In the other thread, Pneudyne said
"A perhaps surprising application was on the final Baldwin 2-6-6-2 batch for the C&O. Way back when (late 1980s, I think), I was looking at the example in the Baltimore museum, and did a double take when I saw the articulation joint. And this was with built-up, not cast frames."
So those last 2-6+6-2s did not have cast frames. Us fans tend to think of cast frames as mandatory for any self-respecting halfway-big engine. So why didn't C&O want them on these last engines? Two possibilities come to mind:
Cast frames cost more?
Cast frames are heavier?
For all I know, both could be true, and C&O figured engines that were going to spend their lives rooting around in the woods for a few hours a day wouldn't need inordinate wiring-together. And maybe they figured the engines' lives would be too short to justify the extra initial cost?
Keep in mind that 'cast frame' is not the same thing as 'cast engine bed'. The former refers to one-piece longitudinal 'bar frame' section, with no joints and possibly with integral pedestals, but it still has bolted crossmembers and other parts of the frame. One of the Canadian large-locomotive production videos (either the CP 4-8-4s or the TH&B 2-8-4s) shows the cast frame fabrication graphically.
I don't have time to find it now, but I'm sure there are lavish pictures of 1309's frame during its restoration to operation.
timzIn the other thread, Pneudyne said "A perhaps surprising application was on the final Baldwin 2-6-6-2 batch for the C&O. Way back when (late 1980s, I think), I was looking at the example in the Baltimore museum, and did a double take when I saw the articulation joint. And this was with built-up, not cast frames." So those last 2-6+6-2s did not have cast frames. Us fans tend to think of cast frames as mandatory for any self-respecting halfway-big engine. So why didn't C&O want them on these last engines? Two possibilities come to mind: Cast frames cost more? Cast frames are heavier? For all I know, both could be true, and C&O figured engines that were going to spend their lives rooting around in the woods for a few hours a day wouldn't need inordinate wiring-together. And maybe they figured the engines' lives would be too short to justify the extra initial cost?
The C&O 2-6-6-2's were mine run engines, not really Main Line engines. They were purchased to service the many coal mine operations on the C&O. Take empties to the mine to be spotted and loaded and the pull the loads back to the marshalling yard for the area and then switch the coal into Main Line trains to be hauled to either the Export Coal dock at Newport News or to the Lake Dock at Presque Isle in Toledo.
Western Maryland Senic 1309 is the operating example of the C&O 2-6-6-2.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Weren't they just copies of earlier C&O 2-6-6-2's built in the Teens? If so, maybe they didn't want to pay for redesigning them?
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