In 1960, EMD built 2 ligh road switchers, which were basically a 1325 h.p. switcher on a longer frame, with a short hood for a steam generator. The idea being, they would be used for passenger terminal work. In the end, a coal hauler, Chicago & Illionois Midland, bought them for freight use. I can understand why.
Why would a railroad purchase a specialized locomotive to do something that an off the shelf GP9 could easily do?
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
nanaimo73 wrote:Were these demonstrators which the C&IM picked up at a good price?
The RS1325 was an entry in EMD's catalog that barely sold and seems to have paralleled the development of the GMD1 in Canada. The market for passenger switchers had just about dried up and an SW1200 with Flexicoil trucks could work a lot of the same freight duties as an RS1325 so it's interesting as to why EMD even put it in the catalog.
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