Showing posts with label Cowl Unit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cowl Unit. Show all posts

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Trains in Vancouver ,Washington, in December 2001

Union Pacific SD40-2 #3161 in Vancouver, Washington, in December 2001


I took these pictures at the Amtrak depot in Vancouver, Washington, on December 23, 2001, after arriving on the Portland Section of Amtrak’s westbound Empire Builder. Union Pacific #3161 is a 3,000-horsepower SD40-2 that was built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in February 1972.

Canadian Pacific SD9043MAC #9124 in Vancouver, Washington, in December 2001
 
Canadian Pacific #9124 is a 4,300-horsepower SD9043MAC that was built in December 1998 by General Motors Locomotive Group and assembled at Canadian Pacific’s Ogden Shops in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.


Canadian Pacific SD40-2 #5954 in Vancouver, Washington, in December 2001
 
Canadian Pacific #5954 is a 3,000-horsepower SD40-2 that was built by the Diesel Division of General Motors of Canada, Ltd. In London, Ontario, in October 1980.


Canadian Pacific SD40-2F #9009 in Vancouver, Washington, in December 2001


Canadian Pacific SD40-2F #9009 built by the Diesel Division of General Motors of Canada, Ltd. in 1988 in London, Ontario. It is one of only 25 built, all for Canadian Pacific. Nicknamed “red barns,” they were the only cowl-body diesels on the Canadian Pacific. They were built to SD40-2 specifications at Canadian Pacific’s request, despite the fact that regular SD40-2 production had ended several years earlier and competitor Canadian National had already purchased SD50Fs.

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Railfanning in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

Amtrak F59PHI #458 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

These pictures were taken while railfanning at the Amtrak depot in Vancouver, Washington, in July of 1999. The first I saw was a southbound Amtrak Cascades train with an interesting locomotive on the head end.

Amtrak F59PHI #458 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

Amtrak #458 is a 3,200-horsepower F59PHI that was built in July 1998 by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors with final assembly by Super Steel Schenectady of Schenectady, Pennsylvania. The Amtrak Cascades trains are usually powered by F59PHIs that are painted to match the green, brown, and white colors of the train, but this one is silver and blue.

Amtrak F59PHI #458 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

This particular F59PHI is painted in Amtrak's Surfliner colors for service in California. The Surfliner locomotives occasionally substituted on the Cascades when one of the Cascades F59PHIs had to go south to California for maintenance.

Amtrak F40PH #354 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

Leading the eastbound Portland section of the Empire Builder is Amtrak #354, a 3,000-horsepower F40PH that was built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in November 1980. It is painted in the colors of the Florida Fun Train, a short-lived venture that briefly leased three F40PHs (#354, #358, & #374) from Amtrak.

Amtrak F40PH #354 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

The six-car Florida Fun Train made its inaugural run on October 15, 1997, on a 200-mile route between Fort Lauderdale and Orlando. On the inaugural run of a new route between Tampa and central Florida on August 1, 1998, the train was involved in a fatal collision with a tow truck. After losing $9.9 million in the first half of 1998, the Florida Fun Train shut down on September 16, 1998. The three locomotives were returned to Amtrak and were put back in regular service without being repainted.

BNSF C44-9W #739 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

As we left Vancouver, we found a Burlington Northern Santa Fe freight train was waiting on the Sixth Street Viaduct. This train had just come westbound down the north bank of the Columbia River Gorge with a lot of motive power.

BNSF C44-9W #739 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

Leading this freight train was Burlington Northern Santa Fe #739, a 4,400-horsepower Dash 9-44CW that was built by General Electric in August 1997. It was painted in Burlington Northern Santa Fe's newest paint scheme.

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe SD45-2u #5814 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

The second locomotive was Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe #5814, a 3,600-horsepower SD45-2 that was built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in May of 1972 as Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe #5650. In May 1986, it was rebuilt at Santa Fe's shops in San Bernardino, California as an SD45-2u; at the time the Santa Fe was planning to merge with the Southern Pacific, so it was renumbered to 7214 in accordance with the proposed numbering system for the merged railroads, and was painted in the red-and-yellow "Kodachrome" merger paint scheme. After the merger was denied by the Interstate Commerce Commission, it was renumbered to 5814 and repainted in Santa Fe's standard blue-and-yellow paint scheme.

BNSF SDF40-2 #6976 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

The third locomotive was Burlington Northern Santa Fe #6976, which was built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors in August 1974 as Amtrak #644, a 3,000-horsepower SDP40F passenger locomotive based on the popular SD40-2 freight engine. Amtrak found the SDP40Fs unsatisfactory, and in September 1984 Amtrak traded 18 of them to the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe in exchange for 25 CF7s and 8 SSB1200s for use as terminal switchers. 

BNSF SDF40-2 #6976 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

In May 1985 the former Amtrak #644 was rebuilt at the Santa Fe's shops in San Bernardino, California, as SDF40-2 #5266. In April 1994, the maintenance of all the SDF40-2s was subcontracted to Morrison-Knudsen, of Boise, Idaho. After the Burlington Northern Santa Fe merger, ATSF #5266 was renumbered to BNSF #6976 in April 1998.

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe SD45-2u #5814 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe #5814 has MKM sublettering under the road number on the side of the cab, indicating that the maintenance for this locomotive had been subcontracted to Morrison-Knudsen of Boise, Idaho, in April 1994.

BNSF C44-9W #739 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

Here is another look an Burlington Northern Santa Fe #739.

BNSF C44-9W #739 in Vancouver, Washington, in July, 1999

This was one of the first locomotives to be painted in BNSF's new "Heritage II" paint scheme in October 1997. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Locomotive Rosters

I originally posted these rosters on my old website as Excel spreadsheets on June 22, 2008. I have since updated them.

This page features links to locomotive rosters I have compiled. These are not railroad locomotive rosters; instead, they are rosters of a specific locomotive model. In some cases, I have limited the roster to a single railroad's roster of a particular model, such as Amtrak's F40PHs or the LMX Leasing B39-8Es. I have included all the subsequent owners and disposition information I have been able to find. I made these for my own use, but considering the effort I felt they should be shared. I can't guarantee that this information is 100% accurate and up to date, but it was as reasonably accurate and complete as I could get it.

EMD GP30 Roster

This is a roster of all EMD’s distinctive GP30s produced by EMD, including the two Canadian units, in order by original owner and including all known subsequent owners and final dispositions where applicable. I have not included the GP30B's built for Union Pacific, because their roster information wasn't very interesting. This roster is based on information from the Burlington Northern 1974-75 Annual by Motive Power Services, the Burlington Northern 1980-1991 Annual by Robert C. Del Grosso, Southern Pacific Diesel Locomotive Compendium - Volume 2 by Joseph A. Strapac, the GP30 rosters at Diesel Locomotive Rosters and The Unofficial EMD Homepage and a post about GP30 Ownership at the Trains.com forums. Additional information came from The Diesel Shop and RR Picture Archives.net. Information about specific railroads came from ATSF Diesel Rosters, Burlington Northern Railroad Photo Archives, CSX Photo Archives, The Great Northern Empire Then & Now, Milwaukee Road Online, The Unofficial Soo Line Diesel Roster, Don Strack's Utah Rails and Class III Shortlines.

EMD SDP40 & SDP45 Rosters & Paint Schemes

This is a roster of all SDP40s and SDP45s produced by EMD. Because these two models were produced in such small quantities, I am also able to include information on the paint schemes each individual locomotive is known to have worn. Major sources include the Burlington Northern 1980-1991 Annual by Robert C. Del Grosso, Southern Pacific Diesel Locomotive Compendium - Volume 2 by Joseph A. Strapac, the Unofficial EMD Homepage, the Great Northern Empire Then & Now, the Burlington Northern Railroad Photo Archive, the Conrail Cyclopedia, Don Strack's Utah Rails, rrpicturearchives.net, Erie Lackawanna Railroad Survivors, Erie Lackawanna EMD SDP45 Info Request at the Atlas Forum and various other railroad photo sites.

The SDP40 was a passenger version of the SD40 freight locomotive, equipped with a steam generator and water tanks for heating passenger cars. Only 20 were built: 6 for the Great Northern Railway and 14 for the National Railroad of Mexico. Several of the SDP40s are still in service as freight units today, and one, BNSF #6327 (ex GN #325), has been preserved at the Minnesota Transportation Museum. Some of the FNM SDP40s were renumbered into a 5 digit 13000-series at some point. They may have been rebuilt. At least four carried these numbers; there may have been more. I don't know which they were originally. Three were transferred to Ferromex.

The SDP45 was a passenger version of the SD45 freight locomotive. Unlike the SDP40, which was built on the same length frame as the SD40 it was derived from, the SDP45's frame was several feet longer than that of the SD45, resulting in additional space between the trucks for fuel and/or water tanks. SDP45s for passenger service were built for the Southern Pacific Railroad and the Great Northern Railway. All are now out of service. The Erie Lackawanna also purchased SDP45s, however they purchased them for freight-only service. The Erie Lackawanna wanted the extra-long frame of the SDP45 as it could potentially carry larger fuel tanks than the standard SD45s. As they were intended for freight-only service, the Erie Lackawanna units were not equipped with steam generators or water tanks. The entire space between the trucks was allocated for fuel and the end of the long hood was tapered like a regular freight unit instead of squared off like the other SDP40s and SDP45s. The SDP45s became part of Conrail with the rest of the Erie Lackawanna. Erie Lackawanna's first group of SDP45s were ordered when the railroad was under the control of the Norfolk & Western. They were returned to the N&W's successor Norfolk Southern in 1984. Most were scrapped. One unit had been retired after a wreck, and the remains had been rebuilt into a slug by N&W. Unlike the first order, Erie Lackawanna's second order of SDP45s came through a lessor. After their 15 lease expired, they were returned to the lessor in 1984. Most of them went on to find second careers in lease service, or were rebuilt by Morrison Knudson as SD40M-2s for Southern Pacific (years after all SP's original SDP45s were retired and scrapped) and were later transferred to Union Pacific.

EMD Cowl Unit Roster

This roster lists all of the six-axle cowl units built by EMD, including the FP45s, F45s, SDP40Fs and F40Cs, including their subsequent owners and final disposition, where known and applicable. This roster is based on information from the Burlington Northern 1980-1991 Annual by Robert C. Del Grosso, the Unofficial EMD Homepage. Additional information came from RR Picture Archives.net, Santa Fe Cowl Units, ATSF Diesel Rosters, Milwaukee Road Online, The Great Northern Empire Then & Now, Burlington Northern Railroad Photo Archives, Don Strack's Utah Rails, Amtrak Photo Archives, & Metra Locomotive Roster.

Amtrak F40PH Roster

This roster lists all of the EMD F40PH locomotives owned by Amtrak, including their subsequent owners and final disposition, where known and applicable. This roster is based on information from the Unofficial EMD Homepage, On Track On Line and Go By Train. Additional information came from RR Picture Archives.net.

EMD Tunnel Motor Roster

This is a roster of all the SD40T-2 and SD45T-2 Tunnel Motors built by EMD. It includes a complete guide to each locomotive's numbers in the various Union Pacific number series these locomotives were placed in at various points; even if the locomotive never actually wore a number in a particular series, I have managed to figure out what it would have been.

This roster lists all of the SD40T-2 and SD45T-2 locomotives built by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors, including their subsequent owners where known and applicable. Roadnumbers in red were never worn by the locomotive, due to the locomotive being retired or the numbering system being changed before the locomotive was renumbered. This roster is based on information from Southern Pacific Diesel Locomotive Compendium - Volume 2 by Joseph A. Strapac and Don Strack's Utah Rails, with additional information from RR Picture Archives.net, The Unofficial EMD Homepage and DRGW.net.

LMX Leasing GE B39-8E Roster

This roster lists all of the General Electric B39-8E locomotives built for lease to Burlington Northern through LMX Leasing, including their subsequent owners and final disposition, where known and applicable. This roster is based on information from the Burlington Northern Railroad Photo Archives, with additional information from RR Picture Archives.net, Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Locomotive Rosters from Railroads of Northern New England and Class III Shortlines.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe FP45 #92

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe FP45 # 92 at the Illinois Railway Museum on May 23, 2004

Santa Fe #92 is an FP45 built by EMD in December 1967 as Santa Fe #102.  It is one of 9 FP45s built for passenger service on the Santa Fe. It is powered by a 20 cylinder engine producing 3600 horsepower. In 1970, #102 was renumbered to #5942. It was rebuilt in October 1982 and was renumbered to #5992. In 1989 it was renumbered to #101 and in 1990 was renumbered again to #92. It was retired in January 1997 and donated to the Illinois Railway Museum. Though two of the Santa Fe’s FP45s were destroyed in accidents, the other seven all survive today.

Continue to Burlington Northern BN-1/BN-2