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otnmbrd wrote:
Interesting .... thanks. I would have thought, considering the mass involved that you would have had to reduce "ahead" steam first, prior to "pulling one lever". Recip engines have to stop before reversing simply because they rotate in the opposite direction, so do steam turbines. In either case "ahead" steam is secured since it is pointless and counterproductive to have steam working on both "sides" of the engine. In the case of a recip, it is mechanically impossible due to the valve gear geometry. Admitting steam in the astern direction on a recip changes the side of the piston which sees greater pressure, this first slows then stops piston travel ... the forces are the same, the only thing that changes is the direction of crankshaft rotation. The turbine is locked to the reduction gear and shaft so it has to stop before rotation can occur in the opposite direction. There is no problem admitting steam to the astern turbine while the engine is rotating in the ahead direction, we do it quite regularly to assist in slowing the engine rapidly during maneuvering. Rick |