I saw a video today that said The Flying Scottsman was the exact visual people think of when they think of a British steam engine. This made me wonder: What would Americans generally visually imagine when they think of a steam engine?
I was thinking the NYC Hudson; a powerful, large black passenger steam locomotive. That, and also with the NYC hudson being the prototype of the Lionel 700E makes me think its design and look is atleast what I would assume the general public would visualize.
I was also considering the USRA Mikado, being such a common/standard engine, but it had no particular fame in history. The Big Boy also came to mind but it wasent the first thing I would think of if someone mentioned steam engine.
What do you guys think?
Charles
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Modeling the PRR & NYC in HO
Youtube Channel: www.youtube.com/@trainman440
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Trainman440I was also considering the USRA Mikado
When I hear "steam locomotive", my mind instantly goes to the USRA heavy mikado 2-8-2.
Of course, that is the most common steam locomotive on my roster, so I am quite biased.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
I think of an 0-6-0 or 0-4-0 shifter with a sloped tender, because of Mantua.
Challenger 4-6-6-4 hands down. She's always been my favorite.
I got to see the newly restored Union Pacific 3985 come through and stop in Shakopee, Minnesota, September 30th 2008. I felt like that machine was breathing when I stood next to the Monstrous Beast.
My brother and I ran down the tracks to take photos of her as she left. Mine was taking as she went by Rahr grain elevators. One of the few things around that was bigger that day.
TF
I have 2 steam engines, a Bachmann Spectrum 2-6-0 DCC with sound, and a 4-6-4 Mehano, DC.
The Mehano runs as smooth as the Bachmann.
What I think off when someone mentions steam, is the many guys in here that model steam, and know all about it!
Mike.
My You Tube
#4287 Southern Pacific Cab forward, my first ride in a real locomotive for my 14th birthday present. Mel My Model Railroad http://melvineperry.blogspot.com/ Bakersfield, California I'm beginning to realize that aging is not for wimps.
For me, the Shay locomotive!!
There's just something about all that " sidewinder" action that fascinates me.
Rust...... It's a good thing !
The Great Northern P2 Mountain.
Mark P.
Website: http://www.thecbandqinwyoming.comVideos: https://www.youtube.com/user/mabrunton
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
I don't bring a specific locomotive to mind when talking about steam, or when someone else brings it up. It has to start with a certain characteristic, and then I'll think of typical examples or of extreme examples. It's not the same as, 'What's your favourite steam locomotive?'
"It's the South Shore Line, Jim - but not as we know it".
Lazers Thankfully, several examples are preserved in the UK. Paul
A number of different types of U S A built locomotives are preserved over here. In fact Manufacturers here are making models of them.
David
To the world you are someone. To someone you are the world
I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought
While this may be highly personalized:
British: Mallard. And Cantlie's KZ 4-8-4.
American: J1 Hudson, PRR K4, Niagara. Recently PRR T1, of course. I am a 4-8-4 proponent in general, and French 242A1 in particular. German 05 (and, honorarily although misdesigned, 06). Japanese C62.
NZR: the Ks. Funny headlight placement and all. (I am also a Garratt fan, dangerous though that might be, and a great admirer of the As).
The 2-4-2s are notable for another reason. Dug out of streams and completely rebuilt. More reasons why I love NZ.
Oz C36. (Honorable mention to the latter Garratts (NOT the ASG), the T1 lookalike, and the S-class.)
Reading T-1 4-8-4's. And the best news of all - R&N test fired 2102 the other day. Under steam, blew the whistle - they they did it twice, once with the 6-chime passenger whistle and once with the original freight hooter whistle (not deep like the N&W steamboat hooters). Only vids I can find are on Facebook so I can't link them. Now all they have to do is finish putting her back together.
Also a Reddit thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/trains/comments/kv271h/reading_t1_2102_has_been_testfired_at_reading/
Good look under the hood so to speak, a lot of piping that is normally covered up. Even a relatively basic steam loco with no real fancy extra equipment is pretty complex.
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
I think of the Civil Way locomotive "The General." I had the Lionel model on my O-27 layout and loved it. Plus during the Civil War centennial they rehabbed The General and sent it on a US tour, so there were lots of photos of it in the nightly newspaper. I had also enjoyed the Disney movie about the Great Locomotive Chase as a boy, and was predisposed to love anything that had Fess Parker in it.
And the Buster Keaton silent movie is still one of my favorites.
In the early 1960s a retired railroader in town who went to our church gave me some of his old rail union magazines and one of them had an article about The General that said if you wrote to the Louisville & Nashville they'd send a picture of it. Even though that magazine was pretty old and outdated, I wrote to the address given and sure enough in a few weeks a large cardboard tube arrived from the L&N's PR department with a beautiful color photo of The General on high gloss photographic paper, plus a postcard showing the locomotive on tour. I still have the photo and that postcard. I think I even still have the cardboard tube!
Dave Nelson
Overmod While this may be highly personalized: British: Mallard. And Cantlie's KZ 4-8-4. American: J1 Hudson, PRR K4, Niagara. Recently PRR T1, of course. I am a 4-8-4 proponent in general, and French 242A1 in particular. German 05 (and, honorarily although misdesigned, 06). Japanese C62. NZR: the Ks. Funny headlight placement and all. (I am also a Garratt fan, dangerous though that might be, and a great admirer of the As). The 2-4-2s are notable for another reason. Dug out of streams and completely rebuilt. More reasons why I love NZ. Oz C36. (Honorable mention to the latter Garratts (NOT the ASG), the T1 lookalike, and the S-class.)
For me, it is also Chapelon's 242A1. Brilliant design - just have a look at pages 13 - 14 of the link where they compare it with the NYC S-1b.
https://static1.squarespace.com/static/55e5ef3fe4b0d3b9ddaa5954/t/55e6373fe4b04afd122b821d/1441150783767/%23+DOMS-1_Chapelon.pdf
Class A4s (Mallard etc.) even better with skirts.
The first two things that come to mind are a NYC streamlined Hudson pulling a fast train up the river of the same name, and a D&H 4-8-4 with "Elephant Ears".
Harrison
Homeschooler living In upstate NY a.k.a Northern NY.
Modeling the D&H in 1978.
Route of the famous "Montreal Limited"
My YouTube
In no particular order,
Almost any Mikado...... but USRA versions and B&O Q4's top that list.
Mountians - (4-8-2) - B&O T3's and C&O J2's - Mountains were in many ways the first really successful dual purpose steam locos, and I think helped lead to the development of the super power locos.
Pacifics - the universal passenger loco of the steam era. The B&O P7d & e possibly the finest evolution.
2-8-0's - the single most produced wheel arrangement........
Sheldon
Nickle Plate Berkshire: 2-8-4
Rick Jesionowski
Rule 1: This is my railroad.
Rule 2: I make the rules.
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I think of V&T 4-4-0's.
Probably comes from watching westerns on TV when I was young.
Paul
I have lots of "favourite" steam locomotives,but no one of them in particular comes to mind at the mention of "steam locomotive".
Wayne
The Lionel 2026, as that is what my father had
I dunno, someone mentions steam locomotives and i think.....
"brimstone on a summers day with a touch of creosote". MMmmmmm
PMR
SP GS-5 4-8-4 in Daylight colors.
Ray
DM&IR Yellowstones, Giants of Steam (with live sound, actually the very first video my oldest son ever watched, and he watched it over and over again with me).
When someone says steam locomotive, I picture the big ones, the articulateds: all the 2-8-8-4's and the N&W Y class 2-8-8-2's.
John
I love the big guys, favorites are the Challanger and the mighty 4-8-4
Trainman440I saw a video today that said The Flying Scotsman was the exact visual people think of when they think of a British steam engine.
It occurs to me that some people here might enjoy another reason to think so...
https://www.brightontoymuseum.co.uk/w/images/Flying_Scotsman_locomotive,_cross-section_(WBoR_14ed).jpg
This does not change the images people have in their brains, but here are some rough production numbers for North American steam by wheel arrangement.
2-8-0 30,000
4-4-0 25,000
0-6-0 15,000
2-8-2 14,000
2-6-0 11,000
4-6-2 6,800
2-10-0 4,100
4-8-2 2,400
2-10-2 2,200
Not too many "famous" locos with those wheel arrangements so far.
4-4-2 1,900
4-8-4 1,000
4-6-4 500
2-8-4 450
And only one wheel arrangement of articulated locos exceeded 1000 examples, nearly half the list did not exceed 100 examples:
2-6-6-2 1,300
2-8-8-2 720
2-8-8-0 425
4-8-8-2 204
4-6-6-4 200
2-8-8-4 72
2-6-6-6 70
2-6-6-4 65
4-8-8-4 25
So do you want to model "flashy and rare" or "worked hard every day"?
I choose more of the later and fewer of the former, and that is what I think of when you say "steam locomotive".