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What would be your favorite engin of all time???

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Posted by baberuth73 on Thursday, January 15, 2009 8:31 PM

327 ci Chevrolet.

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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, January 15, 2009 4:52 AM

Please don't

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Posted by 24kmach on Wednesday, January 14, 2009 10:45 PM

The Four Aces 1111 Timken bearing special

I'm trying to quit
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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, January 12, 2009 4:20 AM

If the K4 is my favorite steamer because of the many enjoyable miles behind its tender, then I also ought to rate the diesel and the electric.  Obviously, although in my opinion the New Haven EF-3P is a better engine, more powerful, better crew accomodations and visibility, and a cleaner design, the GG-1 is certainly distictive and given me the most reliable and pleasent passenger miles.   Diesles?   1949-1954, 1956-1970, regularly rode NY-Boston.   1971-1996, NY - N. White Plains.   So the answer has to be the FL-9.   And its a good looking locomotive too.

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Posted by BHirschi on Sunday, January 11, 2009 12:28 PM

Steam: Atlantic Coast Line R-1 4-8-4 Northern

Diesel: Tie between the "ugly duckling" BL-2 (preferably in FEC red and yellow) and the graceful E-6 (in ACL purple and silver, FEC red and yellow, Seaboard "citrus" or Southern green and gold - take your pick).

Steam I've seen/ridden behind: I'd have to give the nod to N&W A-Class 2-6-6-4 No. 1218, although two others - Clinchfield 4-4-0 No. 1 (my first steam excursion experience) and N&W J-Class No. 611 also get high marks in my book.

Diesels I've seen: As a class, the odd-looking GP-30. As an individual locomotive, SCL U-36-B No. 1776, the locomotive which started the Bicentennial paint job craze, and the best looking one of the bunch. Pity it wasn't preserved.

Electric: The GG-1, specifically the "Blackjack" No. 4935, which I saw parked (and then pulling silently away from) the platform at Washington Union Station in 1978.

Honorable Mention: Union Pacific DDA40X, Southern's Crescent E-8s and another strange bird, the SCL/Family Lines wide-cab BQ-23-7 (the only freight locomotive I ever got a cab ride in).
SCL black, ACL purple, SAL green or cream, FEC yellow and red, Southern green... and that's what I like about the south!
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Posted by ACF1001 on Sunday, January 11, 2009 6:20 AM

My overall favorite would any PRR GG-1, in particular #4935.Wink

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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, January 11, 2009 5:06 AM

Not the best, not the most beautiful, not the fastest, not the most powerful,   Beauty, the New Haven I-5 with the N&W J and the SP Daylight close behind.   But my real favorite.   Of course the K4.   Why, because I rode behind it more often than any other steam locomotive, everything from the Broadway down to New York and Long Branch commuter trains.  (Was stationed at Fort Monmouth twice in my life.) And fan trips.   So many enjoyable and memoriable rides.  That is realloy what counts as a favorite.   And I'd have to place the NYC Hudsons, all three variations together, as second for the same reason.  With either locomotive, I never had a train I was riding delayed or cancelled because of a locomotive failure.

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Posted by blade on Friday, January 9, 2009 9:52 AM

my favorite engine of all time is no other than the southern pacific daylight 4-8-4 gs class 4449.the style grace and good looks make her my favorite steam engine.

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Posted by henry6 on Thursday, January 8, 2009 9:37 AM

There are probably more answers to this than there were locomotives for each railfan has his/her own favorite.  Or favorites.  For many reasons, too.

Me? 

First, probably the Fairbanks Morse Trainmaster:  first high horsepower dual purpose road switcher. Despite its problems it at least presaged the second generation of diesels.  Never rode one, rode behind them quite a few times but did ride litttle brother the "Baby Trainmaster".

Second, GG1.  What a monster!  How ugly!  How  beautiful!  How fast!  And it was when I was about 10 years old while walking with  my father, brother and friends, on a platform in Penn Station, NY that a trainman jumped up from between a G and a baggage car and handed me a real railroad kerosene lantern.  The G was part of that prize forever!

The Lackawanna Railroad.  Every engine.  Was a couple hundred feet from the house I grew up in and everything they owned from 1946 to 1961 went passed.  Cannot forget the Poconos pulling the Lackawanna Liimited and its brethern like the Merchants Limited/Scrantonian.  Or thier Pacifics puffing up and down the line with the Boonton Line scoots with the open vestibule cars.  My first cab ride was in the MU's, yes, but first diesel cab was an RS2 quickly followed by the GP7s and the Baby Trainmasters.  The E8's were so graceful pulling the Phoebe Snow and just as gracefule, with a touch of brute, pulling the milk trains 47 and 44! 

CNJ's Wharton and Northern introduced me to the EMD F's in orange and blue!  What a sight!  And the NYS&W scampered about behind those silver and maroon RS1's.  Lets see, the Erie had those Vanderbuilt tenders waiting with their Pacifics and their commuter trains there on Bloomfield Ave.at the end of the Caldwell branch made such a unique sight.  Over in Easton, PA we would marvel at the PA's with LV's Black Diamond.  And out on the Island, Long Island, the LIRR had those funnly looking cabbed FM's called C-Liners, but boy did they move those owl eyed cars!  And those huge double ended electric engines the NH had bringing trains from the Hell Gate Bridge across the Grand Cental Pkwy were absolutly fascinating to watch.  And thre were those little Lionel electric engines flitting about GCT and lugging long strings up the hill to Mott Haven. The same railroad, NYC, also kept a flock of PF's huddled along the Jersey side of the Hudson ducking in and out of that tunnel along the high cliffs. 

How can anyone choose a single favorite out of all of them?!  Each one contributed so heavily to the experience of becoming and being a railfan that to give any one all the credit would spoil the fun of what happened!

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Posted by ACF1001 on Thursday, January 8, 2009 5:35 AM

My favorite engine of all time is GG-1 4935 aka BLACKJACK.

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Posted by j610 on Sunday, April 20, 2008 2:42 AM
 Without a doubt , any of the N&W y class .   RON
J610
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Posted by palallin on Wednesday, May 31, 2006 3:41 PM
Frisco 1500-class 4-8-2s.
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Posted by Train 284 on Thursday, May 25, 2006 11:31 AM
Any Southern Pacific locomotive!
Matt Cool Espee Forever! Modeling the Modoc Northern Railroad in HO scale Brakeman/Conductor/Fireman on the Yreka Western Railroad Member of Rouge Valley Model RR Club
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Posted by cspmo on Thursday, May 25, 2006 8:38 AM
Geronimo
Brian
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, May 20, 2006 10:57 AM
The SD40-2
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Posted by METRO on Tuesday, April 4, 2006 2:12 AM
Steam CAN: Canadian Pacific's 4-8-2 I1a Mountain class, all two of them
Steam USA: New York Central's 4-6-4 J3a Streamlined Hudson

Diesel CAN: Canadian National's MLW RS3
Diesel USA: New Haven's ALCo DL109

Electric CAN: Canadian National's #17
Electric USA: Milwaukee Road's Little Joe

Mass Transit CAN: Toronto Transit Commission's PCC
Mass Transit USA: North Shore Line's Electroliner
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Posted by espee3004 on Monday, April 3, 2006 11:51 PM
Denver & Salt Lake 2-6-6-0
Bullfrog Goldfield 4-6-0 # 12
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Posted by markn on Monday, April 3, 2006 11:26 PM
My nominees are:

Early Steam
4-4-0 American (Big stack-can't remember the correct term)
Late Steam
N&W J
Passenger/Cab Diesel
EMD E7/8
Freight /Road Switcher Diesel
F-M TrainMaster
Electric
PRR GG-1
Experimental/One off/Concept
N&W "Jawn Henry"/C&O Steam turbine

And the Overall winner is:
N&W J

(conveniently, this list is also my Garden RR Christmas/wish list)


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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, April 3, 2006 7:43 PM
Great Northern 4-8-2 P-2's Mountain or the DM&IR 2-8-8-4 Yellowstones would be my favorites.

Active, on the otherhand, I would go with Milwaukee Road's Northern #261
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, April 3, 2006 4:43 PM
C-Liners for diesels, NYC Niagras for steam locomotives
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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, March 30, 2006 10:45 AM
The A4's were beautiful and I rode from Aberdeen to Dundee behind one in 1962. For non-streamlined British steam, the most beautiful for me were the Great Western 4-6-0 Castles.
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Posted by Trainspotter on Wednesday, March 29, 2006 6:27 PM
A4 (British)
Deltic (British)
GP9
SD40-2
Big Boy
GG1
PRR T1 Duplex
Turbo (Canadian)
The trainspotter's credo: 'I was born a spotter. I trainspot, therefore I am.'
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, March 13, 2006 7:06 PM
My favorite, which I have seen, and been pulled by, is the first all-Timken roller bearing 4-8-4 Northern which ended up on the NP as #2626 often pulling the NCL.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 9, 2006 11:35 PM
Reading T-1 - Holy Wooten fireboxes, Batman!
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Posted by daveklepper on Wednesday, March 8, 2006 8:44 AM
I have many loves, but I think if I had to pick one right now, it would a N&W J.

My second choice would be the New Haven EF-3 double-end streamlined freight locomtoive, as modified during WWII with train boiler for alternating in passenger service into Penn Station (but not Grand Central, lacking third rail shoes and dc capability), which believe it or not was an improvement in every way on the GG-1 except for top speed. (Geared for 60 but could reach 90 without any problem). It could lug any freight train the New Haven ran, over 100 cars, up the Hell Gate Bridge grade. This required 3 GP-9's (also a very good locomotive) or then two ex-Virginian rectifyer locomotives. Not only could this outperform the GG-1, but the cab comforts were far superior for the crew, visibility far better, and it looked like a modern electric locomotive, basically the same styling as the Little Joes and the New Haven's EP-4's. The Jets, the EP-5's were a bit more squarish, somewhat like the Alco PA, but the New Haven's double-end streamlined EF-3 and EP-4 were very stylish and graceful locomotives. I prefer the old paint job to the McGinnis on these locomotives.

My third choice would be an EMD (EMC?) E-5 for the Burlington system, which was for me the most beuatiful diesel. Preferably not just the A-unit, but run with a B behind it.
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Posted by ragnar on Tuesday, March 7, 2006 2:22 PM
Originally posted by glennbob

See you learn something every day i did not know there was a 2-6-8-0[:O][:O][:O][bow][bow][:-^]
/quote]


Yep,I have to agree with GN-Rick the M2 and N3,Only the G.N and Southern rostered the 2-6-8-0....Weird wheel arrangment but there was just something about the look of the M2 i have always loved!
Imagine my suprise when viewing the G.N videos released a few years back and there one was>>>>>>>>WOO-HOO!!!!
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 12, 2006 11:54 PM
It is my first post on the forum and i would say just for sheer size and massive power and obviously cus they are cool as anything on rails is the BIG BOYS !! BIG BOYS ALL THE WAY. Massive beasts of american power!! [8D][8D][8D][}:)]
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Posted by Gunns on Friday, January 27, 2006 3:46 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by glennbob

Ah yes .pueblo colorado; they have a big old steam engin on static display next to the old depot that has been turned into a restraunt and banquit e hall


That is the 2912, an older Sister of the 2926, same production run finshed late 1943 or early 1944

Gunns
http://www.nmslrhs.org/
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 12:16 PM
Have to go with Blade on the SP 4-8-4 #4449 or any of her sisters.

Virginia and Truckee #18 would be a close second.[8D]

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