1. Firebox – Burning the Coal

  • Coal is manually (or mechanically) fed into the firebox.
  • It burns at very high temperatures, producing intense heat.
  • This heat is the starting point of the entire engine process.

2. Boiler – Turning Water into Steam

  • The fire heats water stored in a large tank called the boiler.
  • Hot gases pass through tubes surrounded by water.
  • Water converts into high-pressure steam.

3. Steam Pressure Builds Up

  • Steam accumulates under pressure inside the boiler.
  • Pressure is controlled using valves to avoid explosion.
  • This stored energy is what powers the train.

4. Pistons Move the Wheels

  • Steam is directed into cylinders.
  • It pushes pistons back and forth.
  • Pistons are connected to rods that turn the wheels.

5. Exhaust Steam Leaves the Chimney

  • After doing its work, steam is released through the chimney.
  • This creates the classic “chuff-chuff” sound.
  • It also helps draw more air into the fire, keeping combustion going.

The Energy Flow

Coal burns → heats water → creates steam → steam pushes pistons → pistons turn wheels → train moves

A coal engine is essentially a heat engine—it converts thermal energy (from coal) into mechanical energy (motion of wheels) using steam as the medium.

Steampunk engine emitting fire on one side and water streams on the other near glowing green leaves
A steampunk machine blends fiery energy with flowing water among glowing plants.

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