Wile E. Coyote wrote:
power is dW/dt (t-time) (I used SI-marks for measured units above)
And because work is p*dV, p is pressure, and V is volume of cylinders.
Alternative method could be P = F * v (P-power, F could probably be tractive effort, because it's motion force, and v is max. speed).
Although the physical derivation of "power" would be easy: P = F * v -> F * s / t, resp. P = W / t, calculating the correct value for a steam engine is far from trivial.
Firstly, F isn´t constant. In the case of "tractive effort", F would be largest for v = 0, dropping for increasing speed. Same goes for "pressure". Pressure on piston isn´t constant either (hence usually a pV-diagram is used to determine W), and in fact, you´re not using "V" (cylinder volume) but rather A (piston area, a constant value) * S (piston stroke), S being indeed part of a different calculation, namely "piston speed", for which only a mean value can be calculated as well.
I.e., one way to calculate power for a steamer would be "the physical way":
P = F * s / t -> F * v -> p * A * v
i.e.
P = n * pm * A * vm
with
n = number of cylinders
pm = mean pressure on piston
A = piston area
vm = mean piston speed
The other way I´d like to call the "thermodynamic / heuristic" way of calculation, and can be found in ancient steam locomotive building literature. Here, calculation would be based on factors like "heating surface", "grate area", etc, to calculate the quantity of steam the boiler of a locomotive would be able to generate, and then to establish a relationship between this value and the locomotive´s mechanical properties (driving wheel size, piston size, ..).
I.e., something like
P/H = <factor> (<type> - n/<factor>) * sqrt(n)
with
H = heating surface
n = revolutions of driving wheels per minute
<factor> and <type> being some coefficients describing properties of the locomotive in question
Nevertheless, "power" of a steam locomotive depends on "speed", and I´m unsure to which speed the values for power given in the literature are related to. Max speed? Normal travelling speed? Something else?
And then, if we´ll have a good formula, we still don´t know how all those values for steam locomotive power found elsewhere had been calculated in the first place. Hence no possibility of comparison.
Apart from that, I suspect the calculation for steam locomotives in TTDPatch is generally wrong. Because a steam locomotive, in contrast to a diesel or an electric locomotive, is a "constant force engine" (i.e., as long as you affect the same steam (mean) pressure against the piston faces, the same force is produced regardless of the locomotive´s speed), whereas diesel and electric engines are "constant power engines". That difference should be clearly noticeable on grades, e.g.
regards
Michael