Flintlock76 You're very welcome! And I'll tell you, if your YouTube displays like mine does on the right-hand side of the screen there's probably the follow-up previews to the video I posted. When time permits I'm going to have a lot of fun watching them!
You're very welcome! And I'll tell you, if your YouTube displays like mine does on the right-hand side of the screen there's probably the follow-up previews to the video I posted. When time permits I'm going to have a lot of fun watching them!
I watched all four - worth the time. And center cabs (including WAGs Ford GE's) made several appearances.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Flintlock76 I found a video with some all-too-brief shots of some centercabs, but the rest of the vid's pretty darn interesting in it's own right. Steam and first-generation diesels. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krfzeNv4T78
I found a video with some all-too-brief shots of some centercabs, but the rest of the vid's pretty darn interesting in it's own right. Steam and first-generation diesels.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krfzeNv4T78
I really enjoyed that video. Thanks.
Very nice... so much lost. Too much.
I inadvertantly revived this ancient thread, because a young lady commenting on a YouTube video of the DSS&A in Upper Michigan, had been under the impression that her grandfather's C&EI was the only railroad to have such engines. But it's fascinating to learn more about them!
CSSHEGEWISCHThe Ford/WAG locomotives were closer in size to large industrial switchers than a Baldwin or Lima centercab.
But much, much bigger (both in actual and apparent size) than most of the industrial centercabs built. 132 tons is appreciable -- I know it is a bit specious to compare this with a Charger or Genesis locomotive, but it's getting into that weight range. These were NOT little locomotives. (Think of it as three 44-tonners for perspective...)
As an aside: it felt almost like seeing an old friend to encounter a couple of the 'Ford-replacement' F units from the WA&G operating in Arkansas -- one guy even painted his mailbox to match them.
Trona Railway ran their Baldwin center cabs until 1993... Rail classics had a good article on them sometime in the mid 70s. along with a centerfold photo which I liked so much I framed it and hung it in my room.
The Ford/WAG locomotives were closer in size to large industrial switchers than a Baldwin or Lima centercab.
There is quite a history with these centercab designs. EMC was involved briefly with them early on (for Illinois Central) but rapidly diverged into producing 'cow-calf' locomotives (like a center-cab with a coupling between one end of the cab and the adjacent hood) which were like switcher bodies on FT running gear. These TR units were drawbarred, and built prewar.
Postwar of course EMD had a whole series of TR units, usually with switcher-size units (and developing additional horsepower by adding multiple units: a cow with two 'calves' being called a 'herd', at least by railfans.) Someone more alert than me will know when it became expedient to have these coupled in MU rather than semipermanently joined...
This approach gave flexibility, but incurred the cost of four trucks instead of two for the centercabs, so you see the Baldwin approach initially sold to a surprisingly large number of roads. Of course by the time the 600A series was refined into production and Baldwin had supposedly eliminated the worst of its reliability quirks, no one was buying the 'new' version but PRR... and they only briefly.
There were some large centercabs not built by major builders; see the units built for Ford that ran so long on the WA&G.
The definitive 'cure' for the big centercabs was the introduction of second-generation road-switcher power, which could do with one engine and nominally better visibility what previously called for two. By the time large two-engined power became 'desirable' again, for other reasons than transfer effectiveness, it would be in different carbodies with a decidedly different machinery layout. (Practically speaking, perhaps starting with these.
AnonymousBaldwing Center Cabs. Does anyone know the reason for it's downfall? Having the cab in the middle seems like a good idea. Would this concept be practical today or is this just one of those rare and unique engines ever built?
The Baldwin engines were actually two engines put together with the cab in the middle of the two. They had (at least for the 1940's) a huge amount of power, so were often used as transfer engines slowly moving long cuts of freight cars from one yard to another railroad's yard a few miles away.
Besides the extra power involved, there were union issues at that time. Most railroad contracts said a locomotive had to have an engineer and a fireman. The unions said this meant if you ran two diesels m.u.'ed together, you still had to have two employees per engine. By making two normal locomotives into one huge one, the railroads could say it was only one locomotive so only required one crew. Those issues were resolved by about 1950. (BTW that's also why so many early F-units came with drawbars instead of couplers between them, and were numbered by the railroads as sections of the same locomotive, like an A-B-A set numbered 303A-303B-303C.)
Parade O' Baldwins, anyone?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y3EMPlD7h0
Need a little more correction. There is no DT-6-6-3000; it's a DT-6-6-2000. You were right as you had it in your earlier post.
Theoretically a 3000hp transfer unit could have been built with the early Sharknose DR-4-4-1500 engines, or a 3200hp unit with the engines in the RF16s. But there was no demand for anything with that power on six axles at the time, and of course the whole humongous-double-engined centercab market did not develop much further.
I stand corrected. The surviving Baldwin Center Cab at the Illinois museum is a DT 6-6-3000
Overmod Hey, I know what, let's see what that sounds like, too... https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=TSCBNylPbZA
Hey, I know what, let's see what that sounds like, too...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=TSCBNylPbZA
Mom - I invited some guys over for Memorial Day and the tore up the front yard.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
EuclidRunning wide open up a grade, they sounded like a Caterpillar D8 pushing gravel in a pit.
I'm frankly ashamed that you would miss the obvious so badly, and not point out that they sounded like a pair of Euclid TC-12s.
(Of course there were three examples of a "TC-12" competitor made with D-8s, and now a replica...)
My investigation after posting finds the the RT-624 was an improved version of the DT-6-6-2000. One RT-624 survives at the Illinois Railroad Museum, in operating condition.
Minneapolis Northfield & Southern Ry. used them.
http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=399082
For a time circa 1964, MN&S double headed them on their trains. Running wide open up a grade, they sounded like a Caterpillar D8 pushing gravel in a pit.
This HAS to be a record for necro thread revival.
Interestingly enough, PRR had only one kind of center-cab Baldwin (RT-624; BS24m) although there are expensive painted models of the earlier DT-6-6-2000 in PRR paint. You'll see references to "DT-6-6-2400" but the road numbers map to Limas...
PRR also had 22 Lima centercabs (at 2500hp) and I suspect there are some out there who mistake them for 'earlier' Baldwins. See Allen Hazen, Will Davis et al. on the various series here.
I saw in two videos these center cab units operating on the Pennsy. Yet, the PRR is not listed as an original buyer. Did Baldwin make more than one model of the center cab transfer units?
Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks he needs more of it than he already has.
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