Posted by Tommy Wolfe on August 20, 2012 
Looks Like a Modern Day Steam Engine!
Posted by Andrew Robb on August 20, 2012 
Eco friendly my arse!
Posted by K100DS on August 21, 2012 
Yikes. Did anyone capture the final moments on video by any chance?
Posted by Cliff Gray on August 21, 2012 
I didn't know Alco was still making Locomotives.
Posted by Cameron Lochli on August 21, 2012 
Lol Eco-Friendly... Pah!
Posted by Erick Anderson on August 21, 2012 
Diesel runaway isn't limited to locomotives either. It happens to trucks much more often. Common remedies include plugging the air intake or putting the vehicle in gear with the brakes on. Neither of those seem workable here.
Posted by NYC Man on August 21, 2012 
So, how much do turbochargers cost now?
Posted by C Davis on August 21, 2012 
That is a GE for you.
Posted by Jack Wayne on August 21, 2012 
Looks like that "belle" has been to her last "ball". ">(
Posted by Brent Kneebush on August 21, 2012 
Nice! Once they run away there is nothing you can do to stop them, they begin burning there own oil and the only way you can possibly shit them down is to somehow block the air intakes. Shutting off the fuel does nothing because like I said they begin burning their own oil. You tube "Runaway Diesel"and see some of the madness that can ensue.
Posted by Derek Stewart on August 21, 2012 
A gevo running away? I think GE should probably look into this and make sure it isn't an issue that others might have.
Posted by Jake McGarvie on August 21, 2012 
Looks like the turbo took an unauthorized leave of absence. KCS should look into buying 70ACe's or 70m's.
Posted by pierre fournier on August 21, 2012 
Heavy smoke goes back to the ground.
Posted by Derek Buel on August 21, 2012 
Wierd, I live near Overland Park and I didn't see anything smoke. Huh...
Posted by Calvin bonawitz on August 21, 2012 
WOW,Hope nobody got hurt
Posted by on August 21, 2012 
not so eco-friendly now, are you GEVO?
Posted by Mike G on August 21, 2012 
Not a good sign for GE.
Posted by Avery Williams on August 21, 2012 
WOW! Not good.
Posted by K100DS on August 21, 2012 
This can happen to any diesel engine. It can happen, and has happened, to EMDs too. It's not just a GE thing.
Posted by Ryan.Chugg on August 21, 2012 
This can happen to any locomotive, I've seen it happen. This is pretty much the locomotive killing itself, but I'm sure GE is already looking at the prime mover of this puppy and seeing what they can re-do. a Brand new loco can do this!
Posted by Kurt von Wissenstein on August 22, 2012 
That's a volcanic eruption! I'm not surprised if any aircraft service disruption has taken place over there, as it was in Europe after Iceland disaster!
Posted by on August 22, 2012 
Turbo oil seal blew out, so the engine was running on the lube oil. It will quit when the crankcase runs dry, and the engine seizes. I'll bet the engine block is nothing but an aircraft carrier anchor now.........
Posted by cabman701 on August 22, 2012 
Yikes, I'm sure that was quite a site to watch. And Brent... I believe you had a minor misspelling on the word shut. :-) Surprised they let that slide through...
Posted by on August 22, 2012 
Saw the smoke all the way from my office in KCK. I wondered what it was since it appeared in the yard area. Wow, she was belching!!
Posted by pjflstc on August 22, 2012 
Oh Yeah "shut" happens :-)
Posted by on August 23, 2012 
Nice paint though.
Posted by Mike on August 23, 2012 
That's a whole lot of burnt toast! "Sorry sir, the warranty expired yesterday."
Posted by Jadczak Photography on August 24, 2012 
I'd Love to see a video of it!
Posted by BNSFandSP on August 24, 2012 
Eventually Steam for 44 minutes, All can C
Posted by Rahul on August 24, 2012 
Is'nt there a way to cut the oil supply too. Physically squeezing the pipe that supplies oil to the turbo will kill only the turbo, and prevent the engine from seizing up.
Posted by Brent Kneebush on August 25, 2012 
The block is full of oil, as long as the engine is rotating the oil keeps moving to the top of the engine from the sump.
Posted by gordon vincent on August 27, 2012 
As an engineer for 36 years,I've run everything from GG1's E44's,E33's Alcos of all kinds,EMD's of all kinds,and GE's from U series to the P42's.Nothing beats a GM,period. Alco second beast.GE since 1959 had to resort to all kinds of tactics to get railroads to buy them.The only good GE is a dead GE,period.
Posted by Spencer on September 2, 2012 
don't worry, gevo's LOVE to clear there throat!
Posted by Wayne Weidner on March 25, 2013 
Smoke 'em if you've got 'em!
Posted by Carsten Frank on July 30, 2013 
Do these engines really have no fast closure flap in the air intake?
Posted by Ethan Hoffman on December 1, 2013 
its their throat. who checks the spelling anyway? I know we all fumble but 2 in 1 post? we can't spel.
Posted by PhantomRailfan on January 6, 2022 
The prime mover must've been like "Screw this crap, I'm out.", an interesting photo.
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