Texas Zepher wrote:I was the last locomotive to officially carry the colors of my original home road after a mega-merger. The unique thing is that I went to scrap in this fresh coat of paint, after only wearing it for about 3 months. And this was about 8 years after the merger! My locomotive class also was the last to carry the original home road colors of one of the other parent companies involved in the mega-merger.What loco am I?
What loco am I?
Source "Burlington Northern 1977-1980 Annual" Page 97.
f
Gandy Dancer wrote: andrechapelon wrote:Southern Pacific E-9 #6051.An E unit with B trucks? That had to look worse than the D&RGW PB with Bs under it.
andrechapelon wrote:Southern Pacific E-9 #6051.
Nope, the A1A trucks used under the E units were designed by Martin Blomberg, the same guy who designed the Blomberg B truck for freight units.
http://utahrails.net/up/up-diesel-story-1934-1982-a.php
Snippet from web site:
EMC's answer to these two problems was the model EA locomotive, introduced in May 1937, with six cab units and six booster units being supplied to B&O, and the E1 locomotive introduced in June 1937. (The model designation "E" stemmed from the original powering at Eighteen-hundred horsepower.) Eight E1As and three E1Bs were delivered to Santa Fe. These two designs were streamlined, and both were equipped with EMC's new three-axle, A1A passenger truck (two powered outboard axles, with the center one unpowered). The truck was designed by Martin Blomberg, who, as an employee of Pullman in 1934, had participated in the patent for the streamlined design of UP's M-10000. By 1937, Blomberg had moved to Electro-Motive. He was also involved during early 1938 in solving the B-B truck tracking problem on Santa Fe's two earlier boxcab units, 1A and 1B, by adding an unpowered axle ahead of the two powered axles. Also in 1938, he designed the leaf-spring, swing hanger-equipped, arch-sideframe two-axle truck that was first applied to EMC's FT freight locomotive.
Andre
Army National Guard E3MOS 91BI have multiple scales nowZ, N, HO, O, and G.
YESS!
another one that would have worked is an E7 6001
nscaler711 wrote: Close but no cigar......its not a GE But its a Southern Pacificthe truck types are Bloomberg style but they are not Bo-Bo configuration
Close but no cigar......its not a GE But its a Southern Pacific
the truck types are Bloomberg style but they are not Bo-Bo configuration
Southern Pacific E-9 #6051.
i have one
i have two engines in my body....
yet im not a DD/anything
i have the colors of a famous Steam train.
i am an american loco....but not Alco.
My # starts with a 6....and its four digits long
i use trucks that start with a B....the B doesnt stand for Bo
i ran in the South Pac.
What am I?
From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
MilwaukeeRoad wrote:I am named after an ocean and am a very popular steam locomotive for the Milwaukee Road. I used to be found by the Milwaukee station.
Let me guess... a Pacific? (That's kind of a "shot in the dark" as I don't know much about steam locomotives.)
-Brandon
no one got it huh?
i am an 44H44A1 or DT2!
http://www.mountainrailway.com/Roster%20Archive/CP%2010/CP%2010.htm
i got one! i got one!
i am a very special locomotive
i am the lowest numbered group in the roster
only 14 of us were built
a number of us went on static display
we are CANADIAN!
snagletooth wrote:Could it be the fist GE, the U25B Demonstrator. What'd they call it U25X or something?
I was repainted to the old scheme to re-enact a grade crossing accident.
twhite wrote:Wild guess, but are you a Burlington E-5? Egad, those were handsome beasties!
twhite wrote: Texas Zepher wrote: andrechapelon wrote: Texas Zepher wrote:Yes it is a diesel.OK, is it http://atsf.railfan.net/cowls/bnsf6550a.jpg ? Oh that is a way cool guess, and some interesting questions could be constructed about the history of those, but no that's not ME. R.T.Poteet wrote:I know that an Onion Specific 4884-2 Class rebuilt from a B&O Dockside is not the right answer - but one of these days it will be the right answer twcenterprises wrote: but could it be a GP30? Possibly Southern and N&W merger? Not so far out in left field. GP30s and N&W have very twisty turney histories. I think that is a good guess, just not ME.I am a 1st Generation Diesel. Texas--Wild guess, but are you a Burlington E-5? Egad, those were handsome beasties!Tom
Texas Zepher wrote: andrechapelon wrote: Texas Zepher wrote:Yes it is a diesel.OK, is it http://atsf.railfan.net/cowls/bnsf6550a.jpg ? Oh that is a way cool guess, and some interesting questions could be constructed about the history of those, but no that's not ME. R.T.Poteet wrote:I know that an Onion Specific 4884-2 Class rebuilt from a B&O Dockside is not the right answer - but one of these days it will be the right answer twcenterprises wrote: but could it be a GP30? Possibly Southern and N&W merger? Not so far out in left field. GP30s and N&W have very twisty turney histories. I think that is a good guess, just not ME.I am a 1st Generation Diesel.
andrechapelon wrote: Texas Zepher wrote:Yes it is a diesel.OK, is it http://atsf.railfan.net/cowls/bnsf6550a.jpg ?
Texas Zepher wrote:Yes it is a diesel.
R.T.Poteet wrote:I know that an Onion Specific 4884-2 Class rebuilt from a B&O Dockside is not the right answer - but one of these days it will be the right answer
twcenterprises wrote: but could it be a GP30? Possibly Southern and N&W merger?
I am a 1st Generation Diesel.
Texas--
Wild guess, but are you a Burlington E-5? Egad, those were handsome beasties!
Tom
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!
This is a wild, out-in-left-field guess, but could it be a GP30? Possibly Southern and N&W merger?
Brad
EMD - Every Model Different
ALCO - Always Leaking Coolant and Oil
CSX - Coal Spilling eXperts
OK, is it http://atsf.railfan.net/cowls/bnsf6550a.jpg ?
Texas Zepher wrote: SMassey wrote:andrechapelon and Twhite you are right on the money. Was that one too easy?Could we finish one before we start the next!?!
SMassey wrote:andrechapelon and Twhite you are right on the money. Was that one too easy?
You're right, we should. But I think you're talking about a diesel, and I don't know anything about diesels, LOL!