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How did they heat old passenger trains?

In most cases, each passenger locomotive was fitted with a steam generator and a feedwater supply tank. The steam generator used some of the locomotive's diesel fuel supply for combustion.



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Steam-powered locomotives were invented in the early 1800s. At first they pulled freight cars full of coal, and later passenger cars full of people. A steam locomotive generally burned coal in a furnace, or “firebox,” and the fire heated water in a boiler to make steam.

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From about 1905 through to the mid 1920s, steam-driven dynamos in head-end baggage cars were the established method to provide electric lighting on passenger trains. Axle generators were first developed in the late 1880s, and the design for early axle generators continued to improve.

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Steam Powered (1920s-1930s)

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Though the earliest steam-powered locomotives first pulled wagons full of coal, they would soon be engineered to accommodate their first passengers. The steam-powered locomotive gets its fuel from burning combustible materials—like coal, wood, and oil—to produce steam.

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Yes. As soon as it was considered impractical to make long stops at stations to let everybody go to toilet and wait until they were done before proceeding. Those only consisted of a bowl with a hole in the bottom and a tube onto the track.

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In rail transport, dieselisation refers to the replacement of the steam locomotive or electric locomotive with the diesel locomotive (usually the diesel-electric locomotive), a process which began in the 1930s and is now substantially complete around the world.

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Before the air brake, railroad engineers would stop trains by cutting power, braking their locomotives and using the whistle to signal their brakemen. The brakemen would turn the brakes in one car and jump to the next to set the brakes there, and then to the next, etc.

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Puffing Billy is the world's oldest surviving steam locomotive, constructed in 1813–1814 by colliery viewer William Hedley, enginewright Jonathan Forster and blacksmith Timothy Hackworth for Christopher Blackett, the owner of Wylam Colliery near Newcastle upon Tyne, in the United Kingdom.

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