Scott - Dispatcher, Norfolk Southern
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Because they liked it better without the A For the same reason, many railroads simplified DASH 9-44CW to just C44-9W, and so forth.
QUOTE: Eric, you'd have to ask General Electric and the railroads that question, but I wouldn't expect an answer. GE must have thought it important to use that model designation; the railroads must have thought it important to use something else. It's like asking a mother why she named her baby "Susan" instead of "Suzanne." It's subjective, and parsing it or asking why won't lead you to any insights, because there are none to be had.
QUOTE: Well, yes, GE and EMD both have a convention, which they change practically with every major redesign -- which hardly makes it a convention! And while the nomenclature you cite above is somewhat consistent, look at it this way: U25C C30-7 DASH 8-40C AC4400CW ES44AC There you have it -- the progression of GE models in 40 year: all over the landscape in terms of model designation. The C in ES44AC does not mean six-axle, but it does in all the others. Horsepower has gone from two digits to four to two. W for wide nose has appeared and disappeared. You'd ask why they'd changed -- well, because they felt like it. You can look deeper all you want, but I don't think you'll find it.
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