N&W in 1903 -- Bad Water
NW Mailing List
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Sun Feb 24 00:25:49 EST 2008
I thought about precipitate too, Kurt, since that is the orange stuff you
see in stream beds, metallic sulfides, I believe. But it would seem that if
it were stirred up it would still be too fine to filter.
Sam Putney
----- Original Message -----
From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
To: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
Sent: Saturday, February 23, 2008 10:45 PM
Subject: Re: RE: N&W in 1903 -- Bad Water
> Reading the article, I noticed that this only occured when the water level
> dropped. It is possible that the sulfur and other minerals that are
> dissolved in the water, became concentrated enough to participate out as
> solids, which could be solved by filtering. It is probably not pure
> sulfur but a salt of it that is causing the problem. This is speculation
> and since I can not run a current analysis of the water it will have to
> do.
>
> Kurt S. Kramke
>
>
>
>
>>From: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>>Date: 2008/02/23 Sat PM 01:32:14 CST
>>To: 'NW Mailing List' <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
>>Subject: RE: N&W in 1903 -- Bad Water
>
>>
>>Guys: Yes, removing dissolved sulfurwould require chemical treatment- ion
>>grabbers would be necessary. Gary R
>>
>>
>>From:
>>nw-mailing-list-bounces at nwhs.org[mailto:nw-mailing-list-bounces at nwhs.org]
>>OnBehalf Of NW Mailing List
>>Sent: Saturday, February 23, 200811:08 AM
>>To: NW Mailing List
>>Subject: Re: N&W in 1903 --Bad Water
>>
>>Sam,
>>
>>I suspect that you are right about the loose use of the word"filter." This
>>points up how newspaper articles sometimes haveto be taken with a grain of
>>salt. Small town reporters had to beversatile. Back in 1903 a reporter
>>might be writing one hour onfeatures of a new hospital, the next hour on
>>the results of a policeinvestigation, the next hour on the latest
>>locomotives and the next hour on theproblem of cows roaming the streets.
>>
>>Gordon Hamilton
>>----- Original Message -----
>>From: NWMailing List
>>To: NWMailing List
>>Sent: Friday, February22, 2008 9:20 PM
>>Subject: Re: N&W in1903 -- Bad Water
>>
>>Thinking back to my high school chemistry, I'm not sure any"filter" would
>>remove dissolved sulfur from water. I knowthe railroad did resort to
>>chemical treatment of the water, which may be whatthe writer is referring
>>to. There's a bit of irony here in that thereason sulfur became such a
>>problem is because it leached out of coal minesthat provided the railroad
>>with its economic life blood and from theattendant slag heaps.
>>
>>Sam Putney
>>
>>----- Original Message -----
>>From: NWMailing List
>>To: N&WMailing 1List
>>Sent: Thursday, February21, 2008 9:23 PM
>>Subject: N&W in 1903 --Bad Water
>>
>>PREPARING TOSPEND $200,000 FOR FILTERS
>>------
>>BAD WATERRUINS MANY ENGINES
>>------
>>New ReasonAssigned for Shortage of Motive Power
>>-----
>>Norfolk andWestern Will Erect Filter Plants at Tanks Where Water is Taken
>>From MountainStreams
>>------
>> The Norfolkand Western Railroad Company is preparing to expend $200,000
>> in the erection offilters along its line through the coal fields as a
>> result of an experience ithas just passed through. The Norfolkand Western
>> is one of the best equipped coal roads in the country, and for morethan a
>> month the men who get coal over it could not understand the delay in
>> theshipment of coal.
>> It was owing to a lack of motive power,but what has caused the shortage
>> of engines puzzled the officers of the roadfor a time.
>> The motive power hadbeen increased, and to their surprise engines that
>> had been in service for butsixty and ninety days were turned into the
>> repair shops with their boilerscompletely wrecked. The investigation
>> started showed a state of affairsnever before encountered in railroading.
>> The water supply for the engines in thecoal district of the Norfolkand
>> Western is secured from the mountain streams and is pumped into
>> watertanks. The water contains sulphur [sic] and mineralsubstances which
>> sink to the bottom of the streams.
>> When the streams are high none of thesesubstances are gathered up when
>> the water is pumped into the tanks, butrecently the country has
>> experienced a drought and the streams became very low. The result was
>> that the sulphur and mineral substances were pumped into thetanks. The
>> sulphur had a terrible effect on the boilers of the engines,and within a
>> short time many were in the shops for repairs. It is saidthat in many
>> cases the boilers were nearly eaten out by the water. It isthis that has
>> caused the shortage of motive power on the Norfolk and Western recently,
>> and has broughtup a most interesting question among railroad men.
>> The work of putting up the filters is nowin progress, and the engineers
>> say that the water can be filtered so that itwill not in any way injure
>> an engine boiler.
>> Within the past week there has been atime in the streams from which the
>> Norfolk and Western draws its supply ofwater, and no difficulty is being
>> experienced, but it is feared that the samedifficulty will occur if they
>> fall, and for that reason the work of erectingthe filters is being pushed
>> energetically [Apparently something was omitted about the streamsbeing
>> full within the past week.]
>>
>>Bluefield Daily Telegraph
>>December 13, 1903
>>
>>Gordon Hamilton
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