fbpx
Wikipedia

ALCO PA

The ALCO PA was a family of A1A-A1A diesel locomotives built to haul passenger trains. The locomotives were built in Schenectady, New York, in the United States, by a partnership of the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) and General Electric (GE) between June, 1946 and December, 1953. Designed by General Electric's Ray Patten (along with their ALCO FA cousins), they were of a cab unit design; both cab-equipped lead A unit PA and cabless booster B unit PB models were built. While externally the PB models were slightly shorter than the PA model,[1] they shared many of the same characteristics, both aesthetically and mechanically. However, they were not as reliable as EMD E-units.[2]

ALCO PA1/PB1 PA2/PB2
An ALCO/M-K PA-4 of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad in April 1978
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderPartnership of American Locomotive Company (ALCO) and General Electric (GE)
ModelPA1, PB1, PA2, PB2
Build dateJune 1946 – December 1953
Total produced297
Specifications
Configuration:
 • AARA1A-A1A
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in), Brazil
Length65 ft 8 in (20.02 m)
Loco weight306,000 lb (138,799 kg; 139 t)
Prime moverAlco 244G V16
Engine typeV16 Four-stroke diesel
AspirationTurbocharger
Displacement10,688 cu in (175.14 L)
GeneratorDC
Traction motors4x GE 746 or 752 DC traction motors
Cylinders16
Cylinder size9 in × 10+12 in (229 mm × 267 mm)
TransmissionDiesel-electric
Loco brakeIndependent air.
Optional: Dynamic
Train brakesAir
Performance figures
Maximum speed117 mph (188 km/h)
Power output2,000 hp (1,490 kW) — PA-1/PB-1
2,250 hp (1,680 kW) — PA-2/PB-2
Tractive effort51,000 lbf (226.86 kN)
Career
ClassErie- PA1- PA-20 PA2- PA-22 NH- PA1- DER-3a NYC- PA1- various PB1- various PA2- DPA-4a PRR- PA1- AP20 P&LE- PA1- DPA-2c PA2- DPA-14b WAB- PA1- D20
LocaleNorth America, Brazil
DispositionThree preserved, two under restoration, one converted to steam generator car, remainder scrapped.

ALCO's designation of P indicates that they were geared for higher speeds and passenger use, whereas the F designation marks these locomotives as being geared primarily for freight use. However, beyond this, their design was largely similar - aside from the PA/PB's both being larger A1A-A1A types with an even more striking nose - and many railroads used PA and FA locomotives for both freight and passenger service.

Although the majority of the PAs and PBs have been scrapped, six examples have survived. Five PAs are now preserved in railroad museums, while a converted PB still remains in service as a power car.

Service history edit

 
A pair of ALCO PA-1s of the Santa Fe Railway in March 1968

There were two models of PAs: the 2,000 horsepower (1,500 kW) PA-1/PB-1, which was built between September 1946 and June 1950, and the 2,250 horsepower (1,680 kW) PA-2/PB-2, which was built between April, 1950 and December, 1953.[citation needed]

The PAs, as well as their cousins, the ALCO FAs, were born as a result of ALCO's development of a new diesel engine design, the Model 244. In early 1944, development started on the new design, and by November 1945 the first engines were beginning to undergo tests. This unusually-short testing sequence was brought about by the decision of ALCO's senior management that the engine and an associated line of road locomotives had to be introduced no later than the end of 1946.

In preparation for this deadline, by January, 1946, the first 16-cylinder 244 engines were being tested, and, while a strike delayed work on the locomotives, the first two PA units were released for road tests in June, 1946 for testing for one month on the Lehigh Valley Railroad. After these first tests were completed, the locomotives returned to the factory for refurbishment and engine replacement.

In September, 1946, the first production units, an A-B-A set of PA1s in Santa Fe colors, numbered #51L, 51A and 51B, were released from the factory and sent to New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, which had a private railroad siding, for exhibition before being launched into road service.[3] This set was repowered in August, 1954 with EMD 16-567C engines rated at 1,750 hp (1,300 kW). This EMD repowering of the PAs was economically unfeasible, and the remaining Santa Fe PAs retained their 244 engines.

Four PA-1s previously operated by the Santa Fe were sold to Delaware and Hudson Railway in 1967. In 1974-1975, they were rebuilt for the D&H as PA-4s by Morrison Knudsen and equipped with ALCO's 251 V-12 engines.[4] Under D&H ownership, they were used by Amtrak for the Adirondack.[5] (Amtrak itself only purchased EMD E- and F-units from the railroads whose service it replaced for its diesel roster, and never owned any PAs.[5][6]) They were used by the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority in the late 1970s, then by Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México in 1978–81.

Fans deemed the PA one of the most beautiful diesels and an "Honorary Steam Locomotive", as noted by Professor George W. Hilton in a book review in September, 1968 Trains Magazine. When accelerating, until the turbocharger came up to speed, thick clouds of black smoke would pour from the exhaust stacks due to turbo lag. Photographing a moving PA while smoking became a prime objective of railfans.[7][8]

Original owners edit

Railroad PA1 PB1 PA2 PB2 PA1 road numbers PB1 road numbers PA2 road numbers PB2 road numbers Notes
ALCO-GE Demonstrators 1 1 8375 8375B to New York Central Railroad 4212 and 4304
ALCO-GE Demonstrators 2 9077-9078 Demonstrated on Canadian National, painted in CN green and gold, later to Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad as PA-2s 59A,C. Last PA-1s built.
American Freedom Train (original) 1 1776 First production PA1. To Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad 292
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad 28 16 51-62L,B, 70-73L 51-62A, 70-73A Four PA1s sold to Delaware & Hudson in 1967; became last to operate in U.S.
Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad 4 2 6001, 6003, 6011, 6013 6002, 6012
Erie Railroad 12 2 850-861 862-863
Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad 2 290-291
Lehigh Valley Railroad 14 601-614
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad 4 8 57-58A,C 60-63A,C 59A,C were Alco PA-1 demonstrators rebuilt as PA-2s
Missouri Pacific Railroad 8 28 8001-8008 8009-8036 8011-8012 were originally owned by International & Great Northern
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad 27 0760-0786 Unit 0783 to D&H in 1967 for parts.
New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad (Nickel Plate Road) 11 180-190
New York Central Railroad 4 4 4 4200-4203 4300-4303 4208-4211
Pennsylvania Railroad 10 5 5750-5759 5750B/5758B even #s
Pittsburgh and Lake Erie 4 2 4204-4207 4213-4214
St. Louis Southwestern Railway 2 300-301 To Southern Pacific Railroad 6067-6068
Southern Pacific Railroad (T&NO) 12 200-205A,B Renumbered to 200-211, then to Southern Pacific 6055-6066
Southern Pacific Railroad 12 6 27 7 6005-6010A,C 6005-6010B 6019-6045 5918-5924 6005-6010A,C renumbered to 6005-6016, 6005-6010B renumbered to 5910-5915
Southern Railway (CNO&TP) 6 6900-6905 Last PA's built by ALCO
Union Pacific Railroad 8 6 600-607 600B, 602B, 604B-607B 607 converted for experimental coal-burning turbine in 1962
Wabash Railroad 4 1050-1053
Companhia Paulista de Estradas de Ferro 3 600-602 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in) gauge
Totals 169 39 81 8

Foreign sales edit

The PA-2 units sold to the 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in) broad gauge Companhia Paulista de Estradas de Ferro of São Paulo State in Brazil were equipped with a bar pilot and solid horizontal steel pilot beam. One of these locomotives survives.

Surviving examples edit

 
Nickel Plate Road 190 at the Oregon Rail Heritage Center. This unit was later moved to Scranton, Pennsylvania in 2023

Five PA units and one converted PB unit survive.

  • One surviving unit, #600, is from the order of three broad gauge units sold to Companhia Paulista de Estradas de Ferro in Brazil. It exists at the Companhia Paulista Museum at Jundiai, São Paulo as a shell with no prime mover and no side panels. A restoration began in 2001 but has not been completed.[citation needed]
  • All four Delaware & Hudson-operated PA-4s have survived, with two being in the United States, and the other two in Mexico.
    • From 1981 to 2000, No.16 and No.18 remained stored in Empalme, Sonora, Mexico. In 2000, the Smithsonian Institution and rail preservationist Doyle McCormack obtained the units and brought them back to the United States.
      • No.16, which was heavily damaged in a derailment while in Mexico, was planned to be cosmetically restored into its original "Warbonnet" colors for the Smithsonian Institution. The unit was acquired by the Museum of the American Railroad in 2011 and transported to the museum's new site in Frisco, Texas. Since then, it has been under restoration, with plans to return it to its original Warbonnet appearance and original number of ATSF 59L.[9]
      • No.18 was owned by Doyle McCormack and has been undergoing restoration since 2002. It has been restored as Nickel Plate Road 190, a recreation of the first locomotive McCormack got to ride.[10] The locomotive was moved to the Oregon Rail Heritage Center, in Portland, Oregon in 2012, where restoration work continued to take place. In March 2023, it was announced that the Genesee Valley Transportation Company would purchase the locomotive, with plans to restore it to operation for excursion use.[11] It arrived in Scranton, Pennsylvania in May 2023.[12][13]
    • No.17 and No.19 are preserved at the National Museum of Mexican Railways in Puebla. Unit DH-17 (former D&H #17) was painted in the classic Southern Pacific Daylight colors, but as of February 2010 had been painted over in primer.[citation needed]
  • Ex-Denver and Rio Grande PB-1 6002 was converted to a steam generator car in October 1965; it gained Blomberg B trucks in 1980. It was sold to Ansco in late 1987 for service on the Ski Train, and later sold again in 2007 to the Algoma Central Railway.

References edit

  1. ^ Solomon, Brian. (2009). "p.113". Alco Locomotives. Laguna Hills: Quayside Publishing Group. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-61673-136-6. OCLC 1024276965.
  2. ^ Solomon, Brian. Santa Fe Railway. Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-1-61060-672-1.
  3. ^ Steinbrenner, Richard T (2003). The American Locomotive Company: A Centennial Remembrance. On Track Publishers. ISBN 0-911122-07-9.
  4. ^ See Anderson, Norman E. and MacDermott, C. G., "PA4 Locomotive." (Burlingame, Chatham Publishing Co.)(1978). ISBN 0896850358.
  5. ^ a b Ingles, J. David (December 1975). "The power behind the pointless arrow". Trains. Vol. 36, no. 2. pp. 22–29.
  6. ^ D.P.M. (July 1974). "What we lost with the PA's". Trains. Vol. 34, no. 9. p. 18.
  7. ^ Ingles, J. David, Passenger Diesel Turned Legend, Trains Magazine January, 1997, p.54.
  8. ^ “Honorary steam locomotive” at Trains Magazine
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2021-05-03. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  10. ^ "McCormack retires as Oregon Rail Heritage Foundation president". Trains Magazine.
  11. ^ "Genesee Valley Transportation Acquires Historic Alco PA". 2 March 2023.
  12. ^ "Famed Alco PA will move to Genesse Valley Transportation". Trains. Kalmbach Media. June 2023. p. 44.
  13. ^ "News photo: A PA arrives in Pa". Trains. May 19, 2023. Retrieved 2023-05-20.

Additional Reading edit

  • Aslaksen, James and McCormack, Doyle. . Retrieved on March 26, 2005.
  • Hayden, Bob, ed. (1980). Model Railroader Cyclopedia-Volume 2: Diesel Locomotives. Kalmbach Books. ISBN 0-89024-547-9.
  • Hollingsworth, Brian and Arthur F. Cook (1987). The Great Book of Trains. Portland House, New York, NY. ISBN 0-517-64515-7.
  • Pinkepank, Jerry A. (1973). The Second Diesel Spotter's Guide. Kalmbach Publishing Co., Milwaukee, WI. ISBN 0-89024-026-4.
  • Romano, Andy (1997). PA: Alco's Glamour Girl. Four Ways West Publications. ISBN 1-885614-16-0.
  • Stumpf, Rolf. ALCO World: Paulista RR. Retrieved on March 26, 2005.
  • The Santa Fe Diesel Volume One: Dieselization - 1960 by Dr. Cinthia Priest pages 52–56.
  • http://utahrails.net/ajkristopans/REPOWEREDLOCOMOTIVES.php see EMD order #8506 dated August 1954 for repowering data on the AT&SF 51 set of PAs.[better source needed]

External links edit

  • America's PA project 2021-05-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • at the National Museum of Mexican Railroads website.

alco, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, c. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self published sources Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The ALCO PA was a family of A1A A1A diesel locomotives built to haul passenger trains The locomotives were built in Schenectady New York in the United States by a partnership of the American Locomotive Company ALCO and General Electric GE between June 1946 and December 1953 Designed by General Electric s Ray Patten along with their ALCO FA cousins they were of a cab unit design both cab equipped lead A unit PA and cabless booster B unit PB models were built While externally the PB models were slightly shorter than the PA model 1 they shared many of the same characteristics both aesthetically and mechanically However they were not as reliable as EMD E units 2 ALCO PA1 PB1 PA2 PB2An ALCO M K PA 4 of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad in April 1978Type and originPower typeDiesel electricBuilderPartnership of American Locomotive Company ALCO and General Electric GE ModelPA1 PB1 PA2 PB2Build dateJune 1946 December 1953Total produced297SpecificationsConfiguration AARA1A A1AGauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge 1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in BrazilLength65 ft 8 in 20 02 m Loco weight306 000 lb 138 799 kg 139 t Prime moverAlco 244G V16Engine typeV16 Four stroke dieselAspirationTurbochargerDisplacement10 688 cu in 175 14 L GeneratorDCTraction motors4x GE 746 or 752 DC traction motorsCylinders16Cylinder size9 in 10 1 2 in 229 mm 267 mm TransmissionDiesel electricLoco brakeIndependent air Optional DynamicTrain brakesAirPerformance figuresMaximum speed117 mph 188 km h Power output2 000 hp 1 490 kW PA 1 PB 12 250 hp 1 680 kW PA 2 PB 2Tractive effort51 000 lbf 226 86 kN CareerClassErie PA1 PA 20 PA2 PA 22 NH PA1 DER 3a NYC PA1 various PB1 various PA2 DPA 4a PRR PA1 AP20 P amp LE PA1 DPA 2c PA2 DPA 14b WAB PA1 D20LocaleNorth America BrazilDispositionThree preserved two under restoration one converted to steam generator car remainder scrapped ALCO s designation of P indicates that they were geared for higher speeds and passenger use whereas the F designation marks these locomotives as being geared primarily for freight use However beyond this their design was largely similar aside from the PA PB s both being larger A1A A1A types with an even more striking nose and many railroads used PA and FA locomotives for both freight and passenger service Although the majority of the PAs and PBs have been scrapped six examples have survived Five PAs are now preserved in railroad museums while a converted PB still remains in service as a power car Contents 1 Service history 2 Original owners 2 1 Foreign sales 3 Surviving examples 4 References 5 Additional Reading 6 External linksService history edit nbsp A pair of ALCO PA 1s of the Santa Fe Railway in March 1968There were two models of PAs the 2 000 horsepower 1 500 kW PA 1 PB 1 which was built between September 1946 and June 1950 and the 2 250 horsepower 1 680 kW PA 2 PB 2 which was built between April 1950 and December 1953 citation needed The PAs as well as their cousins the ALCO FAs were born as a result of ALCO s development of a new diesel engine design the Model 244 In early 1944 development started on the new design and by November 1945 the first engines were beginning to undergo tests This unusually short testing sequence was brought about by the decision of ALCO s senior management that the engine and an associated line of road locomotives had to be introduced no later than the end of 1946 In preparation for this deadline by January 1946 the first 16 cylinder 244 engines were being tested and while a strike delayed work on the locomotives the first two PA units were released for road tests in June 1946 for testing for one month on the Lehigh Valley Railroad After these first tests were completed the locomotives returned to the factory for refurbishment and engine replacement In September 1946 the first production units an A B A set of PA1s in Santa Fe colors numbered 51L 51A and 51B were released from the factory and sent to New York s Waldorf Astoria Hotel which had a private railroad siding for exhibition before being launched into road service 3 This set was repowered in August 1954 with EMD 16 567C engines rated at 1 750 hp 1 300 kW This EMD repowering of the PAs was economically unfeasible and the remaining Santa Fe PAs retained their 244 engines Four PA 1s previously operated by the Santa Fe were sold to Delaware and Hudson Railway in 1967 In 1974 1975 they were rebuilt for the D amp H as PA 4s by Morrison Knudsen and equipped with ALCO s 251 V 12 engines 4 Under D amp H ownership they were used by Amtrak for the Adirondack 5 Amtrak itself only purchased EMD E and F units from the railroads whose service it replaced for its diesel roster and never owned any PAs 5 6 They were used by the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority in the late 1970s then by Ferrocarriles Nacionales de Mexico in 1978 81 Fans deemed the PA one of the most beautiful diesels and an Honorary Steam Locomotive as noted by Professor George W Hilton in a book review in September 1968 Trains Magazine When accelerating until the turbocharger came up to speed thick clouds of black smoke would pour from the exhaust stacks due to turbo lag Photographing a moving PA while smoking became a prime objective of railfans 7 8 Original owners editRailroad PA1 PB1 PA2 PB2 PA1 road numbers PB1 road numbers PA2 road numbers PB2 road numbers NotesALCO GE Demonstrators 1 1 8375 8375B to New York Central Railroad 4212 and 4304ALCO GE Demonstrators 2 9077 9078 Demonstrated on Canadian National painted in CN green and gold later to Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad as PA 2s 59A C Last PA 1s built American Freedom Train original 1 1776 First production PA1 To Gulf Mobile and Ohio Railroad 292Atchison Topeka amp Santa Fe Railroad 28 16 51 62L B 70 73L 51 62A 70 73A Four PA1s sold to Delaware amp Hudson in 1967 became last to operate in U S Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad 4 2 6001 6003 6011 6013 6002 6012Erie Railroad 12 2 850 861 862 863Gulf Mobile amp Ohio Railroad 2 290 291Lehigh Valley Railroad 14 601 614Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad 4 8 57 58A C 60 63A C 59A C were Alco PA 1 demonstrators rebuilt as PA 2sMissouri Pacific Railroad 8 28 8001 8008 8009 8036 8011 8012 were originally owned by International amp Great NorthernNew York New Haven and Hartford Railroad 27 0760 0786 Unit 0783 to D amp H in 1967 for parts New York Chicago and St Louis Railroad Nickel Plate Road 11 180 190New York Central Railroad 4 4 4 4200 4203 4300 4303 4208 4211Pennsylvania Railroad 10 5 5750 5759 5750B 5758B even sPittsburgh and Lake Erie 4 2 4204 4207 4213 4214St Louis Southwestern Railway 2 300 301 To Southern Pacific Railroad 6067 6068Southern Pacific Railroad T amp NO 12 200 205A B Renumbered to 200 211 then to Southern Pacific 6055 6066Southern Pacific Railroad 12 6 27 7 6005 6010A C 6005 6010B 6019 6045 5918 5924 6005 6010A C renumbered to 6005 6016 6005 6010B renumbered to 5910 5915Southern Railway CNO amp TP 6 6900 6905 Last PA s built by ALCOUnion Pacific Railroad 8 6 600 607 600B 602B 604B 607B 607 converted for experimental coal burning turbine in 1962Wabash Railroad 4 1050 1053Companhia Paulista de Estradas de Ferro 3 600 602 1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in gaugeTotals 169 39 81 8Foreign sales edit The PA 2 units sold to the 1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in broad gauge Companhia Paulista de Estradas de Ferro of Sao Paulo State in Brazil were equipped with a bar pilot and solid horizontal steel pilot beam One of these locomotives survives Surviving examples edit nbsp Nickel Plate Road 190 at the Oregon Rail Heritage Center This unit was later moved to Scranton Pennsylvania in 2023Five PA units and one converted PB unit survive One surviving unit 600 is from the order of three broad gauge units sold to Companhia Paulista de Estradas de Ferro in Brazil It exists at the Companhia Paulista Museum at Jundiai Sao Paulo as a shell with no prime mover and no side panels A restoration began in 2001 but has not been completed citation needed All four Delaware amp Hudson operated PA 4s have survived with two being in the United States and the other two in Mexico From 1981 to 2000 No 16 and No 18 remained stored in Empalme Sonora Mexico In 2000 the Smithsonian Institution and rail preservationist Doyle McCormack obtained the units and brought them back to the United States No 16 which was heavily damaged in a derailment while in Mexico was planned to be cosmetically restored into its original Warbonnet colors for the Smithsonian Institution The unit was acquired by the Museum of the American Railroad in 2011 and transported to the museum s new site in Frisco Texas Since then it has been under restoration with plans to return it to its original Warbonnet appearance and original number of ATSF 59L 9 No 18 was owned by Doyle McCormack and has been undergoing restoration since 2002 It has been restored as Nickel Plate Road 190 a recreation of the first locomotive McCormack got to ride 10 The locomotive was moved to the Oregon Rail Heritage Center in Portland Oregon in 2012 where restoration work continued to take place In March 2023 it was announced that the Genesee Valley Transportation Company would purchase the locomotive with plans to restore it to operation for excursion use 11 It arrived in Scranton Pennsylvania in May 2023 12 13 No 17 and No 19 are preserved at the National Museum of Mexican Railways in Puebla Unit DH 17 former D amp H 17 was painted in the classic Southern Pacific Daylight colors but as of February 2010 had been painted over in primer citation needed Ex Denver and Rio Grande PB 1 6002 was converted to a steam generator car in October 1965 it gained Blomberg B trucks in 1980 It was sold to Ansco in late 1987 for service on the Ski Train and later sold again in 2007 to the Algoma Central Railway References edit Solomon Brian 2009 p 113 Alco Locomotives Laguna Hills Quayside Publishing Group p 113 ISBN 978 1 61673 136 6 OCLC 1024276965 Solomon Brian Santa Fe Railway Voyageur Press ISBN 978 1 61060 672 1 Steinbrenner Richard T 2003 The American Locomotive Company A Centennial Remembrance On Track Publishers ISBN 0 911122 07 9 See Anderson Norman E and MacDermott C G PA4 Locomotive Burlingame Chatham Publishing Co 1978 ISBN 0896850358 a b Ingles J David December 1975 The power behind the pointless arrow Trains Vol 36 no 2 pp 22 29 D P M July 1974 What we lost with the PA s Trains Vol 34 no 9 p 18 Ingles J David Passenger Diesel Turned Legend Trains MagazineJanuary 1997 p 54 Honorary steam locomotive at Trains Magazine ATSF 59 Americas PA Archived from the original on 2021 05 03 Retrieved 2022 06 16 McCormack retires as Oregon Rail Heritage Foundation president Trains Magazine Genesee Valley Transportation Acquires Historic Alco PA 2 March 2023 Famed Alco PA will move to Genesse Valley Transportation Trains Kalmbach Media June 2023 p 44 News photo A PA arrives in Pa Trains May 19 2023 Retrieved 2023 05 20 Additional Reading editAslaksen James and McCormack Doyle NKP190 com Retrieved on March 26 2005 Hayden Bob ed 1980 Model Railroader Cyclopedia Volume 2 Diesel Locomotives Kalmbach Books ISBN 0 89024 547 9 Hollingsworth Brian and Arthur F Cook 1987 The Great Book of Trains Portland House New York NY ISBN 0 517 64515 7 Pinkepank Jerry A 1973 The Second Diesel Spotter s Guide Kalmbach Publishing Co Milwaukee WI ISBN 0 89024 026 4 Romano Andy 1997 PA Alco s Glamour Girl Four Ways West Publications ISBN 1 885614 16 0 Stumpf Rolf ALCO World Paulista RR Retrieved on March 26 2005 The Santa Fe Diesel Volume One Dieselization 1960 by Dr Cinthia Priest pages 52 56 http utahrails net ajkristopans REPOWEREDLOCOMOTIVES php see EMD order 8506 dated August 1954 for repowering data on the AT amp SF 51 set of PAs better source needed External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to ALCO PA locomotives America s PA project Archived 2021 05 03 at the Wayback Machine DH 17 and DH 19 at the National Museum of Mexican Railroads website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ALCO PA amp oldid 1218304663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.