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Madam queen

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Madam queen
Posted by thomas81z on Saturday, May 28, 2016 7:28 PM

Is santa fe #5000 being restored to Operational status or just cosmetic??

I have been to thier FB page & thier website ,nothing is really being discussed or stated.Anyone have any insider news??

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Tuesday, May 31, 2016 7:19 AM

Since Santa Fe's second 2-10-4 has been retired and on display since the late 1950's, I'm sure that only a cosmetic restoration is being planned.

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Posted by kgbw49 on Tuesday, May 31, 2016 6:04 PM

AT&SF's first 2-10-4 - a 3800 class 2-10-2 with an experimental 4 wheel trailing truck...63 inch drivers...

A close cousin - 3800 class 2-10-2 with standard 2 wheel trailing truck...63 inch drivers...

Madame Queen - AT&SF's second 2-10-4...69 inch drivers...

5001 class 2-10-4...74 inch drivers - as high or higher as found on many dual service 4-8-2 and 4-8-4 locomotives...

5003 on tonnage...

AT&SF 5011 class 2-10-4...74 inch drivers...

5033 on tonnage...

5023 on varnish...

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Tuesday, May 31, 2016 6:22 PM
I got this from a retired ATSF engineer that retired in 1989 he lives near me he started at the end of steam. He told me that the 5011's where used a lot on the troop trains according to the old hands he trained from. They could get those over the rails as fast as the 3460 class and did not need helpers over Raton pass at all with up to 30 cars behind them.
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Posted by thomas81z on Tuesday, May 31, 2016 8:09 PM

i talked to the 5000 group on FB

turns out they want to restore it to Operational status. They are working with amarrillo to make ot happen 

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Posted by Dr D on Monday, June 6, 2016 3:20 PM

"MADAME QUEEN"

The AT&SF 5000 was a unique engine unlike any of her sister locomotives.  The name given to her hides a significant story.

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The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad adoped 5 coupled axle steam power for freight railroad service in early 1902, choosing to use the 5 axle approach for their 2-10-0 tandem- compound "Decapod" series of freight engines.  Difficulty in running these engines backwards caused the railroad to rethink is freight locomotive design and choose instead to go with the 2-10-2 "Santa Fe" type engine in 1903. 

A total of 160 of these  2-10-2 engines were built between 1903 and 1906.  The last of these 2-10-2 "tandem-compound" locomotives was altered, however, to "simple" or "single expansion" construction.  It was also modified to include the newly developing concept in steam locomotive technology - the use of the high efficiency and high power locomotive "superheater."  Changes that showed the things that were to come.

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Between 1912 and 1913 a new 2-10-2 engine design was built with the addition of 32 locomotives featuring the "single expansion cylinders" and "type A superheaters" envisioned in 1906. 

By 1918 another completely new re-design of the 2-10-2 "Santa Fe" type engines was in the works, to be called the 3800 Class locomotive.  Constructed after the First World War from 1919 thru 1927 a total of 141 of this 3800 Class 2-10-2 locomotive was built. 

Of these engines, in 1919 was one experimentally altered locomotive - ATSF 3829 - was constructed with a 4 wheel trailer truck.  The first 2-10-4 locomotive to be built in the United States. 

The ATSF 3800 Class locomotives featured 30x32 inch cylinders and 63 inch driving wheels.  Boiler pressure increase from 195 psi to 210 psi and then finally to 220 psi.  Tractive effort rose to 85,360 pounds.  The 3800 class burned either coal or oil also according to the district in which they were assigned to operate.

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Although the Santa Fe had built the first locomotive in America of the 2-10-4 locomotive designation it was not for them to be given credit for naming this NEW TYPE of engine.  Designation for their experimental 3800 class engine they still considered a "Santa Fe 2-10-2" even though it was a 2-10-4. 

Rather, the naming of this new 2-10-4 type of locomotive would be done by the LIMA locomotive in 1925 for the construction of one of their new "super power" locomotives - T&P 600 - built for the Texas and Pacific Railroad, thereafter naming the 2-10-4 type engine for that railroad - as the "Texas" type locomotive.

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The AT&SF, however, continued to develop the 2-10-4 type "Texas" design and in 1930 ordered only one experimental design 5000 Class locomotive.  ATSF 5000 which was built with 69 inch driving wheels and developed 93,000 lbs of tractive effort.  The locomotive also featured 300 psi boiler pressure and for this and other reasons attracted considerable attention the least of which was its remarkably high horsepower and its speed and high freight capacity. 

Because of this unique high performance nature and the "one off" nature of its construction - it was the only locomotive - the ATSF 5000 was given the name MADAME QUEEN by railroad workers for its remarkable performance and undoubtedly its special roundhouse queen nature.  Being the only locomotive of its type it required all the roundhouse repairs to be of a unique and special in nature. 

AT&SF 5000 would hold this "one off" unique designation until the waining days of the Great Depression when the railroad would in 1939 almost 10 years afterwards begin the development of the new 5001 Class locomotives - truely super powerful and phenominaly performing freight engines - in a new class by themselves to become famous on the Santa Fe Railroad as well as in American Railroad history. 

Indeed, there were none bigger and none were better than the 5,500 horserpower AT&SF "Texas" freight type steam locomotives.  And MADAME QUEEN remained alone as the only 5000 Class engine - and she stood alone as the most powerful locomotive of her "Texas" type on the Santa Fe for almost 10 years.  

MADAME QUEEN her name speaks for itself - and her long life - she ran over 1,700,000 miles when there was no other engine like her and became unique and famous among the many locomotives that ran the Santa Fe trail in the days of stream.

Amarillo, Texas is lucky to have her - a "Texas" type locomotive developed from the "Santa Fe" type locomotive by the Santa Fe Railroad - this is ATSF 5000, the MADAM QUEEN.

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Doc  

   

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Posted by Overmod on Monday, June 6, 2016 10:49 PM

Dr D
Because of this unique high performance nature and the "one off" nature of its construction - it was the only locomotive - the ATSF 5000 was given the name MADAME QUEEN by railroad workers for its remarkable performance and undoubtedly its special roundhouse queen nature. Being the only locomotive of its type it required all the roundhouse repairs to be of a unique and special in nature.

Some of that may apply, but I suspect ATSF people will confirm they called her that because of a radio-show character -- not a politically correct one by today's standard.  Madam(e) Queen was a character on the Amos 'n Andy show... this is similar to what happened with the original Aeolus ('king of the winds') locomotive 4000 on the Burlington -- which was irreverently called "Big Alice the Goon" after the Thimble Theater (Popeye) character.  (Railroaders cannot be expected to pronounce Greek accurately.)

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Posted by M636C on Monday, June 6, 2016 10:57 PM

I recall reading that the high mounted Elesco feed water heater, unusual on ATSF locomotives at the time, reminded someone of a show character named "Madam Queen" who wore her hair in a roll (or bouffant) at the front, otherwise as posted above.

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Posted by Dr D on Tuesday, June 7, 2016 2:53 AM

WHY WAS MADAME QUEEN THE ONLY ONE?

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ATSF 5000 was the only engine in its class - why?  The Santa Fe Railroad had the tradition of building one "pathfinder locomotive" when planning engine design for future needs.  We can see this in the early 2-10-2 locomotive development of 1906 when the last engine of an order of 160 "tandem-compound saturated steam" engines was built as a "single expansion superheated engine."  Likewise, in 1919 an order was placed for 140 additional 2-10-2 locomotives of the 3800 Series class locomotives to be produced thru the year 1927.  One of these 3800 Series 2-10-2 locomotives was built as a 2-10-4 and so remained through out its service life.  Apparently satisfied with this 1919 version of the 2-10-4 design the railroad in 1930 after 11 years of development went ahead with another "one off" 2-10-4 of grand proportions - the ATSF 5000 MADAME QUEEN.

But what did all this lead up to - one experimental 2-10-4 of the 3800 Class and one experimental 2-10-4 of the 5000 Class?  These engines constitute over twenty years of "one off" experimental design work.  The first engine built in 1919 and the second in 1930.

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An order of 10 mammoth 2-10-4 freight engines in 1939 of the 5001 Class, and a second order made during the Second World War of an additional 25 engines of the 5011 Class.  This last group would go down as the "truely ultimate MASSIVE SANTA FE POWER."  So well liked were these big 2-10-4 engines, that Santa Fe could not bring itself to scrap them all.

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Yes, like the UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD with its massive BIG BOY 4-8-8-4 locomotives the railroad saved almost 20% of these engines from scrap, so also did SANTA FE save 5 locomotives out of the 36 engines that it built.  These 5 historic engines are still with us today - for an almost equal 20% of the engines saved just as Union Pacific also did.

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However, unlike the UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD, the SANTA FE had a different and early bad experience with its 2-6-6-2 articulated steam power in the form of 65 locomotives both of rigid and of hinged boiler construction compound engines called "Prairie Mallets.  In the 1930's Santa Fe abandoned all these articulated engines never to return to articulated engine construction insisting instead on massive rigid frame freight locomotives of truely gigantic proportions.  These new 2-10-4 locomotives were the 36 engines of the 5000 - 5001 and 5011 classes. 

UNION PACIFIC on the other hand went from its massive one piece rigid frame 4-12-2 freight locomotives of the 9000 Class, to hundreds of articulated steam locomotives of the 4-6-6-4 Challenger and 4-8-8-4 Big Boy classes.

Union Pacific was lothe to rid itself of its final steam power and kept UP 4023 on the property in Cheyenne, Wyoming for decades, and owing to its own mismanagment replaced this kept engine with UP 4014. 

Santa Fe was also lothe to rid itself of its final steam power and kept ATSF 5021 on the property at Belen, New Mexico for decades and owing to its merger with Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad into the BNSF donated this kept engine to the California State Railroad Museum in equally mint condition. 

The two railroad went in exactly diverging directions on steam locomotive development.  And interestingly, of the two engines - UP 4-8-8-4 "Big Boy" and the ATSF 2-10-4 "Texas" each represented almost equal development in railroad freight power with both designs capable of passenger train work, and able to achieve speeds of over 70 mph.  Both engine designs developing near 6000 horsepower respectively.

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So what was a Santa Fe 2-10-4 5000 series engine really all about?  Here are a few specifications concerning the surviving ATSF 5011 class locomotives.  

MADAME QUEEN was built on 69" drive wheels common to duel service freight and passenger power of that time - newer engines increased this drive wheel diameter to 74" for the 5001 and 5011 class - a wheel diameter size common to many other railroad passenger power size.  

Boiler pressure for MADAME QUEEN was raised from 300 psi to 310 psi for the later 5001-5011 series engines.  Such steam pressures were about the maximum practical for American locomotives and provided inherent efficiency and economy.  In comparrison, The New York Central for its famous passenger fleet used between 225 psi and 275 psi as working boiler pressures.

One piece engine beds built as solid steel castings from General Steel Castings ment that the locomotive frames were made of solid steel.  In the case of the ATSF 5000-5001-5011 engines these frames were among the largest locomotive steel castings ever constructed for railroad use.  Engine cylinders with their backheads were cast into the frames, as were pedestals for mounting most of the locomotive appliances.  These steel castings were near 62 feet long and weighed over 87,000 lbs.

Drive wheels were Baldwin Disc design and the locomotive axles were carbon steel forgings with center holes bored through the axle 5" in diameter.  The drive wheel crankpins were Nickel chrome steel on the 3rd and 4th wheel sets.  Crankpins for the 1st, 2nd, and 5th drive wheel sets were made from carbon steel which was quenched and tempered in manufacture.  The 5000 and 5001 Class engines ran on "bronze friction bearing" axles but the 5011 Class engines were built with "frictonless roller bearing sets" on all engine and tender axles.  This required really precision construction to hold the fine tolerances in "thousands of the inch" necessary for roller bearings usage across 60 feet of engine frame construction.

All of the ATSF 5000-5001-5011 Class engines used Walschaerts valve gear with 15" diameter piston valves.  The engines were also equipped with "bypass valves" allowing no compresson braking of the locomotive cylinders to happen when the engine throttle was closed.  Steam Cutoff was set for 60% of the piston stroke.  These engines also used all bronze friction bushing constructrion in the piston rod and side rod bearings.  Here Santa Fe like Union Pacific demured from the roller bearing setups common to truely state of the art construction.  Locomotive side rods were also of light weight alloy tandem rod design using two parallel side rod sets between the center drive wheels.  Further, for high speed running 40% of the reciprocating weight was balanced and the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th drive wheel sets were also cross balanced from side to side - this was an indication the locomotives were built for truely high speed working.

Engines 5001 - 5010 were built as coal burning locomotives while engines 5011 - 5036 were oil fired.  These first 10 engines were later converted to oil by the railroad using 3 1/8 inch Booth burners with cast steel draft pans. 

The original locomotive boilers were built from Nickel Steel construction which is highly resistant to water and acid corrosion.

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FIVE ATSF TEXAS LOCOMOTIVES REMAIN PRESERVED TODAY

Engine ATSF 5000 the "one off" design MADAM QUEEN is in Amarillo, Texas. 

Engine ATSF 5011 the "prototype" for the final class is in the Museum of Transportation, St Louis, MO. 

Engine ATSF 5017 is in the National Railroad Museum of Green Bay, WI.

Engine ATSF 5021 is North of the California State Railroad Museum Shop, Sacramento, CA. - this engine was kept by the railroad into the 1990's.

Engine ATSF 5030 is at Slavador Perez Park, Santa Fe, NM.

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These remaining ATSF 5000 series steam locomotives are among the truely great - the giant railroad steam engines left to America from the past - the best of the best.

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Tuesday, June 7, 2016 7:03 AM

I'm not absolutely sure of this, but I believe that the 5011 class (and the 2900 class) were ordered by Santa Fe only because of the inability to order additional FT's because of wartime restrictions.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, June 7, 2016 11:34 AM

Dr D
WHY WAS MADAME QUEEN THE ONLY ONE?

Principally because in the intervening years between her design and the later 2-10-4s a number of interesting design and detail evolutions took place.  By the time in the mid-to-late Thirties that lightweight rodwork would have made the Queen truly suitable for higher speed, the more sophisticated, much bigger, much faster 74"-drivered classes were 'where the money should go' for any further ten-coupled orders of any prospective use.

I don't think you can practically say that either the later 2-10-4s or the 2900 class 'wouldn't have been built' in favor of FTs.  That was certainly one point Brasher seemed to establish in his (fairly) recent book, but there is a bit more to the story, which I think is common to among other things the introduction of the PRR Q2s.

It is not a nit-picking point to establish that the "2900s" weren't a thing the ATSF would rather have gotten FTs for -- those, themselves, were the result of WBP production restrictions; the actual comparative target would be more 3765 or 3776 class engines.  The 'catch', of course, was that the increased wartime traffic combined with hard restrictions on high production of EMD or any other practical diesel-electric road power would have called for more big high-horsepower and high-speed steam.  Wartime conditions were tailor-made for very long trains, run at high speed with idealized meet and yarding conditions, with guaranteed high tonnage.  Here is where the somewhat strange-looking construction of multiple divided-drive locomotives of massive horsepower (in fact, so high a horsepower that achievable water rate limited the range even with enormous tender cistern capacity) that made best power more than 10mph over PRR's own freight speed restriction made sense.  Remember that when the Q2s were greenlighted and built, there was no prospective end to the war.  Turning to ATSF, even as late as 1945 as the fight shifted to the Pacific theater (and, of course, a radically-increasing use of ATSF for both men and equipment and for freight and supplies) the assumption was that there would be a million-man assault on the home islands fought to the last bamboo stick.  Even with all the FTs EMD could produce at wartime capacity level (and assuming no strategic-material restrictions or mandated limitations on production range or type either for EMD or other builders) there was going to be a need for both Big Three 2-10-4s and 4-8-4s, and perhaps more of them until the job was done.  (And I am not sure that there wasn't at least a little tunnel vision on what would actually be done with the heavy power after the conflict had ended...)

In any of this -- in fact, on a practical ATSF 'transcon' service after the mid-Thirties -- there was no place for a 1927 design not optimized for the particular expediencies of the required service.  And this was increasingly so after the war, even more particularly and pointedly demonstrated in dieselization.  Even a highly-superior design that addressed ATSF's primary issue -- water rate for expensively-treated supply -- namely the poppet-valve application to 3752, was ineffective by the time it finally came along and got debugged.

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Posted by Dr D on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 10:48 AM

THE FATE OF ATSF 5021 -

Santa Fe, like Union Pacific for corporate purpose saved several of its historic steam locomotives.  Saved in Cheyene, Wyoming were Challenger UP 3895 and Big Boy 4023 both low milage engines in excellent condition.  Also saved and continuiously used were passenger Northern UP 844.  Engines kept indoors and away from the theft and vandalism common to most surviving steam.  For almost 50 years these engines were preserved in this way representing the best of what could be kept.

Santa Fe also participated in a similar corporate historic preservation effort by keeping "Northern" ATSF 2925 and "Texas" ATSF 5021 indoors moving them once a year to keep their roller bearing drive train from freezing up.

Either the proposed corporate merger with Southern Pacific or the actual corporate merger involving the Santa Fe with Great Northern and Burlington to form BNSF caused the railroad to, without much thought, seek a location to donate these two engines which after 50 years were forced from their protected home to outdoor industrial storage. 

For the first time they were stripped of their collectable parts for protection from theft and painted primer red.  These fantastic locomotives were given without much thought concerning their fate to the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, CA.  Here without proper care and facility for restoration they have been forced to languish and be vandalized for years in the elements of a fairly rainy climate.

Among the best preserved of the ATSF 5000 locomotives what will be the fate of the prize of the company - ATSF 5021?

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California - hell of a great place!

Doc

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Posted by kgbw49 on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 5:20 PM

Best preserved of the ex-ATSF 2-10-4s might now fall to 5017, indoors at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay, WI.

While it is not a 2-10-4, at least 2926 down in New Mexico should soon be able to show us what a 1940s state-of-the-art, big-barreled Baldwin can do.

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Posted by Firelock76 on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 6:50 PM

I'm sure that big-barreled Baldwin will do VERY well when it hits the road.

Not as well as something from Roanoke mind you, but pretty well indeed! :-)

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 7:33 PM

Dr D
For the first time they were stripped of their collectable parts for protection from theft and painted primer red. These fantastic locomotives were given without much thought concerning their fate to the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, CA. Here without proper care and facility for restoration they have been forced to languish and be vandalized for years in the elements of a fairly rainy climate.

While this was a miserable situation indeed, it has been recently reported in RyPN that added effort has been put into protecting and perhaps 'cocooning' these locomotives until a better home can be found for display.

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Posted by Dr D on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 7:40 PM

WHAT? - ANOTHER MADAME QUEEN!

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Trains Magazine, February 1950 - page 12 - YES!

David P Morgan titled "TRAINS - The illustrated magazine about railroads."

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The February issue accounts stories of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and its experimental roundhouse queen three cylinder engine conversion to two cylinder poppet valve - MP 6001 affectionately named by the railroad MADAM QUEEN.

"North Little Rock Shops and the Franklin Railway Supply people took a hand in No. 6000's destiny in November, 1942.  Franklin was and is selling a new version of poppet valves that promise 16 per cent more horsepower at 40 miles per hour, almost 30 percent more at 88.  Mopac thought the plan had possibilities and selected the three-cylinder Pacific as a convenient test lab since it was obvious that the 6000 was a misfit for anything else on the railroad, excepting scrap.

Little Rock did a good job.  In place of three cylinders came just two, actuated by Franklin Type A poppets; oil replaced coal as fuel.  In addition the Mopac put the engine on roller bearings, modernized her with such equipment as an Elesco exhaust-steam injector and new rods, and gave her the number 6001 - otherwise known as MADAM QUEEN.

The QUEEN again fell down during the first three months of her rebuilt life - but after that the 6001 turned out to be the equal of an MP Mountain type.  Usually where a 4-6-2 of the 6001's weight was allowed 10 cars, a 4-8-2 could handle 14.  The QUEEN not only rearranged the tonnage-rating chart for her wheel arrangement but also ran off 102,000 miles in a 12 month period over the road's Arkansas and Memphis divisions.  Throughtout the duration of the war, when the Mopac shouldered its load with steam, the 6001 was reckoned to be a mighty valuable engine to have around the Ozarks." (p. 12-13 Rebuilt Pacific)

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Two MADAM QUEEN? - Way Out West? - LONG LIVE THE QUEEN!

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Doc 

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Posted by kgbw49 on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 10:42 PM

ATSF 5017 under cover at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay, WI...

ATSF 5000 Madam Queen in revenue service - doubleheading with what looks to be a 3800 class 2-10-2...

ATSF 5000 Madam Queen in revenue service broadside...

A robust Missouri Pacific Pacific - I could not find a picture of 6001 but this Pacific has the high-mounted Elesco feedwater heater like ATSF 5000...

Definitely not Madam Queen, but I came across this rebuilt MoPac Atlantic - pretty impressive for a rebuild of smaller power...

Missouri Pacific 4-8-2 Mountain - that 4-6-2 6001 must have really been souped up to match the performance of these large Mountains...

ATSF 2926 in revenue service - a big-barreled Baldwin comin' right at ya....

ATSF 2926 in proper working order on the West Coast...

Another ATSF 2900 class - 2903 hitting the water plug...

Another big-barreled 4-8-4 dressed in its wartime garb...for Firelock76...

Then one for The Bard of the High Iron - Dr. D - showing what Northeastern-Upper Midwestern sturm und drang is all about - wouldn't it be something to be in that right-hand seat...

 

 

 

 

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, June 9, 2016 7:22 AM

The disc drivers on MP 5508 look out of place, it looks like a 4-8-2 that had a center section of the boiler and frame removed.

MP 6001 (and others) showed how much of a difference that poppet valves could make in performance.

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, June 9, 2016 8:00 AM

kgbw49
- I could not find a picture of 6001 but this Pacific has the high-mounted Elesco feedwater heater like ATSF 5000...

6001 certainly didn't have a high-mounted Elesco heater after rebuilding, but she had something more exotic - an Elesco ES 'poor man's feedwater heater' ESI.  Here she is in North Little Rock in mid-1943.

 There is another Trains article, in late 1978 if I remember right, that covers this locomotive.

 

Definitely not Madam Queen, but I came across this rebuilt MoPac Atlantic - pretty impressive for a rebuild of smaller power...

That locomotive is more impressive than it looks -- I read something about it many years ago, and if I recall correctly it was intended to be a home-brewed version of high-speed power for light trains (following the general Hiawatha model for competing with motor trains, with lightweight rods, rebuilt steam passages, and a variety of other changes to modernize it.  If I'm not mistaken it also includes a booster to give it the equivalent of six-coupled starting adhesion and low-speed practical TE, like other Atlantics on (IIRC) SP and C&NW that could combine good starting characteristics with economical running.  (Wasn't there a mention in that book on 'trains of the '40s' that described one of the SP Atlantics successfully handling a main train with something like 21 cars? - that was the secret.)

It does look as if Karen Parker has been having some fun with more familiar Scullin-drivered power, doesn't it?

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Posted by Firelock76 on Thursday, June 9, 2016 7:08 PM

Thanks for the shot of that Class J, kgb!  Even if she's (eek!) nekkid!

Those N&W J's were awesome machines, even without the streamlining.

Great shot of that NYC Hudson as well, it looks to me like it's on the old Iona Island trestle near Bear Mountain NY on the West Shore Line, now CSX's River Subdivision.  And if you wanted to be in the right hand seat that'd be the place to be, the scenery's just gorgeous up there, although going south as the train seems to be the fireman's got the best view.

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Posted by rcdrye on Thursday, June 9, 2016 7:21 PM

MP's 6001 was the one with the "Puppy valves!" (from the 1978 Trains article)

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Posted by kgbw49 on Thursday, June 9, 2016 11:28 PM

The elusive Missouri Pacific 6001...

Missouri Pacific had some handsome engine classes.

Another one of those scrappy rebuilt Atlantics...

Standard valve MoPac Pacific - lots of plumbing but a good looking locomotive...

Another MoPac Mountain...

 A burly MoPac Mikado...

A warbaby MoPac 4-8-4 - same vintage as ATSF warbaby 5011 class 2-10-4s and 2900 class 4-8-4s...

Circling back around, a warbaby ATSF 4-8-4 for comparison...

A warbaby ATSF 2-10-4 for comparison...

Madam Queen on Raton Pass...a little grainy but a great picture (any conjecture as to the diesel model?)...

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by rcdrye on Friday, June 10, 2016 6:27 AM

The diesels are an EMC E1A/B set.  AT&SF had 8 E1A and 3 E1B units.  I don't think the "L" suffix was in use yet so the A/B sets were 2/2A, 3/3A and 4/4A with the others numbered 5-9.  Two 900HP 201-A engines per unit.  They were rebuilt into E8Ms in the early 1950s.  The three A/B sets were originally assigned to transcon trains, especially the Super Chief, with the others assigned variously to Golden Gate, San Diegan and Chicago-Kansas City-Tulsa trains.

The guts of the E1 were very similar to the original Super Chief diesels 1 and 1A, the main differences being in the carbody and the trucks.

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Posted by timz on Saturday, June 11, 2016 6:05 PM

The diesels in the last pic are E3s or E6s. E1s didn't have roof radiators.

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Posted by Overmod on Monday, June 13, 2016 6:55 AM

kgbw49
Madam Queen on Raton Pass...a little grainy but a great picture (any conjecture as to the diesel model?)...

 

Finescale 1:48 comparison of early ATSF E units.

The radiator openings in the roof of E3s are not as visible as on the E6.  Note that ATSF had only one E3 pair, so this would match the Madam Queen picture, right down to the 2 different-size horns, if that's what it is.

As a spotting feature, seems to me that the side number plate is in front of the rectangular window in the 'warbonnet' paint curve on the E3, but behind it on the E6.  Someone with a magnifying glass ... or a better version of the picture ... might be able to tell.

I'm thinking E6.

 

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Posted by kgbw49 on Monday, June 13, 2016 11:35 AM

Way cool! Thanks!

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Posted by JimValle on Monday, June 13, 2016 4:40 PM

Just a few comments on the operational history of the 5000's and 2900's.  Both were badly needed and heavily utilized when built.  The 2900's operated between Kansas City and Los Angeles via Raton Pass on crack passenger and mail and express trains.  They ran non-stop except of lineside servicing, more than 1,600 miles which was the longest run for any US steam power.  The 5000's, including Madame Queen were concentrated on he Belen Cut Off running between Clovis, NM and Belen over the Abo Canyon grade.  This was a major bottleneck on the Santa Fe's freight route to the West Coast and the 5000's were prized for their ability to haul the standard Santa Fe freight consist of 4000+ tons over the line quickly and without resorting to helpers.  After the War, Santa Fe dieselized rapidly and both classes of engines were held in reserve to handle seasonal perishable traffic.  They performed magnificently on the relatively flat territories between Clovis and Kansas City well into the 1950's.

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Posted by kgbw49 on Monday, June 13, 2016 8:38 PM

Madam Queen contemporaries from 1925 to 1930...

Texas & Pacific with 63 inch drivers...

 

Canadian Pacific with 63 inch drivers...

Chicago, Burlington & Quincy with 64 inch drivers...

Chicago Great Western with 63 inch drivers...

Bessemer & Lake Erie with 64 inch drivers...

Central Vermont with 60 inch drivers...

Cheaseapeake & Ohio with 69 inch drivers...

Madam Queen with 69 inch drivers...

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Posted by M636C on Monday, June 13, 2016 8:40 PM

kgbw49

 

Madam Queen on Raton Pass...a little grainy but a great picture (any conjecture as to the diesel model?)...

  

 

The photo is by Preston George on 19 May 1946.

The train is the Super Chief, the train locomotives are E6 type numbers 13L and 13A.

The photo appears on page 162 of J.B.McCall's "Early Diesel Daze".

M636C

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Posted by Dr D on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 1:02 PM

Overmod,

Absoluely love the Santa Fe covered wagon streamliner models - some serious Santa Fe diesel modeling here!

Kgbw49,

Regarding drive wheel diameter and its importance, if I remember right, one of the serious design problems with the first 2-10-4 Texas locomotives produced as LIMA SUPER POWER was the small drive wheel diameter built with the namesake Texas & Pacific 600 class engines.  Drive wheel balance was so bad that when the engines were run too fast they kinked miles of main line track from the bad dynamic augment of the imbalance in the small drive wheels.  For this reason a strict speed limit was placed on the engines.

The problem was addressed and solved with rebuilding of the T&P 600 series engines but never satisfactorily resolved until the larger 69" drive wheels were designed for the Chesapeake & Ohio 2-10-4 design.

I suspect the Canadian Pacific, Vermont Central, Burlington RR, Chicago & Northwestern, B&LE and other locomotives were also fairly low speed designs.

Chesapeake & Ohio T-1 class, as well as the AT&SF 5000 "Madam Queen" and subsequent classes all had the larger 69 inch drivers and the later 5001-5011 class engines had 74 inch Boxpok drivers with very advanced driver balance and light weight alloy side rod construction.  As such they were absolutely superior super power engines!

Lets not forget the "johnney come lately" design of the Pennsylvainia Railroad who in the midst of the wartime demands of heavy traffic had to go to the 2-10-4 Texas J class engines by borrowing the Chessie blueprints.  Almost direct coppies of the C&O T-1 including a non-Pennsy "radial stay" firebox the Pennsy produced an extremenly large fleet of over 125 of the 2-10-4 engines just before the end of steam!  Reports are the early Pennsy "Texas" engines had drive wheel balance problems even with the 69" drivers.  Pennsy also borrowed a number the ATSF 5001 and ATSF 5011 class super Texas 2-10-4 engines to run on its eastern railroad sometime in the 1950's.  Sure would have been weird seeing these massive western engines burning oil and running in Appalachia coal country! 

----------------

Doc

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