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ALCO RS-1

The ALCO RS-1 was a 4-axle diesel-electric locomotive built by Alco-GE between 1941 and 1953 and the American Locomotive Company from 1953 to 1960. ALCO subsidiary Montreal Locomotive Works built an additional three RS-1s in 1954. This model has the distinction of having the longest production run of any diesel locomotive for the North American market. The RS-1 was in production for 19 years from the first unit Rock Island #748 in March 1941 to the last unit National of Mexico #5663 in March 1960.

ALCO RS-1
DSSA #101 of the Lake Superior Railroad Museum poses for a photograph near French River, Minnesota.
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderAmerican Locomotive Company
Montreal Locomotive Works
ModelRS-1
Build dateMarch 1941 – March 1960
Total produced469
Specifications
Configuration:
 • AARB-B
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm), Brazil
TrucksAAR type B
Wheel diameter40 in (1,016 mm)
Minimum curve57° (116.14 ft or 35.40 m)
Wheelbase40 ft 5 in (12.32 m)
Length55 ft 5+34 in (16.91 m)
Width10 ft 0 in (3.05 m)
Height14 ft 5 in (4.39 m)
Loco weight247,500 lb (112,300 kg)
Fuel capacity1,000 US gal (3,800 L; 830 imp gal)
Prime moverALCO 539T
Engine typeIn line Four stroke diesel
AspirationTurbocharger
Displacement1,595 cu in (26.14 L) per cylinder
9,572 cu in (156.86 L) total
GeneratorGE GT-553-C DC generator
Traction motors(4) GE 731 DC traction motors
Cylinders6
Cylinder size12+12 in × 13 in (318 mm × 330 mm)
Loco brakeIndependent air
Train brakesAir
Performance figures
Maximum speed65 mph (105 km/h)
Power output1,000 hp (746 kW)
Tractive effort40,425 lbf (179.82 kN)

Design

In 1940, the Rock Island Railroad approached ALCO about building a locomotive for both road and switching service.[1] To meet the Rock Island's request, ALCO created the RS-1. Their new design was a hood unit, in contrast to most existing locomotive designs at the time which were predominantly carbody units. The hood unit design allowed for improved visibility, especially to the rear. Rear visibility is very important for switching, which often involves reverse movements. Unlike carbody units, hood units such as the RS-1 can be operated in reverse without much difficulty, eliminating the need to turn them around at the end of a line.[2] For these reasons, most North American locomotives built since have followed this basic design, which is known as the road switcher.

Though the locomotive could operate in either direction, the "long" hood was officially designated as the front.[2]

Production

The first thirteen production locomotives were requisitioned by the US Army, as U.S. involvement in World War II began shortly after ALCO began production. The five railroads affected had to wait while replacements were manufactured. The requisitioned RS-1s were remanufactured by ALCO into six axle RSD-1s for use on the Trans-Iranian Railway to supply the Soviet Union during the war.

Variants

RSD-1: An RS-1 with two three axle trucks instead of the normal two axle trucks. The three axle trucks allowed the locomotive to operate safely on lighter track, as its weight was more evenly distributed by the additional axles. Unlike the RSC-1, all axles were powered.

RSC-1: An RS-1 with three-axle trucks, having an A1A-A1A wheel arrangement. It was used in much the same manner as the original variant, though the axle load was distributed for operation on light rail such as are found on branch lines.

Operating History

RS-1s were primarily operated in freight service, though in some cases they were also assigned to passenger trains. A few railroads equipped their RS-1s with steam heading equipment for passenger trains.[2] Many RS-1s were stationed in train yards for switching duties, assembling and taking apart trains to be hauled by mainline locomotives. True to their designation as 'road switchers', RS-1s could also be frequently found hauling mainline trains, especially on branch lines.

The RS-1 enjoyed a long service life, despite its manufacturer ALCO shutting down in 1969, just 9 years after the last locomotive was produced. Despite ALCO's closure, spare parts have been produced and marketed by other manufacturers for the RS-1 and other ALCO products.[3] Many served for decades, and even in the 21st century a number of examples can still be found in freight service on shortline railroads, or on excursion trains at railroad museums.

Successors

The RS-1 was succeeded by two improved versions in ALCO's catalogue, the RS-2 and RS-3. Despite this, the RS-1 remained in production even after both of its successors were discontinued.

Original Owners

First Thirteen

Railroad Quantity Road numbers Notes
Atlanta and St. Andrews Bay Railroad
3
901–903 to US Army 8010–8012
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad ("Milwaukee Road")
2
1678–1679 to US Army 8002–8003
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
4
746–749 to US Army 8004, 8007, 8005, 8006; 748 first RS-1 built in 3/41
New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad
2
231, 233 to US Army 8000–8001
Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company
2
601–602 to US Army 8008–8009
Total 13

Remainder of production

Railroad Quantity Road Numbers Notes
Akron, Canton and Youngstown Railroad
1
D-2
Alabama, Tennessee and Northern Railway
11
101–111 To SLSF 101-111
Alaska Railroad
2
1000–1001

1000 at The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry

Alton Railroad
10
50–59
Ann Arbor Railroad
2
20–21
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway
6
2385–2388, 2394–2395 2385–2388 renumbered 2396–2399
Atlanta and St. Andrews Bay Railroad
10
904–913
Atlantic and East Carolina Railway
1
500
Bamberger Railroad
1
570 to Union Pacific 1270
Central Railroad of New Jersey
6
1200–1205
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway
2
5114–5115
Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway
4
115–118
Chicago and North Western Railway
6
1066–1069, 1080–1081
Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad
12
252–263
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad ("Milwaukee Road")
5
1676, 1677, 961–963
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
11
735–745
Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway
8
100–107 to Soo Line Railroad
DuPont
4
105–108
Gaylord Container
2
302–303
GE-Atomic Energy Commission
4
39-3729 – 39-3732 39-3729 & 39-3731 are preserved as part of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park in Hanford, Washington
Genesee and Wyoming Railroad
2
25, 30

25 was Bay Colony Railroad 1064 Current owner unknown

Grand Trunk Western Railroad
2
1950–1951 Last RS-1s built for US Railroad 11/1957
Great Northern Railway
4
182–185 182 at West Coast Railway Heritage Park, Squamish, BC
Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad
24
1102–1117, 1120–1127
Illinois Terminal Railroad
6
750–752, 754–756
Kansas City Southern Railway
4
1110–1113
Lake Erie, Franklin and Clarion Railroad
2
20–21
Lake Superior and Ishpeming Railroad
3
1001–1003
Long Island Rail Road
9
461–469 467 privately owned, stored inoperable at Hoosier Valley Railroad Museum
Midland Continental Railroad
2
401–402
Minneapolis and St. Louis Railway
35
244, 744, 944, 1044, 1144, 645, 745, 845, 945, 146, 246, 346, 446, 546, 646, 746, 846, 946, 1046, 547, 948, 1048, 1148, 849, 949, 1049, 1149, 1249, 950, 1050, 1150, 1250, 751, 851, 951
originally numbered by month and year of delivery, renumbered 200–234
Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México
64
5606–5663, (5619–5624 twice) 5619–5621 (first) built by Montreal Locomotive Works. NdeM 5663 was the last RS-1 built 3/1960.
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad
12
0660–0671 0670 currently owned by the Central New England Railroad, stored out of service due to missing parts
New York Central Railroad
14
8100–8113 renumbered 9900–9913
New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway
16
230–256 (even numbers only), 231 and 233 (second)
Northern Pacific Railway
4
155–158 renumbered 800–803
Pennsylvania Railroad
27
5619–5640, 5906, 8485–8486, 8857–8858
Rutland Railroad
6
400–405 400 Owned By Maryland and Delaware Railroad 22, Currently Arkansas and Missouri Railroad 22. 405 now on the Green Mountain Railroad.
Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad ("Soo Line")
4
350–353
Soo Line (Wisconsin Central Railway)
9
2360–2368
Spokane International Railroad
12
200–211
Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway
2
50–51
Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway (Oregon Electric Railway)
4
52–55
Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company
3
602–604
United States Navy
1
6 renumbered 65-00078
Washington Terminal Company
25
40–64
 
Locomotive ALCO RS1 292 CYXX - Conrad Yelvington Distributors in Orlando-FL
Arabian American Oil Company (Saudi Arabia)
6
A11x50, A11x51, 1002–1005
Estrada de Ferro Central do Brasil
38
3100–3137 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
São Paulo Railway, (Brazil)
6
504–509 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm) to Estrada de Ferro Santos a Jundiaí
Estrada de Ferro Santos a Jundiaí (Brazil)
2
510–511 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
Total 456

Preservation

 
Green Mountain Railroad (formally Rutland Railway) Alco RS1 #405 in Bellows Falls, Vermont in August 2006.

Several examples exist at tourist railways and railway museums, including:

See also

References

  1. ^ Otte, David (October 2003). . Model Railroad News. Lamplight Publishing Co. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  2. ^ a b c Schafer, Mike (1998). Vintage diesel locomotives. Osceola, WI: Motorbooks International. pp. 50, 55. ISBN 0-7603-0507-2. OCLC 38738930.
  3. ^ "New & Remanufactured Alco Engine Parts - Hatch & Kirk, Inc". Hatch & Kirk. 2015-09-23. from the original on 2015-10-16. Retrieved 2021-07-24.
  4. ^ "Pictures of AWW 4".
  5. ^ https://gatetoadventures.com/the-hanford-site/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Dorin, Patrick C. (1972). Chicago and North Western Power. Burbank, California: Superior Publishing. p. 138. ISBN 0-87564-715-4.
  • Alco RS1 Study-Part I The Original Road Switcher by Don Dover Extra 2200 South Issue #57 Jul-Sep 1976 pp. 18–24.
  • Alco RS1 Study-Part II The Original Road Switcher by Don Dover Extra 2200 South Issue #58 Oct-Dec 1976 pp. 18–21.
  • Alco RS1 Roster Part 1 by Bob Carman and Joe Brockmeyer Extra 2200 South Issue #58 Oct-Dec 1976 pp. 22–23.
  • Alco RS1 Study-Part III The Original Road Switcher by Don Dover Extra 2200 South Issue #59 Jan-Mar 1977 pp. 24–26.

External links

Diesel Shop roster with all data from Extra 2200 South http://www.thedieselshop.us/Alco_RS1.HTML 2014-05-12 at the Wayback Machine

alco, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, june, 2017, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, axle, diesel, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The ALCO RS 1 was a 4 axle diesel electric locomotive built by Alco GE between 1941 and 1953 and the American Locomotive Company from 1953 to 1960 ALCO subsidiary Montreal Locomotive Works built an additional three RS 1s in 1954 This model has the distinction of having the longest production run of any diesel locomotive for the North American market The RS 1 was in production for 19 years from the first unit Rock Island 748 in March 1941 to the last unit National of Mexico 5663 in March 1960 ALCO RS 1DSSA 101 of the Lake Superior Railroad Museum poses for a photograph near French River Minnesota Type and originPower typeDiesel electricBuilderAmerican Locomotive CompanyMontreal Locomotive WorksModelRS 1Build dateMarch 1941 March 1960Total produced469SpecificationsConfiguration AARB BGauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge 5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm BrazilTrucksAAR type BWheel diameter40 in 1 016 mm Minimum curve57 116 14 ft or 35 40 m Wheelbase40 ft 5 in 12 32 m Length55 ft 5 3 4 in 16 91 m Width10 ft 0 in 3 05 m Height14 ft 5 in 4 39 m Loco weight247 500 lb 112 300 kg Fuel capacity1 000 US gal 3 800 L 830 imp gal Prime moverALCO 539TEngine typeIn line Four stroke dieselAspirationTurbochargerDisplacement1 595 cu in 26 14 L per cylinder9 572 cu in 156 86 L totalGeneratorGE GT 553 C DC generatorTraction motors 4 GE 731 DC traction motorsCylinders6Cylinder size12 1 2 in 13 in 318 mm 330 mm Loco brakeIndependent airTrain brakesAirPerformance figuresMaximum speed65 mph 105 km h Power output1 000 hp 746 kW Tractive effort40 425 lbf 179 82 kN CareerLocaleNorth America Brazil Saudi Arabia Contents 1 Design 2 Production 2 1 Variants 3 Operating History 4 Successors 5 Original Owners 5 1 First Thirteen 5 2 Remainder of production 6 Preservation 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDesign EditIn 1940 the Rock Island Railroad approached ALCO about building a locomotive for both road and switching service 1 To meet the Rock Island s request ALCO created the RS 1 Their new design was a hood unit in contrast to most existing locomotive designs at the time which were predominantly carbody units The hood unit design allowed for improved visibility especially to the rear Rear visibility is very important for switching which often involves reverse movements Unlike carbody units hood units such as the RS 1 can be operated in reverse without much difficulty eliminating the need to turn them around at the end of a line 2 For these reasons most North American locomotives built since have followed this basic design which is known as the road switcher Though the locomotive could operate in either direction the long hood was officially designated as the front 2 Production EditThe first thirteen production locomotives were requisitioned by the US Army as U S involvement in World War II began shortly after ALCO began production The five railroads affected had to wait while replacements were manufactured The requisitioned RS 1s were remanufactured by ALCO into six axle RSD 1s for use on the Trans Iranian Railway to supply the Soviet Union during the war Variants Edit RSD 1 An RS 1 with two three axle trucks instead of the normal two axle trucks The three axle trucks allowed the locomotive to operate safely on lighter track as its weight was more evenly distributed by the additional axles Unlike the RSC 1 all axles were powered RSC 1 An RS 1 with three axle trucks having an A1A A1A wheel arrangement It was used in much the same manner as the original variant though the axle load was distributed for operation on light rail such as are found on branch lines Operating History EditRS 1s were primarily operated in freight service though in some cases they were also assigned to passenger trains A few railroads equipped their RS 1s with steam heading equipment for passenger trains 2 Many RS 1s were stationed in train yards for switching duties assembling and taking apart trains to be hauled by mainline locomotives True to their designation as road switchers RS 1s could also be frequently found hauling mainline trains especially on branch lines The RS 1 enjoyed a long service life despite its manufacturer ALCO shutting down in 1969 just 9 years after the last locomotive was produced Despite ALCO s closure spare parts have been produced and marketed by other manufacturers for the RS 1 and other ALCO products 3 Many served for decades and even in the 21st century a number of examples can still be found in freight service on shortline railroads or on excursion trains at railroad museums Successors EditThe RS 1 was succeeded by two improved versions in ALCO s catalogue the RS 2 and RS 3 Despite this the RS 1 remained in production even after both of its successors were discontinued Original Owners EditFirst Thirteen Edit Railroad Quantity Road numbers NotesAtlanta and St Andrews Bay Railroad 3 901 903 to US Army 8010 8012Chicago Milwaukee St Paul and Pacific Railroad Milwaukee Road 2 1678 1679 to US Army 8002 8003Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad 4 746 749 to US Army 8004 8007 8005 8006 748 first RS 1 built in 3 41New York Susquehanna and Western Railroad 2 231 233 to US Army 8000 8001Tennessee Coal Iron and Railroad Company 2 601 602 to US Army 8008 8009Total 13Remainder of production Edit Railroad Quantity Road Numbers NotesAkron Canton and Youngstown Railroad 1 D 2Alabama Tennessee and Northern Railway 11 101 111 To SLSF 101 111Alaska Railroad 2 1000 1001 1000 at The Museum of Alaska Transportation and IndustryAlton Railroad 10 50 59Ann Arbor Railroad 2 20 21 20 Owned By Southern Michigan Railroad Society on loan to Shepherd MI Railroad Depot Museum and Display 21 Owned By Southern Michigan Railroad SocietyAtchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway 6 2385 2388 2394 2395 2385 2388 renumbered 2396 2399Atlanta and St Andrews Bay Railroad 10 904 913 904 is on display at Bay Line Railroad Headquarters 905 Owned By Maryland and Delaware Railroad 22 Currently By Arkansas and Missouri Railroad 22 907 Owned By Conrad Yelvington Distributors 303 909 Owned By Chattahoochee Industrial Railroad 3 then Conrad Yelvington Distributors 3 Currently Conrad Yelvington Distributors 275 911 Owned By Chattahoochee Industrial Railroad 118 Currently Conrad Yelvington Distributors 294 913 Owned By Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum H and S Railroad 913 Current owner uncertainAtlantic and East Carolina Railway 1 500Bamberger Railroad 1 570 to Union Pacific 1270Central Railroad of New Jersey 6 1200 1205Chesapeake and Ohio Railway 2 5114 5115 5114 last numbered Baltimore amp Ohio 9185 5115 last numbered Baltimore amp Ohio 9186Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway 4 115 118Chicago and North Western Railway 6 1066 1069 1080 1081Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad 12 252 263Chicago Milwaukee St Paul and Pacific Railroad Milwaukee Road 5 1676 1677 961 963Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad 11 735 745Duluth South Shore and Atlantic Railway 8 100 107 to Soo Line Railroad 103 Owned By Algers Winslow and Western Railway 104 Owned By Algers Winslow and Western RailwayDuPont 4 105 108Gaylord Container 2 302 303GE Atomic Energy Commission 4 39 3729 39 3732 39 3729 amp 39 3731 are preserved as part of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park in Hanford WashingtonGenesee and Wyoming Railroad 2 25 30 25 was Bay Colony Railroad 1064 Current owner unknownGrand Trunk Western Railroad 2 1950 1951 Last RS 1s built for US Railroad 11 1957Great Northern Railway 4 182 185 182 at West Coast Railway Heritage Park Squamish BCGulf Mobile and Ohio Railroad 24 1102 1117 1120 1127Illinois Terminal Railroad 6 750 752 754 756Kansas City Southern Railway 4 1110 1113Lake Erie Franklin and Clarion Railroad 2 20 21Lake Superior and Ishpeming Railroad 3 1001 1003Long Island Rail Road 9 461 469 467 privately owned stored inoperable at Hoosier Valley Railroad MuseumMidland Continental Railroad 2 401 402Minneapolis and St Louis Railway 35 244 744 944 1044 1144 645 745 845 945 146 246 346 446 546 646 746 846 946 1046 547 948 1048 1148 849 949 1049 1149 1249 950 1050 1150 1250 751 851 951 originally numbered by month and year of delivery renumbered 200 234Ferrocarriles Nacionales de Mexico 64 5606 5663 5619 5624 twice 5619 5621 first built by Montreal Locomotive Works NdeM 5663 was the last RS 1 built 3 1960 New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad 12 0660 0671 0670 currently owned by the Central New England Railroad stored out of service due to missing partsNew York Central Railroad 14 8100 8113 renumbered 9900 9913New York Susquehanna and Western Railway 16 230 256 even numbers only 231 and 233 second Northern Pacific Railway 4 155 158 renumbered 800 803 157 802 Last numbered Burlington Northern 952 158 803 Last numbered Burlington Northern 953Pennsylvania Railroad 27 5619 5640 5906 8485 8486 8857 8858Rutland Railroad 6 400 405 400 Owned By Maryland and Delaware Railroad 22 Currently Arkansas and Missouri Railroad 22 405 now on the Green Mountain Railroad Minneapolis St Paul and Sault Ste Marie Railroad Soo Line 4 350 353Soo Line Wisconsin Central Railway 9 2360 2368Spokane International Railroad 12 200 211Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway 2 50 51Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway Oregon Electric Railway 4 52 55Tennessee Coal Iron and Railroad Company 3 602 604United States Navy 1 6 renumbered 65 00078Washington Terminal Company 25 40 64 Locomotive ALCO RS1 292 CYXX Conrad Yelvington Distributors in Orlando FL 46 Owned By Amtrak 46 Currently Massachusetts Central Railroad 46 47 Owned By Amtrak 47 Currently Tioga Central Railroad 47 out of service needs friction bearings 52 Owned By Chattahoochee Industrial Railroad 57 then Conrad Yelvington Distributors 97 Currently Conrad Yelvington Distributors 292 54 Owned By Chattahoochee Industrial Railroad 38 Currently Conrad Yelvington Distributors 293 57 Owned By Black River and Western Railroad 57 then East Penn Railways 57 Currently East Penn Railroad 57 59 Owned by Essar Steel Algoma 59 Currently Southern Railroad of New Jersey 59Arabian American Oil Company Saudi Arabia 6 A11x50 A11x51 1002 1005Estrada de Ferro Central do Brasil 38 3100 3137 5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm Sao Paulo Railway Brazil 6 504 509 5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm to Estrada de Ferro Santos a JundiaiEstrada de Ferro Santos a Jundiai Brazil 2 510 511 5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm Total 456Preservation Edit Green Mountain Railroad formally Rutland Railway Alco RS1 405 in Bellows Falls Vermont in August 2006 Several examples exist at tourist railways and railway museums including Boone amp Scenic Valley Railroad s RS 1 purchased in 1951 by the Lake Superior and Ishpeming Railroad as 1002 sold to the Calumet amp Hecla Railroad in 1967 as 205 Later purchased by Continental Grain Company Marshalltown IA circa 1975 Donated to the Iowa Railroad Historical Society Boone amp Scenic Valley Railroad in 1996 painted and lettered as Minneapolis and St Louis Railway 244 Consumers Power CPOX 401 1951 built RS 1 79350 former Rutland 401 spent her final years of service switching coal cars at Consumers Energy s Essexville MI power plant on the Saginaw River the unit is now at the Saginaw Railway Museum Grand Trunk Western 1951 last domestic RS 1 produced serial number 82356 at the Illinois Railway Museum Chicago Rock Island amp Pacific 745 believed to be the oldest existing RS 1 and one of the replacements for the 13 taken by the U S Army at the Louisiana Steam Train Association yard in Jefferson LA Eastman Kodak Company 9 built as Chicago amp Western Indiana 260 sold to Genesee amp Wyoming in 1971 and then to EKC is preserved at the Rochester amp Genesee Valley Railroad Museum Livonia Avon amp Lakeville 20 built as Lake Erie Franklin amp Clarion 20 sold to Livonia Avon amp Lakeville is preserved at the Rochester amp Genesee Valley Railroad Museum Green Mountain Railroad 405 former Rutland Railway 405 serial number 79575 Catskill Mountain Railroad 400 out of service amp under repair and 401 operating tourist train in Kingston NY Duluth South Shore and Atlantic Railway 101 previously the only known locomotive existing from that railroad is at the Lake Superior Railroad Museum and has been restored for occasional use on the North Shore Scenic Railroad Algers Winslow and Western Railway 4 Built as Duluth South Shore and Atlantic Railway 103 it is currently in service on the French Lick Scenic Railway a line operated by the Indiana Railway Museum 4 Ann Arbor Railroad 20 is owned by the Southern Michigan Railroad Society in Clinton MI and on loan to Shepherd MI Railroad Depot Museum and Display Ann Arbor Railroad 21 is owned by the Southern Michigan Railroad Society in Clinton MI 21 is set to undergo cosmetic and operational repairs and a return to operational status by the end of 2015 Soo Line 350 survives on display at the Whippany Railway Museum in New Jersey as Morristown amp Erie 21 Former Washington Terminal 57 is privately owned and in storage on the East Penn Railroad at Quakertown Pennsylvania Great Northern 182 is on display at the West Coast Railway Heritage Park in Squamish British Columbia Chicago Rock Island amp Pacific 743 is on display at the Oklahoma Railway Museum in Oklahoma City OK Two RS 1s are on display at the US Department of Energy s Hanford Site s B Reactor along with two flatcars 5 See also EditList of ALCO diesel locomotives List of MLW diesel locomotivesReferences Edit Otte David October 2003 THE ATLAS O RS 1 DIESEL ELECTRIC Model Railroad News Lamplight Publishing Co Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 20 October 2016 a b c Schafer Mike 1998 Vintage diesel locomotives Osceola WI Motorbooks International pp 50 55 ISBN 0 7603 0507 2 OCLC 38738930 New amp Remanufactured Alco Engine Parts Hatch amp Kirk Inc Hatch amp Kirk 2015 09 23 Archived from the original on 2015 10 16 Retrieved 2021 07 24 Pictures of AWW 4 https gatetoadventures com the hanford site a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Dorin Patrick C 1972 Chicago and North Western Power Burbank California Superior Publishing p 138 ISBN 0 87564 715 4 Alco RS1 Study Part I The Original Road Switcher by Don Dover Extra 2200 South Issue 57 Jul Sep 1976 pp 18 24 Alco RS1 Study Part II The Original Road Switcher by Don Dover Extra 2200 South Issue 58 Oct Dec 1976 pp 18 21 Alco RS1 Roster Part 1 by Bob Carman and Joe Brockmeyer Extra 2200 South Issue 58 Oct Dec 1976 pp 22 23 Alco RS1 Study Part III The Original Road Switcher by Don Dover Extra 2200 South Issue 59 Jan Mar 1977 pp 24 26 External links EditDiesel Shop roster with all data from Extra 2200 South http www thedieselshop us Alco RS1 HTML Archived 2014 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Wikimedia Commons has media related to ALCO RS 1 locomotives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ALCO RS 1 amp oldid 1126787878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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