When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pennsylvania Railroad class T1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_class_T1

    The first PRR duplex was the single experimental S1 No. 6100 of 1939. It managed to reach 100.97 miles per hour (162.50 km/h) on level track while pulling a 1,350-ton passenger train. Its performance encouraged the PRR to continue to develop duplex steam locomotives.

  3. Duplex locomotive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplex_locomotive

    The Q2 4-4-6-4 was the most successful example of the duplex locomotive constructed by the PRR. Production locomotives followed from the end of 1944, but these were rather different, the lesson that backward-facing cylinders next to the firebox were a poor design choice made clear.

  4. Pennsylvania Railroad 5550 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_5550

    Pennsylvania Railroad 5550 (PRR 5550) is a mainline duplex drive steam locomotive under construction in the United States. With an estimated completion by 2030, the locomotive will become the 53rd example of the Pennsylvania Railroad's T1 steam locomotive class and the only operational locomotive of its type, [7] as well as the largest steam locomotive built in the United States since 1952.

  5. Pennsylvania Railroad class Q2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_Q2_class

    The duplex propensity to slip was combated by an automatic slip control mechanism that reduced power to the slipping unit. The Q2 locomotive was 78% more powerful than the locomotives that PRR had in service at the time, and the company claimed the Q2 could pull 125 freight cars at a speed of 50 mph (80 km/h). [5]

  6. Pennsylvania Railroad class S1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_class_S1

    The PRR S1 class steam locomotive (nicknamed "The Big Engine") was a single experimental duplex locomotive of the Pennsylvania Railroad. It was designed to demonstrate the advantages of duplex drives espoused by Baldwin Chief Engineer Ralph P. Johnson. [1] The streamlined Art Deco styled shell of the locomotive was designed by Raymond Loewy. [1 ...

  7. 6-4-4-6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6-4-4-6

    It was a duplex locomotive, the longest and heaviest rigid frame reciprocating steam locomotive ever built and is referred to as the Pennsylvania Type. This experimental locomotive was exhibited at the 1939 New York World's Fair, and was afterward placed in limited service between Chicago, Illinois, and Crestline, Ohio. The locomotive was too ...

  8. Pennsylvania Railroad class Q1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_class_Q1

    PRR's Board approved $595,000 for the construction of this experimental Class dual service locomotive on Oct. 9, 1940. it was built in March 1942.Its streamlined shrouding, according to an interview of John W. Epstein, Special Projects Manager and vice president, Raymond Loewy & Assoc., [2] was designed by Raymond Loewy, but,due to WWII, there was no publicity about it.

  9. 4-4-6-4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4-4-6-4

    The Pennsylvania Railroad's Q2 class were the only locomotives ever to use this arrangement. These were duplex locomotives, in which both sets of driving wheels were mounted in a common, rigid locomotive frame. This locomotive design was a further development of the highly successful 2-10-4.