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2-10-10-2 steam locomotive

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2-10-10-2 steam locomotive
Posted by asta on Thursday, June 28, 2007 11:59 PM

i had found this information on these two railroads website http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-10-10-2#Virginian_Railway_class_AE  and i am trying to get more photos of these engines so i can attempt to build one for my layout or if anyone knows if these where ever made for a HO scale layout and if any do exist

 

  thanks

    david

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Friday, June 29, 2007 12:30 AM
 asta wrote:

i had found this information on these two railroads website http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-10-10-2#Virginian_Railway_class_AE  and i am trying to get more photos of these engines so i can attempt to build one for my layout or if anyone knows if these where ever made for a HO scale layout and if any do exist

 

  thanks

 david



I got interested in the hobby in 1962 and shortly afterwards one of these showed up as a Japanese import; I seem to recall it was by a company called LMB with offices in Cleveland.  I have been in this hobby now for forty-five years and that is the only one I can recall ever being on the market.

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Posted by Cheyenne Roundhouse on Friday, June 29, 2007 1:36 AM
some one made on in brass and it was on ebay not to long ago.
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Posted by VAPEURCHAPELON on Friday, June 29, 2007 4:17 AM
None of the real ones has been saved, and as others stated, the only H0scale model is a Japanese built brass one, but imported by CUSTOM BRASS. It is a very good model, but due to the era it has been produced some details have been omitted, and currently I add these, plus I would rework the drive line.
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Posted by ndbprr on Friday, June 29, 2007 8:07 AM
The 2-10-10-2 was built for the Virginian Railroad for hauling coal from West Virginia to Norfolk.  They were built in a drag era and were designed to run at ten miles an hour.  The front cylinders were 48" in diameter and were shipped separately becasue of clearance problems on other railroads.  MR had plans for it back in the magazine back in the 70's.
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Posted by Virginian on Friday, June 29, 2007 8:46 AM

Interesting locos.  They did exhibit some TE.  I love VGN (rather obviously), but between the VGN 800s and the SF whaleback tender ones, I think the 2-10-10-2s win the ugly tender competition, hands down, among all classes.  I know why they did it and I don't care - it's ugly.  On the other hand, the VGN's USE class were about the most handsome mallets in my opinion with that classic plain boiler front, and the BA's were the Ultimate non-articulated fast freight locos.

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Posted by VAPEURCHAPELON on Friday, June 29, 2007 9:49 AM

 8500HPGASTURBINE wrote:
I have seen about 15 of them on Ebay so far. They go for a fair price.  Westside makes them. When I get home I'll email you all the pics you want on them. I can also give you the prices they went for. It seems like you could buy one a lot cheaper then you could build one.

He meant the VIRGINIAN engine, not the SANTA FE - which you are thinking of. The VIRGINIAN model from Custom Brass is much rarer (only 200 pieces) than the Westside SANTA Fe engine, and they are much more expensive. The last one I saw went away for exactly 2500$, but it was as mint as it could get. And since my 3 ebay years I found only about 5 or 6 of these models (one of these is in my collection now) - and none at the online dealers.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Friday, June 29, 2007 11:13 AM

 

Most of the so called early large steam experiments like the 2-10-10-2 and the Triplex engines were not sucessful in actual operation.  The 2-10-10-2's were extremely slow and the boiler was not sufficient size in steam generation.  This was the problem with the Triplex engine as the boiler could not provide sufficient amount of steam for the three sets of cylinders.  They were used very little in actual service. 

Cheers

 

 

 

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Posted by VAPEURCHAPELON on Friday, June 29, 2007 11:57 AM
 CAZEPHYR wrote:
Most of the so called early large steam experiments like the 2-10-10-2 and the Triplex engines were not sucessful in actual operation.  The 2-10-10-2's were extremely slow and the boiler was not sufficient size in steam generation.  This was the problem with the Triplex engine as the boiler could not provide sufficient amount of steam for the three sets of cylinders.  They were used very little in actual service. 

Cheers

But the VIRGINIAN 2-10-10-2s were VERY successful - much more than the later 2-6-6-6s and 2-8-4s. They ran for decades, and did it UNCHANGED - except some got a Worthington BL feedwater heater. These engines were what the road wanted. A huge boiler (btw it was the largest ever used on any steam locomotive) which COULD AND DID provide sufficient steam, and plenty of T.E. VIRGINIAN always was a drag speed road, so these engines fit perfectly, thus the long operating life span. 

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Friday, June 29, 2007 12:51 PM
 VAPEURCHAPELON wrote:
 CAZEPHYR wrote:
Most of the so called early large steam experiments like the 2-10-10-2 and the Triplex engines were not sucessful in actual operation.  The 2-10-10-2's were extremely slow and the boiler was not sufficient size in steam generation.  This was the problem with the Triplex engine as the boiler could not provide sufficient amount of steam for the three sets of cylinders.  They were used very little in actual service. 

Cheers

But the VIRGINIAN 2-10-10-2s were VERY successful - much more than the later 2-6-6-6s and 2-8-4s. They ran for decades, and did it UNCHANGED - except some got a Worthington BL feedwater heater. These engines were what the road wanted. A huge boiler (btw it was the largest ever used on any steam locomotive) which COULD AND DID provide sufficient steam, and plenty of T.E. VIRGINIAN always was a drag speed road, so these engines fit perfectly, thus the long operating life span. 

I am not sure and don't have any reference books to find out how long the 2-10-10-2's were used, but I am under the impression they were not used like the USRA 2-8-8-2's of other railroad.  They were not high horsepower locomotives and could not have sustained the amount of steam sufficient needed for any other service other than slow drag service.  The Virginian used the electrics also which probably cut short the life of these drag engines.   If you have the dates of their mainline service, I would appreciate the information.  Even the Virginian used the 2-8-8-2's in their road service.   Did ALCO build the 2-10-10-2's ??   I could not find any reference to them in my Baldwin books, which has the Triplex I referred to.

 The Triplex design was really a problem. The quote below is from the Norfork and Western Historical Society concerning the merged Viginian.   They were returned to Baldwin after the tests.

Steam Locomotives   

The Virginian was often in the forefront of steam locomotive development, particularly in the area of LARGE articulated locomotives. The most (in)famous was the class XA Baldwin Triplex. This was built expressly for pusher service up the Clark's Gap grade. Unfortunately, its appetite for steam exceeded the capacity of its boiler. It was returned to Baldwin after extensive field trials, and was rebuilt into two smaller locomotives.

.

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Friday, June 29, 2007 3:02 PM
 VAPEURCHAPELON wrote:
None of the real ones has been saved, and as others stated, the only H0scale model is a Japanese built brass one, but imported by CUSTOM BRASS. It is a very good model, but due to the era it has been produced some details have been omitted, and currently I add these, plus I would rework the drive line.

Custom Brass may very well have imported one of these but that must be a second offering then and I missed it in the dark; I am certain that Custom Brass came into being AFTER I first became acquainted with this engine which, I am sure, dated from the mid-60s.

I know when I first got in the hobby this LMB outfit was importing the Matt H. Shay; I did not initially realize that 2-10-10-2s and 2-8-8-8-2s were unique wheel arrangements; they sure looked impressive to this rookie model rail!

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Posted by tatans on Friday, June 29, 2007 4:01 PM
Cute, real cute !!
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Posted by Don Gibson on Friday, June 29, 2007 5:02 PM

THE SANTA FE 2-10-10-2 was made up from 2 900 class 2-10-2s. for their Arizona divde pull. 

The WHALEBACK TENDER was designed so this engine could be run backwards. It is doubtful the ATSF had turtables long enough to turn it.

Reputedly, this engine' suffered from insufficient boiler steam and limited top speed. They were all rebuilt back to 2-10-2s. The 'Whalebacks' were primarily attached to the new 1600 class rebuilds.

 

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Posted by andrechapelon on Friday, June 29, 2007 5:16 PM

The Virginian used the electrics also which probably cut short the life of these drag engines.   If you have the dates of their mainline service, I would appreciate the information. 

All of the Virginian AE 2-10-10-2 locos were built in 1918. Seven were scrapped in 1948, two in 1952 and the last, #805, was not cut up until May, 1958. They all had a service life of at least 30 years.

Source: "The Virginian Railway" by H. Reid, Kalmbach Publishing, 1970.

Andre

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Posted by dti406 on Friday, June 29, 2007 9:32 PM

 R. T. POTEET wrote:
 VAPEURCHAPELON wrote:
None of the real ones has been saved, and as others stated, the only H0scale model is a Japanese built brass one, but imported by CUSTOM BRASS. It is a very good model, but due to the era it has been produced some details have been omitted, and currently I add these, plus I would rework the drive line.

Custom Brass may very well have imported one of these but that must be a second offering then and I missed it in the dark; I am certain that Custom Brass came into being AFTER I first became acquainted with this engine which, I am sure, dated from the mid-60s.

I know when I first got in the hobby this LMB outfit was importing the Matt H. Shay; I did not initially realize that 2-10-10-2s and 2-8-8-8-2s were unique wheel arrangements; they sure looked impressive to this rookie model rail!

 

I checked my Brown Book and the only Virginian 2-10-10-2's were the 200 imported by Custom Brass in 1979. LMB did import the Erie Triplex but not the Virginian one, that was imported by both PSC and WMC.

 

Rick 

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Posted by asta on Friday, June 29, 2007 10:57 PM

so are these engines are alot bigger the the 4-8-8-4?

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Posted by Morpar on Friday, June 29, 2007 11:38 PM
Bigger than the 4-8-8-4, no. They had more drive wheels, but they were a smaller diameter, as were the boilers. They were NEVER built for speed, but for dragging coal trains out of the mountains. Remember, these locos were compound Mallets, (meaning the steam got used twice, so it didn't need a huge boiler) and the low pressure cylinders were four feet in diameter! The thrust loads on something that size are huge, and to go very fast (I understand they were limited to 15 mph) would have made the loco self-destruct. MR had plans for them in the August 1967 issue, and the drawings show that they were a compact loco for the number of wheels. The same can be said of the N&W 2-8-8-2 locos, none of them had a big boiler, they were about the size of the ones used on the 4-8-4s. But again, the N&W wasn't looking for high speed in these locos, but an efficient mountain killer that could bring the coal to the loading docks. The needs of these roads were greatly different than for the UP with it's longer, constant grade runs through the west.

Good Luck, Morpar

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Posted by VAPEURCHAPELON on Saturday, June 30, 2007 5:37 AM

 Morpar wrote:
Bigger than the 4-8-8-4, no. They had more drive wheels, but they were a smaller diameter, as were the boilers.

Not true. The boiler of those VIRGINIAN beasts had a FAR GREATER diameter - thus having BY FAR the greatest heating surface. Only the grate area was a bit smaller, but this was never an issue because the coal they used was better than on UP. I had the opportunity to compare that model directly with a 4-8-8-4 - and aside from the somewhat shorter length it looks much bigger than the Big Boy - both higher and broader.

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Posted by Virginian on Saturday, June 30, 2007 10:25 AM

What the Virginian was trying to accomplish with their 2-10-10-2s, N&W with their 2-8-8-2s, and UP with their 4-8-8-4s, were different tasks.  If success is measured by service length, I think N&W wins hands down, but I don't think it's quite that simple.  While I am not a huge Big Boy fan (I doubt I'll be missed in the stampede), I do believe it was an emminently successful design; it was highly suited to it's task, and the Challenger did okay too.  N&W's freight loco's, the As and Ys, were in my opinion the very best out there at their jobs; N&W specialized in getting more from less, size wise.  C&O and VGN kinda stumbled with their 2-6-6-6s in my opinion - barely matching the capabilities of a Class A in any category but horsepower, at the cost of thousands and thousands of pounds of more weight.  They won the last horsepower war of the steam era, to what end I am not sure.  UP got the "biggest" glory, true or not, and N&W emerged as the legend of steam for all time.

Technology has progressed at a faster and faster pace as mankind has developed tools to help this evolution along.  The trend had already begun by the time the Big Boys and Y6bs arrived on the scene.  The last Js only served 9 years, and they are as fine a steam passenger engine as was ever built.

In our society, it matters not what product or service a company renders; only whether or not it makes money, and manages to keep it's name out of the mud.  On that basis, history should score the N&W, Virginian, and UP fairly highly I would think.

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Saturday, June 30, 2007 2:25 PM
 dti406 wrote:
I checked my Brown Book and the only Virginian 2-10-10-2's were the 200 imported by Custom Brass in 1979. LMB did import the Erie Triplex but not the Virginian one, that was imported by both PSC and WMC.
Rick

I know the Brown Book to be incredibly accurate so if it does not give recognition to any 2-10-10-2s except for the Custom Brass import then I, undoubtedly, have been laboring in a delusion.  I do remember being exposed to this particularly unique - and  extremely rare - wheel arrangement early in my model railroading experience: I thought for sure that it was through a model import but I appear to have been incorrect in this circumstance and I apologize to the readership for advancing misinformation. Perhaps my knowledge of this locomotive came from rhetoric in one of the model railroad magazines; whatever might be the case I am glad that this issue has been clarified by those with more knowledge than mine.

As a clarification on a somewhat related issue involving triplex wheel arrangements I believe that the Virginian triplex was a 2-8-8-8-4 wheel arrangement whereas the Erie triplex was a 2-8-8-8-2. I do remember a writer somewhere stating that the Virginian triplex succeeded in running out of steam before running out of yard limits! Having just stumbled in my facts I am advancing this information as a "I think" possibility which, admittedly, may be incorrect.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Saturday, June 30, 2007 2:47 PM

 R. T. POTEET wrote:
 dti406 wrote:
I checked my Brown Book and the only Virginian 2-10-10-2's were the 200 imported by Custom Brass in 1979. LMB did import the Erie Triplex but not the Virginian one, that was imported by both PSC and WMC.
Rick

I know the Brown Book to be incredibly accurate so if it does not give recognition to any 2-10-10-2s except for the Custom Brass import then I, undoubtedly, have been laboring in a delusion.  I do remember being exposed to this particularly unique - and  extremely rare - wheel arrangement early in my model railroading experience: I thought for sure that it was through a model import but I appear to have been incorrect in this circumstance and I apologize to the readership for advancing misinformation. Perhaps my knowledge of this locomotive came from rhetoric in one of the model railroad magazines; whatever might be the case I am glad that this issue has been clarified by those with more knowledge than mine.

As a clarification on a somewhat related issue involving triplex wheel arrangements I believe that the Virginian triplex was a 2-8-8-8-4 wheel arrangement whereas the Erie triplex was a 2-8-8-8-2. I do remember a writer somewhere stating that the Virginian triplex succeeded in running out of steam before running out of yard limits! Having just stumbled in my facts I am advancing this information as a "I think" possibility which, admittedly, may be incorrect.

The Virginian was indeed a 2-8-8-8-4, where the Erie in the book is a 2-8-8-8-2 and was a compound locomotive.  Both looked somewhat alike since both were built by Baldwin.  It is an interesting locomotive since the tender is very small sitting on top of what looks like a 2-8-0.   

The book (Locomotives that Baldwin Built ) has a picture of the Viginian #700 on page 122.  It was built in 1916 as a simple engine, not compound and after a short time in testing was returned to Baldwin.  It is somewhat an odd looking engine and was very large for a 1916 era, but the boiler looks to have less steam capacity than a modern 4-8-4 like the Santa Fe 2900 class.  They were built for pusher service, but were not able to furnish steam for all six simple cylinders according to articles.

The book also has pictures of the Erie Triplex on page 121 and 124.

 Steam Locomotives   

The Virginian was often in the forefront of steam locomotive development, particularly in the area of LARGE articulated locomotives. The most (in)famous was the class XA Baldwin Triplex. This was built expressly for pusher service up the Clark's Gap grade. Unfortunately, its appetite for steam exceeded the capacity of its boiler. It was returned to Baldwin after extensive field trials, and was rebuilt into two smaller locomotives.

 

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Saturday, June 30, 2007 3:44 PM
 CAZEPHYR wrote:
The Virginian was indeed a 2-8-8-8-4, where the Erie in the book is a 2-8-8-8-2 and was a compound locomotive.  Both looked somewhat alike since both were built by Baldwin.  It is an interesting locomotive since the tender is very small sitting on top of what looks like a 2-8-0.   

The book (Locomotives that Baldwin Built ) has a picture of the Viginian #700 on page 122.  It was built in 1916 as a simple engine, not compound and after a short time in testing was returned to Baldwin.  It is somewhat an odd looking engine and was very large for a 1916 era, but the boiler looks to have less steam capacity than a modern 4-8-4 like the Santa Fe 2900 class.  They were built for pusher service, but were not able to furnish steam for all six simple cylinders according to articles.

The book also has pictures of the Erie Triplex on page 121 and 124.

 Steam Locomotives   

The Virginian was often in the forefront of steam locomotive development, particularly in the area of LARGE articulated locomotives. The most (in)famous was the class XA Baldwin Triplex. This was built expressly for pusher service up the Clark's Gap grade. Unfortunately, its appetite for steam exceeded the capacity of its boiler. It was returned to Baldwin after extensive field trials, and was rebuilt into two smaller locomotives.


After I had posted my 12:25 PM response to this topic I decided to Google triplex locomotives and confirmed that the information I had provided in my last cited paragraph was, indeed, correct.  I also looked in the index of my Kalmbach Guide to North American Steam Locomotives and, wallah! there was an entry for - are you ready for this? - triplex locomotives; I have no idea why I even buy these books if I'm not going to use them.

It appears that Virginian was, indeed, at the forefront of steam locomotive experimentation; their 2-8-8-8-4 made a statement about what the technology of the day would not allow. In that regard it was not the salient failure which one might suppose. Furthermore, it appears as if their 2-8-8-2s were on a par with N&Ws famous 'y's. Beyond some reading about their electrification program I have not followed this railroad closely; this topic has, however, whetted my appetite to learn more about their steam locomotive program.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Saturday, June 30, 2007 9:21 PM

 

 

I found a web page with the same pictures as the Baldwin book.

 

http://www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/MUSEUM/LOCOLOCO/triplex/triplex.htm

 

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Posted by asta on Saturday, June 30, 2007 9:52 PM
would it be possible to scrach build one of these 2-10-10-2's or the triplex? thses are interesting engines and i think they would be a great eye catcher on my layout
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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Saturday, June 30, 2007 10:46 PM

 asta wrote:
would it be possible to scrach build one of these 2-10-10-2's or the triplex? thses are interesting engines and i think they would be a great eye catcher on my layout

asta

Depending on your skills, you could start with a USRA 2-8-8-2 or Rivarossi 2-8-8-2 and add the  0-8-0 chassis under a cut down tender.  It would be an eye catcher for sure.  The most obvious problem with the Triplex is the second engine is almost under the cab, which eliminates the deep firebox area.  This is one reason they did not steam well.   It would require a lot of cutting and who knows, if you are good at kit bashing, post a picture.

Cheers

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Posted by asta on Sunday, July 1, 2007 9:10 PM
my skills are not really that good... mainly at trying to figure out the scale size and getting it historically correct... i can build box cars and other eazy stuff but nothing complexe as this
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Posted by Virginian on Sunday, July 1, 2007 10:07 PM

The VGN Triplex was rebuilt into a 2-8-8-0 and a 2-8-2.  One reason some of their 2-8-8-2s looked like N&Ws is that they were third hand N&Ws.  The rest were similar to the USRA engines and N&W Y-2s, from which the USRAs were developed.  The Triplex was a compound engine, with the center engine feeding the front and rear engines (one off each cylinder).

The 800s were about the limit of Virginians successful trailblazing developmental steam engine activities.  For the most part, they stuck to tried and true technology.  They did know how to make money very well.

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Posted by asta on Monday, July 2, 2007 10:13 AM
as the third set of drive wheels is ther a place that i can go to and buy a drive mechanism and then somehow add it to the usra 2-8-8-2?
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Posted by VAPEURCHAPELON on Monday, July 2, 2007 10:38 AM

 asta wrote:
as the third set of drive wheels is ther a place that i can go to and buy a drive mechanism and then somehow add it to the usra 2-8-8-2?

This would indeed be a nice project, but at first I would say you need two USRA 2-8-8-2s, from the second one you need the front drive mechanism because the tender drive and the front drive of the triplex were identical to the best of my knowledge (or at least almost identical with hard to tell differences), but second the boiler would not be fat enough to look prototypically aside from the fact that many details would have to be changed. The tender body would have to be completely scratch built.

I think you would be more happy to save some money for future and look for a brass model. Yes probably expensive, but these special models retain their value, plus the detail and proportions ARE prototypical. If you could find an older one which is cheaper than the later ones you can add some omitted details like cab deck apron, or brake rods, and this is fun!

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Posted by dinwitty on Monday, July 2, 2007 11:15 AM

I think the question was to build a 2-10-10-2

 Bowser has a 2-10-2 but its wheel diameters might be too big.

Someone made a VGN triplex using mantua mechanisms and scratching the rest, recently a model of the month award in MR I think.

This is why I wish some of these model makers didnt go outa business because the posssibilites of bashing is great to do these things.

Prolly the best current example of lokies I wouldnt be afraid to bash around on  are the IHC engines. They arent always correct for the prototype they throw a roadname on so whadaheck...  Most stories I hear tho is they run fairly well.

I am looking into bashing a never built HOn3 2-8-8-2.

 

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