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PRR T1

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Saturday, July 17, 2010 6:36 PM

Dr Leonard
The T1 has long fascinated me. I never saw any of them in operation, and they were gone before I started taking rail photos (at around age 14, 1952). I have read whatever I can find about them, and own a few videos that show them in operation. Incidentally, the Green Frog DVD "The Golden Twilight of Postwar Steam," mentioned in one of the posts here, shows not only the T1 but also has scenes of K4 3847 which was equipped with rotary poppet valves.

Dr Leonard 

The 3847 had the rotary poppet valves and all of that frame work to hold the drive shaft connected to the ecentric rod.  One of the T1 had that system applied also, but it looked very odd to me.

We got to see the 5399 eastbound at Effingham in early 1952.  It was the K4 with the Franklin system installed which looked almost normal except for the cylinder casting being different and the lack of the ecentric rod.  Both the 5399 and 3847 also received a front end thottle, which was rare on the K4's since only a few were modified.

I looked at your web site recently and gave permission to the IRM display of the Picture of the C&NW display at the Railroad Fair.  Thank you for forwarding that email

CZ

 

 

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Posted by Bob.M on Saturday, July 17, 2010 4:40 PM

Acela026
Post Script: Not related to the previous Subject: How do you get images (like a logo) in your forum signature?

 

I don't know if anyone answered this, but it is fairly simple: on the right side of the screen it says "My Profile". Under that click on "Update Profile", then select the tab marked "Avatar" It lets you upload your selected picture.

In another message, you wanted to set the background picture on the computer, but the owner of the machine did not want it changed. On this family's computer, using Windows XP, we each have our own login, and can choose whatever background picture you want.

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Posted by Dr Leonard on Friday, July 16, 2010 9:39 PM

The photo in the first post of this thread comes from my Rail Archive web site, from the Random Steam Collection ( www.railarchive.net/randomsteam/ ). It was in my father's small collection and I don't know who the photographer was. (Perhaps someone here knows who took it.)

The T1 has long fascinated me. I never saw any of them in operation, and they were gone before I started taking rail photos (at around age 14, 1952). I have read whatever I can find about them, and own a few videos that show them in operation. Incidentally, the Green Frog DVD "The Golden Twilight of Postwar Steam," mentioned in one of the posts here, shows not only the T1 but also has scenes of K4 3847 which was equipped with rotary poppet valves.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Monday, June 28, 2010 10:43 AM

KCSfan

2. Many enginemen never bothered to learn how to operate the T1's and continued to run them like the K4's they were used to operating. This was the primary reason for their reputed "slipperiness". As Feltonhill well knows, given a bit of sand and a light hand on the throttle when starting, a T1 could walk away with the heaviest PRR passenger consist without slipping.

I had the good fortune to see T1's running at track speed on the PRR main line east of Valpariso, IN and believe me they were an awesome sight to behold.

Mark

 Mark 

I was fortunate to see the T1's at speed on the St. Louis line around Effingham Illinois.  They were really something to see running 80mph or more with a long passenger train.

We spent many days on the weekends watching the PRR in Effingham, and I don't remember a T1 starting a train without spinning.  The westbound train stopped at the station about 100 feet from the IC diamond and when the T1 started up, the front engine would spin on the diamond.  They were slippery and I have read they could go into a high speed slip also.   There were some engineers that could probably handle them better than others, but an operating department has to have locomotive that everyone can run.  

I really liked them, but it was more than an operating problem.  I have always wondered why more weight was not added to the front engine of the T1.   If steam had continued, they would have found some better solutions.  

This is one of my pictures of an eastbound T1 slowing for Effingham station stop.   

CZ

 

 

 

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Posted by K4sPRR on Thursday, June 17, 2010 7:58 PM

An uncle of mine who once worked for the PRR ( Pitt-Harrisburgh) told me that diaphrams were removed in summer month's for better in-cab ventilation.  He also advised of a similar situation to the canvass curtains hung on the back part of the cab, these were closed to help keep heat in during the winter and tied back in the summer.  He also stated the dog houses on the tenders had to be better ventilated in summer month's or ice cooled.

 Another reason for diaphrams being removed was due to maintenance guys who were increasingly getting fed up with all the shrouding and cosmetic's on the T1 and the time wasted taking it off to do even minor maintenance, then put it all back on.  In time and with the company's permission much of it was never replaced taking some of the T1 personality with it.

A side note, my uncle left the PRR because he kept falling off the tops of rail cars in the winter as they rounded the Horseshoe Curve or the many curves along Sugar Run when he was setting or releasing brakes.  One fall too many and he was out of there.

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 2:37 AM

I will certainly have to defer on this.   My memory is simiply not good enough to recall having seen the diaphragm in all cases or whether there were exceptions.   Probably was too excited to see the locomotives and know that I would ride behind them to notice!

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Posted by wobblinwheel on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 2:15 AM
I have a DVD entitled "The Golden Twilight of Postwar Steam" with LOTS of shots of T-1's. In at least TWO of these shots, there clearly appears to NOT be a diaphragm between the engine and tender. The footage is so clear in one particular instance, that it's almost indisputable. Does anyone know if there were documented instances where these locos were operated without these diaphragms? If so, why not? I know that sometimes the cab doors were left open, which may at first glance, give the impression there is no diaphragm, but this clearly is not the case. Any info from the Pennsy know-it-alls out there? (or those fortunate to have actually SEEN it?)

Mike C.

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Posted by feltonhill on Monday, June 14, 2010 8:52 PM

 Mark,

How fortunate you were to actually see these locos in action.  They were out of service before my time trackside.

What is little known, but was documented in both the Altoona tests and the N&W tests in 1948 is that the T1's had a superior steam circuit.  There was little pressure loss from the boiler to the steam chests,and the deliverery pipe volume was very large.  All this gave the T1 a starting TE of something like 68,000 lbs, well above the rated 64,500 or whatever it was.  Part throttle was sufficient to get the maximum  force to the rail under normal conditions.  Any gross throttle opening was a invitation to disaster unless adhesion was ideal.

They were a locomotive to be reckoned with, but as you noted, maintenance during their lifetime was on the decline.  Unfortunately they required everything to be almost perfect to realise their potential.  Good example of the ideal being questionable in real life.

Sure would have liked to see one of them go by at 100 or so (and maybe still accelerating).

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Posted by KCSfan on Monday, June 14, 2010 2:29 PM

IMHO it is a mistake to characterize the T1's as being "obsolete" at the time they were built and one can come to the conclusion they never should been built only with the benefit of hindsight. Remember, until the mid-1940's the Pennsy was committed to steam motive power (just like the N&W was even a decde later). The T1 was designed to replace the double headed K4's on their heavier trains and they were admirably suited for that service. When the T1's failed to live up to their capabilities it was as a result of one or both of two factors neither of which were the fault of the engine or its design.

1. The T1's came into vogue at a time when proper maintneance was being deferred and/or short cut in order to get motive power on the road to handle the surge of WW2 traffic. If anything PRR maintenance declined even further following the war. And,

2. Many enginemen never bothered to learn how to operate the T1's and continued to run them like the K4's they were used to operating. This was the primary reason for their reputed "slipperiness". As Feltonhill well knows, given a bit of sand and a light hand on the throttle when starting, a T1 could walk away with the heaviest PRR passenger consist without slipping.

I had the good fortune to see T1's running at track speed on the PRR main line east of Valpariso, IN and believe me they were an awesome sight to behold.

Mark

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Posted by feltonhill on Wednesday, June 9, 2010 11:45 AM

 The T1's were assigned to all PRR east-west mainlines Harrisburg west.  They ran to both Chicago and St. Louis.  There were some early problems at Federal Tower in Pittsburgh (turnouts on a 13 deg, IIRC) but that was largely resolved by changing the driver back face to back face dimension on several of the locomotive axles and careful attention to the geometry of the turnouts.

In overall weight, they were about the same as a large 4-8-4.  As far as maximum axle load, they ranged from 67,500 lbs to 69,990 lbs, somewhat below a large 4-8-4 and not much more than some of the K4's.  They were only 15'-6" high and 10'-0" wide.  They could clear the high level platforms in the Pittsburgh suburban district (east). 

In contrast, when N&W J 610 was tested on PRR in 1944, it was restricted to Crestline-Chicago.  It was 16'-0" high and 11'-0" wide, too large to operate on many PRR lines without changes to stations, other structures and track centers, which were too expensive to implement for a short-term test.

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Posted by cnwfan51 on Wednesday, June 9, 2010 9:45 AM

Smile   OK One final question on my part, Being that they were on a rigid frame  were thes T-1s  limited or restricted to certain division on the PRR?  Seems to me that there had to be restrictions on clearances on tunnels and weight on bridges and overpasses Just wondering Larry

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Posted by daveklepper on Wednesday, June 9, 2010 2:19 AM

It was only a for and aft motion, not swaying side-to-side.  It was gentle, but noticable.   The above explanaition makes sense.

Much of this riding was in what were probably the most comfortable long-distance coaches ever built, the Juniata-built 44-seat cars specifically for the Trail Blaizer, Jeffersonian, and Red Arrow.   These rode like a dream, the reclining seats were extremely comfortable, and the washrooms spacious.   The next best thing in my opinion were the AT&SF double-deck El Capitan cars.   But the Juniata cars rusted out quickly, and were scrapped after only about 10 year use, with their trucks and possibly other equpment going to rebuilt P-70's which then rode better than they had with the PRR peidstal trucks.   The Budd equipment on the NYC was OK, and so were the rebuilt P-70's, and so were the AT&SF single-level cars and the UP's postwar coaches.   With the PRR pedistal trucks though, sometimes when going around a curve, it seemed like there was absolutely no spring between your seat and the rail!

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Posted by feltonhill on Tuesday, June 8, 2010 8:17 PM

My guess (and that's all it is) is that if the two engine sets got in exact phase, there would be a noticeable variation in the drawbar pull because of the inherent variability of the tractive effort over one revolution of the drivers.  The variation was about plus/minus 20% of average. At 55, a T1 would be getting  onto its DBHP curve, so the variation may have been what you felt.  Wish I could have been there!

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Posted by selector on Tuesday, June 8, 2010 2:54 PM

Is this a variation in speed that was cyclic over, say, one or two second intervals, or was it a swaying motion, Dave?  I have ridden behind diesels and steamers, and don't recall a tugging action of any kind, except I have noticed it on the Sky Train in Vancouver, BC, when it is accelerating.

-Crandell

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, June 8, 2010 1:28 PM

I wonder if any other readers also actually rode passenger trains behind a T1?  The reason I ask is that I remember a gentle oscilation motion at about I think 55 mph that seemed as if some drawbar along the train, possibly between engine and tender or tender and first coach, was underdamped.   It was gentle and not very annoying, but still noticable, somewhat like a similar motion I notoiced when flying in Lockheed Electra turboprops much later.   It came on only at a particular speed.   And this was after the T1's were on the road about one or two years, not when they were new.

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Monday, June 7, 2010 1:59 PM

All of PRR's duplex drives were on rigid frames, not articulated.  This would make the T1 a divided-drive 4-8-4 and the Q2 a divided drive 4-10-4.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by cnwfan51 on Monday, June 7, 2010 1:56 PM

Question    OK My question is were they built on a straight frame or were they articulated, I cannot really tell from any photis dont laugh please Larry

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Posted by wobblinwheel on Monday, June 7, 2010 12:42 PM
Has anyone seen the movie: "Lemony Snickett's A Series of Unfortunate events"? (sp?) It's got a really neat scene of a T1 getting ready to run over a car full of kids at a crossing.....How cool is THAT?

Mike C.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Sunday, June 6, 2010 6:21 PM

CSSHEGEWISCH

While everybody seems to obsess over the checkered history of the T1, does anybody even know the track record of the other duplex-drive, the Q2?

 I got to see one Q2 in Chicago near the roundhouse under steam but did not get to see it run.  All of the books I have on the Q2 seem to point to a duplex that was much better than any of the other PRR trial and error locomotives, but was not ready for prime time against the diesels.  

This information is from the Pennsy Q class book:  PRR Classic Power 

The Q2's had an electrical controlled anit-slip device, a unique applicaiton of an electrical control to a steam locomotive.  The control device was developed by Rosser L. Wilson of American Brake Shoe (ABEX) and it utilized a differential switch which was driven by small wheels running on the treads of the #2 and #3 drivers.  When this switch sensed a speed difference, it suplied air to butterfly valves in the steam lines of the slipping engine. When the drivers equalized in speed again, the steam was returned to that set of cylinders.   They did not work that well after a short time in service.  It was a failure also since they would not reset immediately and the thottle had to be shut off to get them to reset if one of the set of drivers did spin. 

It was a great locomotive that broke records in the HP range on the test plant, but was too expensive to maintain since the new diesels just passed up every water stop, ash cleaning and coaling tower.  The article goes on to say that this butterfly steam valve problem probably could have been solved by modifications to the butterfly valves but the diesels came way too soon for that fix.

 The Q2 was assigned to the Crestline to Chicago run only.  They were eleven feet wide and this was a line that could handle the size.   If you look at the drawings of the Q2 or the BLI model, you will see it had a blind flange on the third driving axle also.  This is correct. 

 CZ

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Sunday, June 6, 2010 10:13 AM

While everybody seems to obsess over the checkered history of the T1, does anybody even know the track record of the other duplex-drive, the Q2?

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, June 6, 2010 2:31 AM

They were wonderful locomotives to see and ride behind, and I would not give up the memories.   But still, the PRR would have been better off with a good 4-8-4 that would fit its clearances (not the SP, UP, or AT&SF, which would not fit eastern clearances) such as the NYC Niagra or N&W J, the latter possibly with slightly larger drivers.  Of course it would have a Belpair firebox!

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Saturday, June 5, 2010 10:01 PM

SSW9389
It doesn't really matter how many miles the T1s were running. According to steamlocomotive dot com most T1s were laid up by 1949 and all were scrapped by 1953. The Pennsy wasted its money on 50 obsolete machines that never should have been built. If depreciation was set at 15 years the Pennsy at best got four years out of most of these locomotives.

 You are probably correct about the T1 and how it should have never been built, but I got to see them run and they were very exciting to see. 

Our last T1 on the St Louis main was in 1951 and the K4's took over again until the summer of 1954 when the coaling tower was removed west of town.   I have many memories seeing several T1s on trains at speeds that you would not believe in Illinois.  They would run once they got the train moving.  Starting a train for them without spinning their front set of drivers was almost impossible.   The PRR did have 52 of them including the first two test locomotives.  None were preserved and no Q2's or J1's were preserved.  It is a shame that the PRR even purchased diesels since they did not save the PRR like the ads for the diesels presented to railroads how great the savings would be.  

The PRR made a lot of mistakes and spent a lot of money of duplex steam, but all steam went out the door when the diesels eliminated the coal, water and maintenance stops.    I consider the greatest of mistakes of the PRR to be the day they became the PC.  

CZ

 

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Posted by feltonhill on Saturday, June 5, 2010 9:28 PM

 Acela026

 

I sent you an e-mail based on this site.  Did you get it?  I have a spare copy of one of the articles I cited.

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Posted by Acela026 on Friday, June 4, 2010 9:25 PM

Thank you feltonhill!  I looked at the link, and it was very helpful and interesting.  You were right, graphics would have made it easier to follow, but I think I got the gist of it.  I have changed (much to my parents disliking) our home screensaver to a photo of a T1.  But they changed it back.  DARN!

 The timbers beneath the rails are not the only ties that bind on the railroad.
           -
-Robert S. McGonigal

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Posted by feltonhill on Friday, June 4, 2010 8:31 PM

 Acela026,

Hope you're still following this.  I looked at your bio and saw that you were a younger member of this forum and you deserved a better answer than I've given when addressing specific T1 issues.  There are several T1 articles written for and published by the PRRT&HS in its magazine The Keystone.   These articles are well researched by their respective authors over many years, and include first hand interviews with the men who actually ran the T1's in service.  They present detailed information that you will not find anywhere else. Popular publications cannot present the detailed information because they must appeal to the general readership.  Railroad historical societies are about the last place where thoroughly researched articles on a given locomotive class can be found.

The best sources for recent research dedicated entirely to the PRR T1 are the series of articles published in PRRT&HS’ magazine, The Keystone, and two articles on the PRR T1 tests on other railroads published by C&OHS and N&WHS.  The two authors have amassed a huge file of original source documents.  Burnell has interviewed the crews that actually operated the T1s over the road and written en extensive series of articles for The Keystone.  The other two articles explain two relatively unknown tests that were conducted on C&O in 1946 and N&W in 1948.  Large amounts of information survived on each of these tests.

Burnell, Neil.  “An Appreciation of the T1 - The Enginemen’s Perspective,” The Keystone (Autumn 2001, pp 19-59)

Stephenson, David R. “Rebuttal to ‘A Slippery Subject’,” The Keystone (Winter 2001, pp17-18)

Burnell, Neil.  “The ‘Slippery’ T1,” The Keystone (Winter 2001, pp57-62)

Burnell, Neil.  Response to 2 letters,  The Keystone (Winter 2002, pp11-13)

Burnell, Neil.  “A Reassessment of T1 6110 and 6111", The Keystone, Vol 37, No. 1, pp18-39

Burnell, Neil. "The Case for the T1a #5547." The Keystone, Vol.39, No. 3, pp40-52

Stephenson, David R.  “PRR T1 Tests on C&O and N&W” The Keystone, Summer 2009, Vol.42, #2 , pp35-66

The Keystone is published by the PRRT&HS.  Back issues are available, but they don’t have a very active program.  Check their website.  These articles are not free but the cost is not all that much considering the number of pages you get, with photos and authoritative text.

Stephenson, David R. “Chesapeake & Ohio Tests the PRR T1". C&O History, May 2005

C&O History is published by the C&OHS.  Back issues are readily available, see their website.  The T1 article text is available free on findarticles.com:

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3943/is_200505/ai_n13642634/pg_1

if you want a free sample of the level of detail.  However, there are no graphics, which makes some of the points hard to follow.

Stephenson, David R.  “T vs. J”. The Arrow, November/December 2006 [This is the PRR T1 test on N&W in 1948.]

The Arrow is published by N&WHS.  Unfortunately, back issues are available only as 1-year sets.  This may be changed. However, all of the text information is still included in the Keystone article cited above.

The T1 is a fascinating subject, and its story is very complicated.  However, it's worth the time to read.

Please notice that it takes considerable effort to find out what really happened in railroad history.  Summary sources such as steamlocomotive.com try to get it right, but their limitations are significant.  Wes Barris is dependent on his contributors for good information. Their competence varies considerably.

The PRR T1is a good locomotive to have as a favorite.  You can learn a lot about railroad history from studying it.  It wasn't all good and it wasn't all bad.  Mixed bags are more fun than black and white!

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Posted by feltonhill on Friday, June 4, 2010 5:29 PM

 Making inaccurate comparisons that distort history and are contrary to facts definitely matter.  Gardner was misled by hearsay, took it uncritically as fact, published it in a reputable magazine, and there you have it - instant facts based on nothing.  It's certainly much easier than doing years of research to find out what actually happened.

IMO, all steam locomotives built after WW2 were obsolete because diesel-electric technology was developing at a very rapid rate.  The economics were obvious.  At best, the finest steam locos were little more than stopgap measures to tide the railroad over until enough diesels could be bought.  The T1 had no corner on obsolescence during the 1940s.  They just had a bit more visibility, style and crankiness.

 I agree, they weren't what PRR needed (or any other railroad for that matter).  A nice reliable 4-8-4 perhaps similar to UP FEFs or ATSF 3776/2900 classes may have been a better choice in 1944.

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Posted by SSW9389 on Friday, June 4, 2010 4:25 PM

It doesn't really matter how many miles the T1s were running. According to steamlocomotive dot com most T1s were laid up by 1949 and all were scrapped by 1953. The Pennsy wasted its money on 50 obsolete machines that never should have been built. If depreciation was set at 15 years the Pennsy at best got four years out of most of these locomotives.   

feltonhill

 You need to read Gardner's account with a large grain of salt.  It's a glaring example of the myths surrounding T1 mileages. It shows how unsupported hearsay can get much wider distribution and have more influence than dry, dusty old facts.  I’ve found considerable reason to question the quoted T1 mileage during the time from Sept 1945 through April 1946, the 6-month period mentioned in article.  During that time, the E7's ran 69,000 miles, about 11,500 miles per month.  The author was told that the highest mileage T1 during that period ran only 2,800 miles.  According to mileage reports I have which were internal correspondence from PRR Chief of Motive Power’s office, 5504 was the highest mileage T1 at the time, posting 40,642 miles since its in-service date of 12/5/45.  This is an average of about 8,294 miles/month.  For the month of April 1946, it posted 10,793 miles, only slightly less than the E7's at that time.  Also during April, 5512 posted 11,442 miles and 5508 posted 10,942 miles, also about the same as the E7's.  Maximum mileage figures for the T1 fleet stayed in this range until March 1947.  I could never understand where the 2,800 mile figure came from.  It’s certainly not supported by any existing data.

Caveat lector.

COTTON BELT: Runs like a Blue Streak!
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Posted by feltonhill on Thursday, June 3, 2010 5:47 PM

 You need to read Gardner's account with a large grain of salt.  It's a glaring example of the myths surrounding T1 mileages. It shows how unsupported hearsay can get much wider distribution and have more influence than dry, dusty old facts.  I’ve found considerable reason to question the quoted T1 mileage during the time from Sept 1945 through April 1946, the 6-month period mentioned in article.  During that time, the E7's ran 69,000 miles, about 11,500 miles per month.  The author was told that the highest mileage T1 during that period ran only 2,800 miles.  According to mileage reports I have which were internal correspondence from PRR Chief of Motive Power’s office, 5504 was the highest mileage T1 at the time, posting 40,642 miles since its in-service date of 12/5/45.  This is an average of about 8,294 miles/month.  For the month of April 1946, it posted 10,793 miles, only slightly less than the E7's at that time.  Also during April, 5512 posted 11,442 miles and 5508 posted 10,942 miles, also about the same as the E7's.  Maximum mileage figures for the T1 fleet stayed in this range until March 1947.  I could never understand where the 2,800 mile figure came from.  It’s certainly not supported by any existing data.

Caveat lector.

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Posted by JimValle on Thursday, June 3, 2010 3:02 PM

" Buck" and "Flash" were put in service in 1942 as experimental prototypes.  The Pennsy liked them well enough to order fifty more slightly modified versions that came on line in 1945-46.  Once the whole fleet was operating there were lots of maintenance issues leading to high operating costs that had not been so obvious with the two originals.  When they were in good working order and manned by a skilled crew they did a fine  job  but they needed too much TLC which was fatal with diesels coming on. 

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Posted by selector on Thursday, June 3, 2010 2:31 PM

 And, not to be a picker of nits Smile,Wink, & Grin, the Pennsy was one of the railroads that didn't use a hyphen in its model designations.  So, it has K4, J1, T1, and not like the Chessie that had H-8..and so on...

-Crandell

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