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New York Central Hudson

The New York Central Hudson was a popular 4-6-4 "Hudson" type steam locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) and the Lima Locomotive Works in three series from 1927 to 1938 for the New York Central Railroad. Named after the Hudson River, the 4-6-4 wheel arrangement came to be known as the "Hudson" type in the United States, as these locomotives were the first examples built and used in North America. Built for high-speed passenger train work, the Hudson locomotives were famously known for hauling the New York Central's crack passenger trains, such as the 20th Century Limited and the Empire State Express. With the onset of diesel locomotives by the mid-20th Century, all Hudson locomotives were retired and subsequently scrapped by 1957, with none preserved today except for a converted tender from J-1d 5313, which is preserved at the Steamtown National Historic Site in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

New York Central Hudson
Promotional Image of a "Dreyfuss" streamlined New York Central Hudson Locomotive
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderAlco-Schenectady (ALCO) (265);
Lima Locomotive Works (10)
Build date1927–1931 (J-1);
1928–1931 (J-2);
1937–1938 (J-3)
Total produced275
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-6-4
 • UIC2’C2’
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Leading dia.36 in (914 mm)
Driver dia.79 in (2,007 mm)
Trailing dia.36 in (914 mm) (front)
51 in (1,295 mm) (rear)
Wheelbase83 ft 7+12 in (25.489 m)
Length97 ft 2+38 in (29.626 m)
Width10 ft 6 in (3.20 m)
Height15 ft 1 in (4.60 m)
Axle load67,267 lb (30,511.8 kg; 30.5 t)
Adhesive weight201,800 lb (91,534.9 kg; 91.5 t)
Loco weight365,500 lb (165,788.0 kg; 165.8 t)
Tender weight316,400 lb (143,500 kg; 143.5 t)
Total weight681,900 lb (309,300 kg; 309.3 t)
Tender type8-wheel;
12-wheel;
14-wheel
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity56,000 lb (25,400 kg; 25.40 t)
Water cap.13,600 US gal (51,000 l; 11,300 imp gal)
Firebox:
 • Firegrate area
82 sq ft (7.6 m2)
Boiler91.5 in (2,324 mm)
Boiler pressure265 lbf/in2 (1.83 MPa)
Feedwater heaterElesco bundle;
Worthington SA;
Coffin
Heating surface5,572 sq ft (517.7 m2)
 • Tubes657 sq ft (61.0 m2)
 • Flues3,170 sq ft (295 m2)
 • Tubes and flues3,827 sq ft (355.5 m2)
 • Firebox360 sq ft (33.4 m2)
Superheater:
 • Heating area1,745 sq ft (162.1 m2)
CylindersTwo
Cylinder size22.5 in × 29 in (572 mm × 737 mm)
Valve gearBaker
Valve typePiston valves
Performance figures
Maximum speed123 mph (197.95 km/h) (at least)
Tractive effort41,860 lbf (186.20 kN)
Factor of adh.4.82
Career
OperatorsNew York Central Railroad, Boston and Albany Railroad, Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway, Michigan Central Railroad, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway
ClassJ-1, J-2 and J-3
Number in class205 (J-1),
20 (J-2),
50 (J-3)
Retired1953 - 1956
DispositionAll scrapped by the late 1950s (steam heat car converted from the tender of J-1d 5313 preserved at Steamtown National Historic Site), none preserved

History

The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road) was the first to design a 4-6-4 locomotive (naming them Baltics); however, they were not built until after the New York Central's Hudsons. NYC President Patrick E. Crowley named the units Hudsons after the Hudson River, which divides New York State's Hudson Valley and streams broadly past New York City.

 
Builder's photograph of J-1b class Hudson #5249

The Hudson came into being because the existing 4-6-2 Pacific power was not able to keep up with the demands of longer, heavier trains and higher speeds. Given NYC's axle load limits, Pacifics could not be made any larger; a new locomotive type would be required to carry the larger boilers. Lima Locomotive Works' conception of superpower steam as realized in the 2-8-4 Berkshire type was the predecessor to the Hudson. The 2-8-4's 4-wheel trailing truck permitted a huge firebox to be located after the boiler. The resulting greater steaming rate ensured that such a locomotive would never run out of power at speed, a common failing of older locomotives. Applying the ideas of the freight-minded Berkshire type to the Pacific resulted in a 4-6-4 locomotive.

 
Streamlined J-3a Hudson at the 1939 New York World's Fair

NYC ordered prototype No. 5200 from Alco, and subjected it to intensive testing. A fleet of 205 J-1 class Hudsons were eventually built, including 30 each for the Michigan Central Railroad (MC road numbers 8200-8229) and the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway (“Big Four” - road numbers 6600-6629). In addition, NYC subsidiary Boston & Albany Railroad ordered 20 J-2 class (B&A road numbers 600-619), the latter 10 from Lima Locomotive Works (all other NYC Hudsons were built by Alco’s Schenectady works).[1] A later development were 50 J-3a class Super Hudsons in 1937–1938, with many modern appliances and innovations. After the MC, Big 4, and B&A locomotives were incorporated into the NYC numbering, the NYC Hudson locomotives had road numbers ranging from 5200 to 5474. The NYC J-1 road numbers were 5200-5344, the MC J-1s became NYC 5345-5374, the Big 4 J-1s became NYC 5375-5404, the J-2s (all from B&A) became NYC road numbers 5455-5474, and the J-3 road numbers were 5405-5454. The J-2 numbers are last because they were transferred to the NYC after the J-3 deliveries.

 
J-3a Super Hudson on display at the 1939 World's Fair

Streamlining

The Hudsons were of excellent quality. In response to the styling sensation of the new diesel-powered Zephyr streamliner, Locomotive No. 5344 (the last J-1e) was fitted with an Art Deco streamlined shroud designed by Carl F. Kantola and was named Commodore Vanderbilt on December 27, 1934.[2][3] The streamlining was later replaced to match the last ten J-3a Super Hudson locomotives (5445-5454) that had been built with streamlining designed by Henry Dreyfuss. J-1e Hudson #5344 stuck out from the rest of the roster, as it was the only J-1 to be streamlined, and was one of two locomotives ever to be streamlined twice (the other being a Baltimore and Ohio P-7, number 5304). Two more J-3a locomotives (5426 & 5429) had a 3rd streamlining style fitted in 1941 for Empire State Express service.[1] The streamlined locomotives featured prominently in NYC advertising.

The forte of all Hudsons was power at top speed. They were poor performers at low speed and the presence of a booster engine on the trailing truck was an absolute necessity for starting. For this reason, they were generally favored by railroads with flat terrain and straight routes. After the NYC, the Milwaukee Road was also fond of the Hudsons, acquiring 22 class F6 and six streamlined class F7s. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway also had 16, while the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad had 10 (#1400-1409) streamlined I-5 4-6-4s built by Baldwin in 1937 (nicknamed "Shoreliners"). Few railroads with hilly terrain acquired any.[citation needed]

A booster was prone to troubles, however, and gradually fell out of favor. Instead of a complicated booster, it was deemed preferential to have an extra pair of driving wheels, and thus better traction.

On September 7, 1943, No. 5450 suffered a boiler explosion in Canastota, New York, killing three enginemen and putting her out of service until the end of World War II due to a steel shortage.[4]

Trials of later, dual-purpose 4-8-2 Mohawks sealed the Hudson's fate. The L-3 and L-4 Mohawks were nice, but they were still more suited to lower-speed hauling than high-speed power. In 1944, NYC received permission from the War Production Board to build a new, high-speed locomotive of the 4-8-4 type, combining all the advantages of the Hudson with those of the Mohawk. Many other railroads had taken to the 4-8-4 in the 1930s, generally calling them Northerns after the Northern Pacific Railway, which had first adopted them. By being a late adopter, the NYC had the chance to build on everyone else's experience. That locomotive proved to be exceptional, and the type on the NYC was named the Niagara. Since only 27 were built, however, they only took over the heaviest and most-prestigious trains, and the last Niagara (No. 6015) was retired in July, 1956. Many Hudsons soldiered-on until the end of steam on NYC in 1957.

Unfortunately, none of the NYC Hudson units survive; all were scrapped when the railroad dieselized, all were replaced by EMD E8.[1] Two J-1d class Hudsons, numbers 5311 and 5313, were sold to the Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway in 1948 and were renumbered 501 and 502 respectively. Both locomotives were retired and scrapped in 1954 when the TH&B dieselized. The tender from the 502 (formerly the 5313) was retained by the TH&B and converted to a steam generator car for use on passenger trains. The generator car still survives today and is part of the Steamtown National Historic Site collection.[5]

Popular culture

 
#5344 Commodore Vanderbilt (the last J-1e) featured Art Deco streamlining designed by Carl F. Kantola when introduced in 1934 (here in 1935, Chicago Board of Trade Building in background). By no later than 1939, it had been re-shrouded with the Art Deco streamlining designed by Henry Dreyfuss for the J-3 Super Hudsons.

Model trains

The Lionel Corporation has issued the Hudson in 1937, 1946, 1947, 1950, 1964, 1984, 1990, 2001, 2011 and 2019. The first model issued, in 1937, was made for special 'T-Rail' track and numbered 5344. It was also the first mass-produced scale model train, numbered '700e' by Lionel, with 'e' designating it as having an electronic reversing unit, or 'e unit'. The Hudson from 1946 and 1947, numbered 221 and made with Dreyfuss streamlining, was made in a grey paint scheme for the NYC railroad. It was the only grey steam locomotive produced by Lionel during the postwar years. The 1950 and 1964 version was for O-Gauge Tubular track and numbered 773. The 1987 Hudson was released for O-Gauge Tubular track and numbered 783. The 2011 'legacy' Hudson was numbered 5344 like the 1937 Hudson but made for O Gauge FasTrack, Tubular, or Atlas O Gauge track.

MTH has also issued the Hudson since the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Broadway Limited Imports built an HO scale version of the Dreyfuss Hudson in a brass-hybrid material for their Paragon 2 lineup. Complete with scullin wheels and prototype whistle, these models were sold alongside the NYC Niagara of the same model railroad scale. While MTH Dreyfuss Hudson HO scale models are somewhat abundant, BLI models are now a rarity, as BLI has discontinued the model.

The A.C. Gilbert Company produced the Hudson in their American Flyer S Gauge line from 1946 to 1964. This represented the standard J-3a configuration rather than any of the streamlined versions.

The Marx Toy Company produced a non-streamlined 1898 Hudson in their 027 style line from 1954 to 1963. In 1935 Marx released tinplate toy trains in windup and electric named the Commodore Vanderbilt.

Bachmann Trains released its accurately scaled version of the J-3a Super Hudson in N scale early in 2021. It features a diecast metal boiler and its trademarked Econami SoundTraxx sound package.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Drury (1993), p. 273.
  2. ^ Drury (1993), p. 271.
  3. ^ Cantola, Carl F. (1981). "New York Central Streamlined Steam Locomotives" (PDF). New York Central System Historical Society. (PDF) from the original on April 20, 2019. Retrieved May 26, 2019.
  4. ^ "Richard Leonard's New York Central Collection -- J-3a 4-6-4 5450".
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-19. Retrieved 2015-09-09.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Staufer, Alvin F.; May, Edward L. (1974). Thoroughbreds: New York Central's 4-6-4 Hudson, the most Famous Class of Steam Locomotive in the World. Medina, Ohio: A. F. Staufer. ISBN 978-0944513033.

york, central, hudson, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, nove. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources New York Central Hudson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The New York Central Hudson was a popular 4 6 4 Hudson type steam locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company ALCO and the Lima Locomotive Works in three series from 1927 to 1938 for the New York Central Railroad Named after the Hudson River the 4 6 4 wheel arrangement came to be known as the Hudson type in the United States as these locomotives were the first examples built and used in North America Built for high speed passenger train work the Hudson locomotives were famously known for hauling the New York Central s crack passenger trains such as the 20th Century Limited and the Empire State Express With the onset of diesel locomotives by the mid 20th Century all Hudson locomotives were retired and subsequently scrapped by 1957 with none preserved today except for a converted tender from J 1d 5313 which is preserved at the Steamtown National Historic Site in Scranton Pennsylvania New York Central HudsonPromotional Image of a Dreyfuss streamlined New York Central Hudson LocomotiveType and originPower typeSteamBuilderAlco Schenectady ALCO 265 Lima Locomotive Works 10 Build date1927 1931 J 1 1928 1931 J 2 1937 1938 J 3 Total produced275SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte4 6 4 UIC2 C2 Gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLeading dia 36 in 914 mm Driver dia 79 in 2 007 mm Trailing dia 36 in 914 mm front 51 in 1 295 mm rear Wheelbase83 ft 7 1 2 in 25 489 m Length97 ft 2 3 8 in 29 626 m Width10 ft 6 in 3 20 m Height15 ft 1 in 4 60 m Axle load67 267 lb 30 511 8 kg 30 5 t Adhesive weight201 800 lb 91 534 9 kg 91 5 t Loco weight365 500 lb 165 788 0 kg 165 8 t Tender weight316 400 lb 143 500 kg 143 5 t Total weight681 900 lb 309 300 kg 309 3 t Tender type8 wheel 12 wheel 14 wheelFuel typeCoalFuel capacity56 000 lb 25 400 kg 25 40 t Water cap 13 600 US gal 51 000 l 11 300 imp gal Firebox Firegrate area82 sq ft 7 6 m2 Boiler91 5 in 2 324 mm Boiler pressure265 lbf in2 1 83 MPa Feedwater heaterElesco bundle Worthington SA CoffinHeating surface5 572 sq ft 517 7 m2 Tubes657 sq ft 61 0 m2 Flues3 170 sq ft 295 m2 Tubes and flues3 827 sq ft 355 5 m2 Firebox360 sq ft 33 4 m2 Superheater Heating area1 745 sq ft 162 1 m2 CylindersTwoCylinder size22 5 in 29 in 572 mm 737 mm Valve gearBakerValve typePiston valvesPerformance figuresMaximum speed123 mph 197 95 km h at least Tractive effort41 860 lbf 186 20 kN Factor of adh 4 82CareerOperatorsNew York Central Railroad Boston and Albany Railroad Toronto Hamilton and Buffalo Railway Michigan Central Railroad Cleveland Cincinnati Chicago and St Louis RailwayClassJ 1 J 2 and J 3Number in class205 J 1 20 J 2 50 J 3 Retired1953 1956DispositionAll scrapped by the late 1950s steam heat car converted from the tender of J 1d 5313 preserved at Steamtown National Historic Site none preserved Contents 1 History 1 1 Streamlining 2 Popular culture 3 Model trains 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 Further readingHistory EditThe Chicago Milwaukee St Paul amp Pacific Railroad Milwaukee Road was the first to design a 4 6 4 locomotive naming them Baltics however they were not built until after the New York Central s Hudsons NYC President Patrick E Crowley named the units Hudsons after the Hudson River which divides New York State s Hudson Valley and streams broadly past New York City Builder s photograph of J 1b class Hudson 5249 The Hudson came into being because the existing 4 6 2 Pacific power was not able to keep up with the demands of longer heavier trains and higher speeds Given NYC s axle load limits Pacifics could not be made any larger a new locomotive type would be required to carry the larger boilers Lima Locomotive Works conception of superpower steam as realized in the 2 8 4 Berkshire type was the predecessor to the Hudson The 2 8 4 s 4 wheel trailing truck permitted a huge firebox to be located after the boiler The resulting greater steaming rate ensured that such a locomotive would never run out of power at speed a common failing of older locomotives Applying the ideas of the freight minded Berkshire type to the Pacific resulted in a 4 6 4 locomotive Streamlined J 3a Hudson at the 1939 New York World s FairNYC ordered prototype No 5200 from Alco and subjected it to intensive testing A fleet of 205 J 1 class Hudsons were eventually built including 30 each for the Michigan Central Railroad MC road numbers 8200 8229 and the Cleveland Cincinnati Chicago amp St Louis Railway Big Four road numbers 6600 6629 In addition NYC subsidiary Boston amp Albany Railroad ordered 20 J 2 class B amp A road numbers 600 619 the latter 10 from Lima Locomotive Works all other NYC Hudsons were built by Alco s Schenectady works 1 A later development were 50 J 3a class Super Hudsons in 1937 1938 with many modern appliances and innovations After the MC Big 4 and B amp A locomotives were incorporated into the NYC numbering the NYC Hudson locomotives had road numbers ranging from 5200 to 5474 The NYC J 1 road numbers were 5200 5344 the MC J 1s became NYC 5345 5374 the Big 4 J 1s became NYC 5375 5404 the J 2s all from B amp A became NYC road numbers 5455 5474 and the J 3 road numbers were 5405 5454 The J 2 numbers are last because they were transferred to the NYC after the J 3 deliveries J 3a Super Hudson on display at the 1939 World s Fair Streamlining Edit The Hudsons were of excellent quality In response to the styling sensation of the new diesel powered Zephyr streamliner Locomotive No 5344 the last J 1e was fitted with an Art Deco streamlined shroud designed by Carl F Kantola and was named Commodore Vanderbilt on December 27 1934 2 3 The streamlining was later replaced to match the last ten J 3a Super Hudson locomotives 5445 5454 that had been built with streamlining designed by Henry Dreyfuss J 1e Hudson 5344 stuck out from the rest of the roster as it was the only J 1 to be streamlined and was one of two locomotives ever to be streamlined twice the other being a Baltimore and Ohio P 7 number 5304 Two more J 3a locomotives 5426 amp 5429 had a 3rd streamlining style fitted in 1941 for Empire State Express service 1 The streamlined locomotives featured prominently in NYC advertising The forte of all Hudsons was power at top speed They were poor performers at low speed and the presence of a booster engine on the trailing truck was an absolute necessity for starting For this reason they were generally favored by railroads with flat terrain and straight routes After the NYC the Milwaukee Road was also fond of the Hudsons acquiring 22 class F6 and six streamlined class F7s The Atchison Topeka amp Santa Fe Railway also had 16 while the New York New Haven amp Hartford Railroad had 10 1400 1409 streamlined I 5 4 6 4s built by Baldwin in 1937 nicknamed Shoreliners Few railroads with hilly terrain acquired any citation needed A booster was prone to troubles however and gradually fell out of favor Instead of a complicated booster it was deemed preferential to have an extra pair of driving wheels and thus better traction On September 7 1943 No 5450 suffered a boiler explosion in Canastota New York killing three enginemen and putting her out of service until the end of World War II due to a steel shortage 4 Trials of later dual purpose 4 8 2 Mohawks sealed the Hudson s fate The L 3 and L 4 Mohawks were nice but they were still more suited to lower speed hauling than high speed power In 1944 NYC received permission from the War Production Board to build a new high speed locomotive of the 4 8 4 type combining all the advantages of the Hudson with those of the Mohawk Many other railroads had taken to the 4 8 4 in the 1930s generally calling them Northerns after the Northern Pacific Railway which had first adopted them By being a late adopter the NYC had the chance to build on everyone else s experience That locomotive proved to be exceptional and the type on the NYC was named the Niagara Since only 27 were built however they only took over the heaviest and most prestigious trains and the last Niagara No 6015 was retired in July 1956 Many Hudsons soldiered on until the end of steam on NYC in 1957 Unfortunately none of the NYC Hudson units survive all were scrapped when the railroad dieselized all were replaced by EMD E8 1 Two J 1d class Hudsons numbers 5311 and 5313 were sold to the Toronto Hamilton and Buffalo Railway in 1948 and were renumbered 501 and 502 respectively Both locomotives were retired and scrapped in 1954 when the TH amp B dieselized The tender from the 502 formerly the 5313 was retained by the TH amp B and converted to a steam generator car for use on passenger trains The generator car still survives today and is part of the Steamtown National Historic Site collection 5 Popular culture Edit 5344 Commodore Vanderbilt the last J 1e featured Art Deco streamlining designed by Carl F Kantola when introduced in 1934 here in 1935 Chicago Board of Trade Building in background By no later than 1939 it had been re shrouded with the Art Deco streamlining designed by Henry Dreyfuss for the J 3 Super Hudsons The character Connor from the Thomas amp Friends television series is stylized after a streamlined NYC Hudson NYC Hudsons are featured on the covers of Van Halen s 2012 album A Different Kind of Truth the Commodores 1975 album Movin On Three Dog Night s 1975 album Coming Down Your Way and the 2020 Dennis DeYoung album 26 East Volume 1 In Pocket Trains there is a steam locomotive called the Century Limited It resembles a streamlined Dreyfuss J 3 4 6 4 locomotive but is a 2 6 4 locomotive in the game It is also the only steam locomotive in the game with side rods In the Courage the Cowardly Dog episode The Mask a steam locomotive loosely based on a streamlined NYC J 3a Hudson was seen pulling an Amtrak passenger train which destroyed Mad Dog s car near the end of the episode In the movie The Iron Giant a steam locomotive resembling a NYC J 3a Hudson was pulling a coal train that crashed into the Giant while he was trying to fix the train tracks he ate at the railroad crossing In season 5 episode 6 of The Big Bang Theory The Rhinitis Revelation a New Empire State Express poster can be briefly seen on the back of Sheldon Cooper s door at the very end of the episode when Leonard interrupts Mary Cooper singing Soft Kitty In The Grand Tour the J 3 Hudson can be seen in the opening part of the show Its valve gear is incorrectly animated In How I Met Your Mother a poster of the New York Central Hudson can be seen in Ted Mosby s apartment above the fireplace The icon for the app Transport Tycoon a version of Chris Sawyer s Locomotion for mobile devices depicts a locomotive that closely resembles the New York Central Hudson In Transformers Revenge of the Fallen a J 3a Dreyfuss appears in a vintage photo that was kept by Seymour Simmons in which the Hudson is confirmed as a Seeker by Autobot Wheelie In the Rugrats episode Murmur on the Ornery Express there is a steam locomotive called Biendeltown Express which resembles a NYC streamlined NYC J 3a Hudson In the movie Everyone s Hero there is a steam locomotive that resembles a NYC J 1e Hudson A streamlined J 3a Dreyfuss Super Hudson can be seen on a poster in a train station The exact same above photo of the Streamlined Hudson at the 1939 New York World s Fair appears framed on the wall of Sam Lowry s apartment in Terry Gilliam s Brazil 1985 film in the scene where Archibald Tuttle played by Robert De Niro is fixing Sam Lowry s faulty air conditioning system Sam Lowry is played by Jonathan Pryce In the SpongeBob SquarePants episode The Great Patty Caper there is a steam locomotive called the Oceanic Express which loosely resembles a NYC J 1a Hudson Model trains EditThe Lionel Corporation has issued the Hudson in 1937 1946 1947 1950 1964 1984 1990 2001 2011 and 2019 The first model issued in 1937 was made for special T Rail track and numbered 5344 It was also the first mass produced scale model train numbered 700e by Lionel with e designating it as having an electronic reversing unit or e unit The Hudson from 1946 and 1947 numbered 221 and made with Dreyfuss streamlining was made in a grey paint scheme for the NYC railroad It was the only grey steam locomotive produced by Lionel during the postwar years The 1950 and 1964 version was for O Gauge Tubular track and numbered 773 The 1987 Hudson was released for O Gauge Tubular track and numbered 783 The 2011 legacy Hudson was numbered 5344 like the 1937 Hudson but made for O Gauge FasTrack Tubular or Atlas O Gauge track MTH has also issued the Hudson since the late 1980s and early 1990s Broadway Limited Imports built an HO scale version of the Dreyfuss Hudson in a brass hybrid material for their Paragon 2 lineup Complete with scullin wheels and prototype whistle these models were sold alongside the NYC Niagara of the same model railroad scale While MTH Dreyfuss Hudson HO scale models are somewhat abundant BLI models are now a rarity as BLI has discontinued the model The A C Gilbert Company produced the Hudson in their American Flyer S Gauge line from 1946 to 1964 This represented the standard J 3a configuration rather than any of the streamlined versions The Marx Toy Company produced a non streamlined 1898 Hudson in their 027 style line from 1954 to 1963 In 1935 Marx released tinplate toy trains in windup and electric named the Commodore Vanderbilt Bachmann Trains released its accurately scaled version of the J 3a Super Hudson in N scale early in 2021 It features a diecast metal boiler and its trademarked Econami SoundTraxx sound package See also EditDelaware Lackawanna and Western 1151 classReferences Edit a b c Drury 1993 p 273 Drury 1993 p 271 Cantola Carl F 1981 New York Central Streamlined Steam Locomotives PDF New York Central System Historical Society Archived PDF from the original on April 20 2019 Retrieved May 26 2019 Richard Leonard s New York Central Collection J 3a 4 6 4 5450 New York Central Boston amp Albany 4 6 4 Hudson Type Locomotives Archived from the original on 2015 04 19 Retrieved 2015 09 09 Bibliography EditDrury George H 1993 Guide to North American Steam Locomotives Waukesha Wisconsin Kalmbach Publishing Company ISBN 0 89024 206 2 Further reading EditStaufer Alvin F May Edward L 1974 Thoroughbreds New York Central s 4 6 4 Hudson the most Famous Class of Steam Locomotive in the World Medina Ohio A F Staufer ISBN 978 0944513033 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York Central Hudson amp oldid 1134705809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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