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Pennsylvania Railroad class S1

The PRR S1 class steam locomotive (nicknamed "The Big Engine") was a single experimental duplex locomotive of the Pennsylvania Railroad. It was designed to demonstrate the advantages of duplex drives espoused by Baldwin Chief Engineer Ralph P. Johnson. It was the longest and heaviest rigid frame reciprocating steam locomotive that was ever built.[1] The streamlined Art Deco styled shell of the locomotive was designed by Raymond Loewy.[1][2]

Pennsylvania Railroad S1
The official publicity photo of PRR S1 6100 of 1939
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderPRR Altoona Works
Serial numberAltoona 4341
Build date1939
Total produced1
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte6-4-4-6
 • UIC3′BB3′
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Leading dia.36 in (914 mm)
Driver dia.84 in (2,134 mm)
Trailing dia.42 in (1,067 mm)
WheelbaseCoupled: 26 ft 6 in (8.08 m),
Loco: 64 ft 4 in (19.61 m),
Loco & tender: 123 ft 9+14 in (37.73 m)
Length140 ft 2+12 in (42.74 m)
Width10 ft 7 in (3.23 m)
Height16 ft 0 in (4.88 m)
Adhesive weight281,440 lb (127,700 kg; 127.7 t) 1st Driver: 73,800 lb (33,475 kg; 33 t),
2nd Driver: 73,130 lb (33,171 kg; 33 t),
3rd Driver: 66,970 lb (30,377 kg; 30 t),
4th Driver 67,460 lb (30,599 kg; 31 t)
Loco weight608,170 lb (275,861 kilograms; 276 tonnes)
Tender weightEmpty: 197,020 lb (89,370 kg; 89.37 t);
Loaded: 451,840 lb (205,000 kg; 205.0 t)
Total weight1,060,010 lb (480,812 kilograms; 481 tonnes)
Tender type250 P84 16-wheel tender (two 4-axle trucks)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity52,900 lb (20,000 kg; 20 t)
Water cap.24,230 US gal (91,700 l; 20,180 imp gal)
Firebox:
 • Firegrate area
132 sq ft (12.3 m2)
Boiler pressure300 lbf/in2 (2.07 MPa)
Heating surface7,746 sq ft (719.6 m2)
 • Tubes and flues219 tubes (2.25 in), 69 flues (5.5 in).
 • Firebox660 sq ft (61.3 m2)
Superheater:
 • Heating area2,085 sq ft (193.7 m2)
CylindersFour
Cylinder size22 in × 26 in (559 mm × 660 mm)
Valve gearWalschaerts
Performance figures
Maximum speed156 mph (251 km/h) (Claimed)
Operating speed ≤ 120 mph (193 km/h)
Power output7,200 hp when hauling 1,200 tons train at 100 mph (161 km/h)
Tractive effort76,403 lbf (339.86 kN) (at 85% cut-off)
or 71,900 lbf (319.83 kN) (at 70.6% cut-off)
Factor of adh.3.68
Career
OperatorsPennsylvania Railroad
Numbers6100
Retired1946
DispositionScrapped in 1949

The S1 had a unique 6-4-4-6 wheel arrangement, meaning that it had two pairs of cylinders, each driving two pairs of driving wheels. To achieve stability at fast passenger train speeds (above 100 mph), articulation was not used. The S1 was completed on January 31, 1939, at Altoona shop, and was numbered 6100.

At 140 ft 2+12 in (42.74 m) overall, engine and tender, the S1 was the longest reciprocating steam locomotive ever; it also had the heaviest tender (451,840 lb / 205 tonnes), highest tractive effort (76,403 lbf (339.86 kN)) of a passenger steam engine when built and the largest driving wheels (7 feet in diameter) ever used on a locomotive with more than three driving axles.[clarification needed] The problem of wheel slippage, along with a wheelbase that was too long for many of the rail line's curves, limited the S1's usefulness. No further S1 models were built as focus shifted to the much smaller but more practical class T1 in June 1940. Design of the 4-4-4-4 T1 and the 6-4-4-6 S1 occurred concurrently, however, the S1 was the first produced.

Construction and historical background

 
Industrial designer Raymond Loewy stands on the front of the S1

As early as June 1936, the management of Pennsylvania Railroad decided to build a new passenger locomotive to replace its aging K4s locomotives. They also hoped that the new S1 steam locomotive would have a performance equal to their Pennsylvania Railroad class GG1 electric engine and would be capable of hauling a 1,000-ton passenger train at 100 mph.[3] A conference was held between Baldwin Locomotive Works officials and W. F. Kiesel, J. V. B. Duer and W. R. Elsey for PRR, where PRR demanded a passenger locomotive to haul 15 standard cars at 100 mph on level track between Paoli and Chicago. Baldwin presented several 4-8-4 and 4-4-4-4 designs made for other railroads. However, PRR rejected the 4-8-4 design in favor of a rigid frame duplex and asked Baldwin to consider the wheel arrangement 4-4-6-4. In July 1936, PRR requested Baldwin Locomotive Works to submit a design for a 4-8-4 engine capable of handling a 2,000-ton train between Colehour and Harsimus Cove.

Two months after the conference, Baldwin Locomotive Works officials presented four designs to PRR:

  • a 4-4-4-4 passenger locomotive that could haul 1,200 tons but exceeded existing weight and clearance restrictions
  • a 4-4-4-6 passenger locomotive that could haul 1,200 tons but also exceeded limits
  • a 4-8-4 freight locomotive with the same weight on drivers as an M1a, which failed to meet the requirements for a 2,000-ton train
  • an articulated 4-6-6-4 locomotive

PRR preferred 4-4-4-4 and asked Baldwin to consider a passenger version with 6 ft 8 in drivers and a freight version with 6 ft drivers. However, the cooperation between PRR and Baldwin, which proceeded without signing any agreement or contract for the development of the new high-speed duplex engine, didn't go smoothly. Ten months after the first conference (April 1937), PRR ended Baldwin Locomotive Work's consultation and assigned the task to a consortium of Baldwin Locomotive Works, American Locomotive Company, and Lima Locomotive Works under a joint contract. T. W. Demarest headed the joint committee, General Superintendent of Motive Power in PRR's Western Region.[4]

The members of the joint committee were:

  • Ralph P. Johnsonn (Baldwin)
  • William Winterwood
  • H. Glaenzer (Baldwin)
  • Dan Ennis (American Locomotive Company)
  • William E. Woodard (Lima)
  • Samuel Allen

On 28 April 1937, PRR's Board authorized $300,000 for this experimental high-speed passenger locomotive project. The design started with a 4-4-4-4 duplex.

On 2 June 1937, PRR officially announced the development of the “Pennsylvania Type” high-speed passenger locomotive which would become Class S1. After various details were discussed and finalized, it became necessary to make changes that substantially increased the locomotive's weight. By the time the plans were finalized and approved it had evolved into a 6-4-4-6.[5]

Duplex design

The benefits of a duplex design included lighter machinery, shorter cylinder stroke, less wear, lower piston thrust, smaller more efficient cylinders, and a more stable frame than an articulated underframe; also, no hinged connection had to be maintained.[6] Reduced hammer blows on the track resulted in lower maintenance cost. Two sets of drivers with four wheels each could have lighter (as much as 25%) running gear than a locomotive with all four axles coupled together, smaller and lighter moving parts ensured less wear and tear. Baldwin's chief engineer believed that the 8-coupled, two-cylinder locomotives of the time were at or near practical limits in terms of steam flow, cylinder efficiency could be improved at high speed by getting the same power from four smaller cylinders with proportionately larger valves. Valve travel in S1's cylinder was 7-1/2 in, the lap was 1-7/8 in, the lead was 5/16 in, exhaust clearance was 0.25 in, valve diameter was 12 in.

Construction

 
The S1 under construction at Altoona. The smaller boiler in the photo is for a B6 switcher giving a sense of scale.

The S1 was the largest passenger locomotive ever constructed, and the cast steel locomotive bed plate made by General Steel Castings was the largest single-piece casting ever made for a locomotive.[3][7] In order to negotiate sharper radius curves, S1 was equipped with lateral motion devices made by Alco on its first and third set of drivers, allowing 57.2 mm (2.25 inches) of lateral play on the axles, but these proved to be inadequate. Unlike other experimental duplex engines like PRR's Class Q1 #6130 4-6-4-4, there were no flangeless wheels or blind drivers adopted on S1.

In March 1938, a Chicago and North Western class E-4 4-6-4 "Hudson" #4003 was tested by PRR at Altoona.[8] Based on the test results, PRR decided to adopt 84" drivers and a cylinder pressure of 300 psi for the S1. PRR believed that the large diameter drivers could increase the tractive effort without causing undue slipping.[3] In August 1941, PRR VP-Western Region James M. Symes, a senior official who turned against the idea of duplex engine in later years, approved the extension of stall no. 30 of the Crestline roundhouse to accommodate the S1. The stall had a connection at the back because the S1 could only be turned on a wye, but not on the roundhouse's turntable.

Timken roller bearings were equipped on the crosshead pins, all engine trucks, and drive axles as well as the tender trucks. Besides, the lightweight reciprocating parts were manufactured by Timken High Dynamic Steel and designed by Timken engineers.[9] To get enough steel between the crank and axle, the back end of each main rod was offset 1+18 inches (29 mm) from the crank in the driver, so the big end made a 26-inch (660 mm) circle while each side rod pin made a 28+14-inch (718 mm) circle.

Boiler, steaming quality and streamlining

The boiler for the S1 was the largest built by the Pennsylvania Railroad; with 660 square feet (61 m2) of direct heating surface and 500 one-inch diameter tubes, the total heating surface area of S1 was 7,746 square feet (719.6 m2); it was 99.3% as massive as the boiler for Union Pacific's 4000-class "Big Boy" locomotives. In terms of drawbar horsepower, the S1 was 13% more powerful than the Big Boy, with 7,200 hp and 6,345 hp respectively. The large Belpaire firebox met the Pennsy's standards; its heating surface area included that supplied by seven American Arch circulators. Water passed through 5.5-inch horizontal tube met at the centerline with the other cross tube forming the bottom of the 7-inch vertical tube that sprayed the water up into the steam space above the crown sheet. The lowest set pair of tubes was forward with the side openings of the other six steadily rising toward the back.

A large Worthington 6 SA feedwater heater was fitted with a 7 SA pump to handle the enormous boiler's thirst. The six-wheel leading and trailing trucks were added, as the locomotive was too heavy for four-wheel units. The streamlined Art Deco styled shrouding of the locomotive was designed by Raymond Loewy,[1][2] a design concept based on his earlier streamlining design for PRR K4s #3768 in 1936, for which he received U.S. Patent No. 2,128,490. Raymond Loewy conducted the wind-tunnel test by using the clay model of S1 at Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory for the design of its streamlined shrouding, and it was the same laboratory where he conducted testing of the streamlining of PRR K4s #3768. The design of the smoke lifting plate around the smokestack on S1 was improved based on the wind-tunnel test result from Guggenheim.[10]

Construction costs and testing

The cost of the S1 was $669,780.00, equal to $13,047,891 today,[3] which was over twice the cost of a PRR T1 4-4-4-4 (#6111 cost $310,676). No. 6100 was completed at Altoona on December 21, 1938 without the streamlined casing. On the same day, it made its first road test with two cars, running backward to Huntingdon and returned to Altoona at speeds up to 50 miles per hour (80 km/h). During the run, it was stopped and checked for overhang on all tight curves. Assistant Chief of Motive Power-Locomotive Carleton K. Steins (1891-1973) noted superior riding and steaming qualities.[11] During another pre-service road test, the S1 was clocked at 73 miles per hour (117 km/h) towing 90 freight cars.[12]

1939 World's Fair display

 
The S1 at the New York World's Fair of 1939

The S1 was displayed at the New York World's Fair of 1939–40 with the lettering "American Railroads" rather than "Pennsylvania Railroad", as 27 eastern railroads had one combined 17-acre (6.9 ha) exhibit, which also included the Baltimore and Ohio Class N-1.[7] To reach the Fair, the S1 took a circuitous route over the Long Island Rail Road. Many obstacles, like some of the third rail guards, had to be temporarily removed while other obstacles were passed at a crawl to reach the fairgrounds. S1 was towed (facing backward) by smaller freight engines like PRR Ils and took a round-about route to the fair site. She ran up the Bel-Del, interchanged with the Lehigh and Hudson River Railway at Belvidere and NH at Maybrook. The S1 traveled over the Poughkeepsie and Hell Gate Bridge, crossed over the Hudson River and then brought it across on the NY Connecting.[13] On March 13, 1939, the S1, lettered “American Railroads” on the tender, arrived at New York World's Fair.

At the Fair, the drive wheels operated under the locomotive's steam power[3] ran continuously on the roller platform at 60 mph (97 km/h) all day long. Film footage shows that all the wheels on S1, besides the drive wheels, were also placed on rollers powered by electricity; every time S1 started its performance by moving the drive wheels, all the wheels were rolling, including the wheels on the tender's truck.

The World's Fair was open for two seasons, from April to October each year, and was officially closed on October 27, 1940. During the five-month break between October 1939 and April 1940, No. 6100 was put back on the system for passenger service and road testing. There is photo evidence showing that the S1 was hauling the Manhattan Limited, a named train serving as an alternative to the Broadway Limited, in November 1939.[14]

Popular Mechanics described S1 as the "Pride of American Railroad" in an article in their June 1939 issue.[15] The New York World's Fair of 1939 attracted nearly 25 million visitors, S1's first 50,000 service mile was accumulated from this fair's live steam show. After the World's Fair, the S1 was re-lettered for the Pennsylvania Railroad fleet. As one of the most important exhibits of the World's Fair, S1 was used by the PRR for various publicity purposes; her image was featured in calendars, stamps, advertisements, brochures, puzzles, etc. The American Bank Note Company issued a series of posters in 1939, published by the Eaton paper company as part of an advertising campaign. One of the posters depicts the S1 hauling the Broadway Limited.[16]

Service history

 
PRR S1 #6100 hauling the Trail Blazer, PRR's premier, luxury all-coach train between New York and Chicago in Nov 1942.

The S1 began its passenger train services starting from December 1940, on the run between Chicago and Pittsburgh. On its first run out of Fort Wayne, Indiana, the crew was led by H.H. Lehman (Fireman), C.J. Wappes (Road Foreman) and Frank Ritcha (Engineer). Due to its gigantic size, the S1 had to turn on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad's wye at Chicago before going eastbound and was unable to go through the 130 lb switch (No. 8) just to the west of Pittsburgh Union Station.[17] This problem wasn't fixed until 1946 (which also prevented the PRR class T1 operating through Pittsburgh).

The S1 was so large that it could not negotiate the track clearances on most of the lines of the PRR system, in its brief service life it was restricted to the mainline between Chicago, Illinois and Crestline, Ohio (283 miles/446 km). It was assigned to the Fort Wayne Division and based at the Crestline engine-house. As such, the S1 had to be turned on the wye at Crestline whenever it was in town, and suffered from repeated derailments as a result.[18] Based on photographic evidence, the S1 hauled the Broadway Limited (New York to Chicago) and Liberty Limited (Washington D.C to Chicago) in the first few months of its revenue service, and was then assigned to haul other popular, heavier and commercially successful passenger trains such as The General, The Trail Blazer and The Golden Arrow on this route.[3]

Monthly mileage reports from the Hagley Library indicated that the S1 racked up 10,388-mile (16,718 km) per month, equivalent to twenty round trips between Chicago, Illinois and Crestline, Ohio, which in Aug 1941 was a very spectacular figure for an experimental engine, compared to K4s monthly average of 6,000 to 8,000 miles. This implied that the PRR had high regard for the S1's power and speed. The S1 helped PRR to handle the extreme busy wartime traffic until the end of WWII and paid off her high construction cost within one year. Crews liked the S1, partly because of its very smooth ride at speed. The great mass and inertia of the locomotive together with the unique, massive 6-wheel trailing truck soaked up the bumps and the surging often experienced with duplex locomotives.

Operating performance and alleged speed records

 
PRR S1 #6100 was seen hauling the Liberty Limited eastbound at New Freedom, PA in April 1941.

In terms of tractive effort and drawbar horsepower, the PRR S1 was the most potent reciprocating steam locomotive ever built for passenger service. Starting tractive effort calculated in the usual way (85% mean effective pressure) comes out 76,400 lbf (340 kN), but the engine used 70.6% limited cutoff (presumably to increase port openings at short cutoff), so the railroad claimed a correspondingly lower tractive effort.[jargon] During a test run between Chicago, Illinois and Crestline, Ohio in December 1940, the S1 managed to reach 100.97 miles per hour (162.50 km/h) on level track with 1,350 tons of passenger stock behind her, which was equal to 24 postwar lightweight passenger cars.[19] In this test run, the S1 also achieved an average speed of 66 miles per hour (106 km/h), which was 27% faster than the average schedule speed of the route. Some publications from Germany stated that the S1 was able to reach 120.01 miles per hour (193.14 km/h) in other road tests during the late 1940s with a lighter load behind her, but PRR never claimed this record. On Apr 19, 1941, during an excursion run organized by the Detroit Railroad Club, the S1 reached 105 miles per hour (169 km/h) on the route between Fort Wayne and Chicago.[20]

An article "Riding the Gargantua of the Rails"[21] in the Dec 1941 Popular Mechanics Magazine cites a speed recorded by assistant road foreman Charlie Wappes of the Fort Wayne Division during the S1's test runs at 133.4 miles per hour (214.7 km/h) with 12 heavyweight passenger cars in its back. There are other stories of the S1 reaching or exceeding 140 miles per hour (230 km/h). In the German trade press and literature from 1945, there was a report of a record run of the S1, citing railroad officials of Interstate Commerce Commission that a speed of 141.2 miles per hour (227.2 km/h) was reached when the engine was trying to make up time for a delayed westbound train, the Trail Blazer.[22]

Its high-speed capability was such that many have claimed that the S1 exceeded on multiple occasions the 126 mph (203 km/h) record steam locomotive speed set in 1938 by the British LNER locomotive 4468 Mallard. The engine was claimed to have exceeded 156 mph (251 km/h) on the Fort Wayne-Chicago run, as it was reported that the PRR received a fine for the feat.

The streamlining designer of the train Raymond Loewy himself wrote in 1979: "On a straight stretch of track without any curves for miles; I waited for the S1 to pass through at full speed. I stood on the platform and saw it coming from the distance at 120 miles per hour. It flashed by like a steel thunderbolt, the ground shaking under me, in a blast of air that almost sucked me into its whirlwind. Approximately a million pounds of locomotive were crashing through near me. I felt shaken and overwhelmed by an unforgettable feeling of power, by a sense of pride at the sight of what I had helped to create."

Suspected design flaws

 
Detail view of the driving wheels and cylinders; note the rollers upon which the wheels rested while on display

The lack of curve compatibility led to the S1 not being used for its intended long-distance express service. Although the S1 had less than half (47%) its total weight on the driving wheels, its Factor of adhesion was still very close to the much more successful PRR Q2, Santa Fe "Northern" 4-8-4s the 2900s, and the renowned N&W Class J 4-8-4s. More than half of its weight was being carried by the massive six-wheel pilot (leading) and trailing trucks instead of the drivers. This left the two sets of four duplex driving wheels susceptible to wheel slippage. However, during the 5+12 years service history of the S1, no serious accident occurred due to wheel slippage. The S1 managed to serve between Chicago and Crestline, Ohio for almost 5+12 years, made it having the longest-serving record among all experimental steam engine prototypes of the PRR, such as the Q1 4-6-4-4 and S2 turbine 6-8-6.

Mitigation measures

To increase the adhesion and improve performance, PRR enlarged the sand dome on the S1. It ensured the supply of sand for steam sanding and slightly increased the axle load above the first and second set axle. The S1 was partially de-skirted in 1942 to improve the visibility of the reciprocating parts for the crews and better operation.[23] Suspension springs of the pilot truck and trailer truck were fine-tuned to straighten out the overall weight distribution to achieve better performance. Railway Historian and Author Alvin F. Staufer agrees that she (S1) was oversized and thus unable to visit most roundhouses or handle tight curves, but contends: "She was an excellent steamer and gave trouble-free service."[24]

Retirement

 
Based on the experience gained from the S1, PRR improved the design of the T1. A total of 52 of them were ordered from 1940 to 1945.

According to an official report from PRR dated December 1, 1945, which is now stored in The Hagley Museum and Library, No. 6100 was awaiting engine truck repairs at Crestline. It was expected to be returned in service after a few days. This is one of a solid proof that the S1 was still in service at least until December 1945. At the time, at least 13 T1 4-4-4-4s were already put into service.

The design flaws of the S1 led to only one example being produced. Before the S1 was officially put in revenue service, the PRR already ordered the T1s. Unlike her duplex sisters, the S1 didn't install any form of Poppet Valve Gear, even though it was proposed to install Franklin Type A rotary cam poppet valve gear when she was already under construction, but such proposal was rejected due to technical difficulties in 1938.,[23] this decision unexpectedly prevented a lot of troubles that would have been caused by the problematic Franklin poppet valve gears in the T1's service life. The total service years or total service mileage of the S1 (from Nov 1939 to March 1940, Dec 1940 to May 1946) was ironically slightly longer than some of her younger duplex sisters.

A time-book belonging to Pennsy engineman Byron Breininger from the Ft. Wayne division records a trip to Chicago on No. 6100 at 8:59 AM on May 5, 1946. This run was possibly one of its last in service, as less than two years later PRR president Martin W. Clement announced that “by May of this year (1948) we expect all of our through passenger trains west of the electrified territory to be dieselized”.[25] Preservation of the S1 was discussed inside PRR's board, but due to the deteriorating financial situation since 1946, 6100 was scrapped in 1949.[3][26] The PRR continued developing the T1 class of 4-4-4-4 duplex locomotives but wheel slip and mechanical failures also plagued the T1.

Before Pennsylvania Railroad commissioned Baldwin for a 4-4-4-4 duplex passenger engine (T1) in 1940, Baldwin Locomotive Works already begun the development of designs for fast locomotives with duplex drive since 1938, including a rigid-frame 4-2-2-4 and three-cylinder 4-4-4 for lightweight trains and the preliminary design for a 4-4-4-4 for heavy trains; BLW presented these designs to several railroads, but only the PRR adopted the duplex concept.[27] In Oct 1939, when PRR S1 was still on display in the 1939-40 World's Fair, Baldwin Locomotive Works placed a stock order to build a 4-4-4-4 duplex high-speed passenger locomotive as a demonstrator, with bullet nose streamlining by noted industrial designer Otto Kuhler, but before it could be built, the PRR placed an order for two locomotives of this type in July 1940. This implied that the PRR S1 was a showpiece exclusively built for the World's Fair instead of replacing the K4s as the new prime power of the PRR. The PRR T1 was developed at the same time when the S1 was under construction or on display in the World Fair.[28]

Cultural references

The stylish appearance of the S1 has proved to be very popular:

  • The S1 was represented in a 1939 painting by railroad artist Grif Teller that appeared in the Pennsylvania Railroad's picture calendar.
  • The American Bank Note Company issued a series of posters published by the Eaton paper company as part of an advertising campaign in 1939, one of the posters depicts the S1 hauling the Broadway Limited
  • Famed artist Emmanuel Zurin's Bronze sculpture "Train futuriste," a 43 inches long sculpture which features some elements of S1's front-end styling like the bullet head, lines, and curves at the pilot and its 6-wheel trucks.
  • CD Album "Night Train, Classic Railroad Songs, Volume 3" by Various Artists, Published by Rounder in 1998, a painting of S1 was used on the cover of the Album.
  • CD Album "Black Diamond Express to Hell" by Various Artists, Published by Rev. A. W. Nix in 2006, features a perspective drawing of S1 which was used as the backbone of the cover's art design.
  • In the PC game Gadget: Invention, Travel, & Adventure, one of the trains the player travels on is pulled by an S1 modeled locomotive.
  • The Danish pop group 'Laid Back's third album 'Play It Straight,' released in 1985, features a three-quarter view of the S1's bow on its cover, albeit in a gaudy pinkish-red hue it never wore in service.
  • The S1 appears in the Sandman comic series, book IX.
  • In the anime 'The Galaxy Railways', the engine for Vega Platoon, Iron Burger, is loosely based on the S1, with the 4-8-8-4 wheel arrangement used for the Union Pacific Big Boy, which was used as the basis for Big One, the engine for Sirius Platoon.
  • A locomotive inspired by the S1 appears in the PC game Grim Fandango as "the Number Nine," the best vehicle for travel to the eternal rest.
  • Solomon Islands Stamps release a set of stamp in 2017 (Neofile #SI-17212a) with S1 and other express steam locomotives from all over the world like the LNER A4 Mallard on it, S1 was placed next to the LNER Mallard.[29]
  • A streamlined locomotive similar to the S1 appears in Batman: The Animated Series season 1, episode 2, Christmas with the Joker.
  • Aunt Billie's "toy trains" in the 2007 film Meet the Robinsons are loosely based on this particular locomotive design.
  • Engine Engine No. 9, a 34-page children’s chapter book by Edith Thacher Hurd, illustrated by Clement Hurd, published in 1940 by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co. of Boston, has as its main character an anthropomorphic steam locomotive. Clement Hurd’s illustrations show No. 9 to be nearly identical to a PRR class S1, except for its 4-6-2 “Pacific” wheel arrangement, making No. 9 considerably shorter than a 6-4-4-6 PRR class S1.

There are Lionel and MTH models of 6100

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c . The Avanti. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-09-02.
  2. ^ a b "It's a bird! It's a plane! No, it's - an office tool". The Home Forum > Essays. The Christian Science Monitor. September 23, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-04.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Actual Production Models Shown". Brochures. www.lionel.com. 2003. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
  4. ^ "PRR Chronology 1936" (PDF). PRR Chronology. Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society. April 2015. Retrieved 2018-07-21.
  5. ^ "PRR Chronology 1937" (PDF). PRR Chronology. Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society. April 2015. Retrieved 2018-07-21.
  6. ^ Pennsy Power by Alvin F. Staufer | 1962 | Page 217
  7. ^ a b Reed, Brian (June 1972). Pennsylvania Duplexii. Loco Profile 24. Windsor, Berkshire: Profile Publications Limited. pp. 267–271.
  8. ^ "Black Gold - Black Diamonds: The Pennsylvania Railroad & Dieselization" Volume 1 by Eric Hirsimaki, July 1997, Page 85-86
  9. ^ Waide Collection of Vintage Railroad Advertisements 1840-1949 https://waidephoto.smugmug.com/Trains/Waide-Collection-of-Vintage/i-NcMc82c/A
  10. ^ Streamliner - Raymond Loewy and Image-making in the Age of American Industrial Design |John Wall| Page 81 |
  11. ^ "PRR Chronology 1937" (PDF). PRR Chronology. Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society. April 2015. Retrieved 2018-07-21.
  12. ^ The Keystone Magazine | Vol.27 | No.2 | Summer 1994
  13. ^ "PRR S-1 Duplex (Volume 1)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-05.
  14. ^ Pennsy's “Big Engine” in the snow | Classic Trains Magazine | April 1st, 2014 | http://ctr.trains.com/photo-of-the-day/2014/04/pennsys-big-engine-in-the-snow
  15. ^ Popular Mechanics | Million-Pound Iron Horse is 140 Feet Long { https://archive.org/stream/PopularMechanics1939/Popular_Mechanics_06_1939#page/n109
  16. ^ The Pennsylvania Railroad S-1 | http://www.jitterbuzz.com/stream.html#essone
  17. ^ https://prrt1steamlocomotivetrust.org/faq.php | Question No.9 "Where it will run?"
  18. ^ "Crestline PRR Engine Facility Duplex and Experimentals".
  19. ^ Dampflokomotiven in den USA 1825–1950 Band 2: Die technische Hochblüte der Dampftraktion 1921–1950, Page 112 | 1972 | Autoren: BUCHMANN
  20. ^ Black Gold - Black Diamonds: The Pennsylvania Railroad & Dieselization" Volume 1 by Eric Hirsimaki, July 1997, Page 105
  21. ^ http://streamlinermemories.info/PRR/Gargantua.pdf | Popular Mechanics Magazine | Dec 1941
  22. ^ Rekord Lokomotiven, Die schnellsten der Schiene 1848-1950, P.134 | (1988) by Wilhelm Reuter
  23. ^ a b Loco Profile, 24: Pennsylvania DuplexII | 1972
  24. ^ Pennsylvania "Duplex Drive" Locomotives in the USA, https://www.steamlocomotive.com/locobase.php?country=USA&wheel=Duplex&railroad=prr
  25. ^ Railway & Locomotive Historical Society Newsletter - Winter 2007
  26. ^ "PRR Chronology 1945" (PDF). PRR Chronology. Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society. April 2015. Retrieved 2016-02-20.
  27. ^ A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY ITS PREDECESSORS AND SUCCESSORS AND ITS HISTORICAL CONTEXT| Christopher T. Baer| 1939
  28. ^ A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY 1939 | http://www.prrths.com/newprr_files/Hagley/PRR1939%204_15_15.pdf
  29. ^ SOLOMON ISLANDS STAMPS 2017 | http://www.neofila.com/stamps/world/solomon-islands.htm

pennsylvania, railroad, class, class, steam, locomotive, nicknamed, engine, single, experimental, duplex, locomotive, pennsylvania, railroad, designed, demonstrate, advantages, duplex, drives, espoused, baldwin, chief, engineer, ralph, johnson, longest, heavie. The PRR S1 class steam locomotive nicknamed The Big Engine was a single experimental duplex locomotive of the Pennsylvania Railroad It was designed to demonstrate the advantages of duplex drives espoused by Baldwin Chief Engineer Ralph P Johnson It was the longest and heaviest rigid frame reciprocating steam locomotive that was ever built 1 The streamlined Art Deco styled shell of the locomotive was designed by Raymond Loewy 1 2 Pennsylvania Railroad S1The official publicity photo of PRR S1 6100 of 1939Type and originPower typeSteamBuilderPRR Altoona WorksSerial numberAltoona 4341Build date1939Total produced1SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte6 4 4 6 UIC3 BB3 Gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm Leading dia 36 in 914 mm Driver dia 84 in 2 134 mm Trailing dia 42 in 1 067 mm WheelbaseCoupled 26 ft 6 in 8 08 m Loco 64 ft 4 in 19 61 m Loco amp tender 123 ft 9 1 4 in 37 73 m Length140 ft 2 1 2 in 42 74 m Width10 ft 7 in 3 23 m Height16 ft 0 in 4 88 m Adhesive weight281 440 lb 127 700 kg 127 7 t 1st Driver 73 800 lb 33 475 kg 33 t 2nd Driver 73 130 lb 33 171 kg 33 t 3rd Driver 66 970 lb 30 377 kg 30 t 4th Driver 67 460 lb 30 599 kg 31 t Loco weight608 170 lb 275 861 kilograms 276 tonnes Tender weightEmpty 197 020 lb 89 370 kg 89 37 t Loaded 451 840 lb 205 000 kg 205 0 t Total weight1 060 010 lb 480 812 kilograms 481 tonnes Tender type250 P84 16 wheel tender two 4 axle trucks Fuel typeCoalFuel capacity52 900 lb 20 000 kg 20 t Water cap 24 230 US gal 91 700 l 20 180 imp gal Firebox Firegrate area132 sq ft 12 3 m2 Boiler pressure300 lbf in2 2 07 MPa Heating surface7 746 sq ft 719 6 m2 Tubes and flues219 tubes 2 25 in 69 flues 5 5 in Firebox660 sq ft 61 3 m2 Superheater Heating area2 085 sq ft 193 7 m2 CylindersFourCylinder size22 in 26 in 559 mm 660 mm Valve gearWalschaertsPerformance figuresMaximum speed156 mph 251 km h Claimed Operating speed 120 mph 193 km h Power output7 200 hp when hauling 1 200 tons train at 100 mph 161 km h Tractive effort76 403 lbf 339 86 kN at 85 cut off or 71 900 lbf 319 83 kN at 70 6 cut off Factor of adh 3 68CareerOperatorsPennsylvania RailroadNumbers6100Retired1946DispositionScrapped in 1949The S1 had a unique 6 4 4 6 wheel arrangement meaning that it had two pairs of cylinders each driving two pairs of driving wheels To achieve stability at fast passenger train speeds above 100 mph articulation was not used The S1 was completed on January 31 1939 at Altoona shop and was numbered 6100 At 140 ft 2 1 2 in 42 74 m overall engine and tender the S1 was the longest reciprocating steam locomotive ever it also had the heaviest tender 451 840 lb 205 tonnes highest tractive effort 76 403 lbf 339 86 kN of a passenger steam engine when built and the largest driving wheels 7 feet in diameter ever used on a locomotive with more than three driving axles clarification needed The problem of wheel slippage along with a wheelbase that was too long for many of the rail line s curves limited the S1 s usefulness No further S1 models were built as focus shifted to the much smaller but more practical class T1 in June 1940 Design of the 4 4 4 4 T1 and the 6 4 4 6 S1 occurred concurrently however the S1 was the first produced Contents 1 Construction and historical background 2 Duplex design 3 Construction 4 Boiler steaming quality and streamlining 5 Construction costs and testing 6 1939 World s Fair display 7 Service history 8 Operating performance and alleged speed records 9 Suspected design flaws 10 Mitigation measures 11 Retirement 12 Cultural references 13 See also 14 ReferencesConstruction and historical background Edit Industrial designer Raymond Loewy stands on the front of the S1 As early as June 1936 the management of Pennsylvania Railroad decided to build a new passenger locomotive to replace its aging K4s locomotives They also hoped that the new S1 steam locomotive would have a performance equal to their Pennsylvania Railroad class GG1 electric engine and would be capable of hauling a 1 000 ton passenger train at 100 mph 3 A conference was held between Baldwin Locomotive Works officials and W F Kiesel J V B Duer and W R Elsey for PRR where PRR demanded a passenger locomotive to haul 15 standard cars at 100 mph on level track between Paoli and Chicago Baldwin presented several 4 8 4 and 4 4 4 4 designs made for other railroads However PRR rejected the 4 8 4 design in favor of a rigid frame duplex and asked Baldwin to consider the wheel arrangement 4 4 6 4 In July 1936 PRR requested Baldwin Locomotive Works to submit a design for a 4 8 4 engine capable of handling a 2 000 ton train between Colehour and Harsimus Cove Two months after the conference Baldwin Locomotive Works officials presented four designs to PRR a 4 4 4 4 passenger locomotive that could haul 1 200 tons but exceeded existing weight and clearance restrictions a 4 4 4 6 passenger locomotive that could haul 1 200 tons but also exceeded limits a 4 8 4 freight locomotive with the same weight on drivers as an M1a which failed to meet the requirements for a 2 000 ton train an articulated 4 6 6 4 locomotivePRR preferred 4 4 4 4 and asked Baldwin to consider a passenger version with 6 ft 8 in drivers and a freight version with 6 ft drivers However the cooperation between PRR and Baldwin which proceeded without signing any agreement or contract for the development of the new high speed duplex engine didn t go smoothly Ten months after the first conference April 1937 PRR ended Baldwin Locomotive Work s consultation and assigned the task to a consortium of Baldwin Locomotive Works American Locomotive Company and Lima Locomotive Works under a joint contract T W Demarest headed the joint committee General Superintendent of Motive Power in PRR s Western Region 4 The members of the joint committee were Ralph P Johnsonn Baldwin William Winterwood H Glaenzer Baldwin Dan Ennis American Locomotive Company William E Woodard Lima Samuel AllenOn 28 April 1937 PRR s Board authorized 300 000 for this experimental high speed passenger locomotive project The design started with a 4 4 4 4 duplex On 2 June 1937 PRR officially announced the development of the Pennsylvania Type high speed passenger locomotive which would become Class S1 After various details were discussed and finalized it became necessary to make changes that substantially increased the locomotive s weight By the time the plans were finalized and approved it had evolved into a 6 4 4 6 5 Duplex design EditThe benefits of a duplex design included lighter machinery shorter cylinder stroke less wear lower piston thrust smaller more efficient cylinders and a more stable frame than an articulated underframe also no hinged connection had to be maintained 6 Reduced hammer blows on the track resulted in lower maintenance cost Two sets of drivers with four wheels each could have lighter as much as 25 running gear than a locomotive with all four axles coupled together smaller and lighter moving parts ensured less wear and tear Baldwin s chief engineer believed that the 8 coupled two cylinder locomotives of the time were at or near practical limits in terms of steam flow cylinder efficiency could be improved at high speed by getting the same power from four smaller cylinders with proportionately larger valves Valve travel in S1 s cylinder was 7 1 2 in the lap was 1 7 8 in the lead was 5 16 in exhaust clearance was 0 25 in valve diameter was 12 in Construction Edit The S1 under construction at Altoona The smaller boiler in the photo is for a B6 switcher giving a sense of scale The S1 was the largest passenger locomotive ever constructed and the cast steel locomotive bed plate made by General Steel Castings was the largest single piece casting ever made for a locomotive 3 7 In order to negotiate sharper radius curves S1 was equipped with lateral motion devices made by Alco on its first and third set of drivers allowing 57 2 mm 2 25 inches of lateral play on the axles but these proved to be inadequate Unlike other experimental duplex engines like PRR s Class Q1 6130 4 6 4 4 there were no flangeless wheels or blind drivers adopted on S1 In March 1938 a Chicago and North Western class E 4 4 6 4 Hudson 4003 was tested by PRR at Altoona 8 Based on the test results PRR decided to adopt 84 drivers and a cylinder pressure of 300 psi for the S1 PRR believed that the large diameter drivers could increase the tractive effort without causing undue slipping 3 In August 1941 PRR VP Western Region James M Symes a senior official who turned against the idea of duplex engine in later years approved the extension of stall no 30 of the Crestline roundhouse to accommodate the S1 The stall had a connection at the back because the S1 could only be turned on a wye but not on the roundhouse s turntable Timken roller bearings were equipped on the crosshead pins all engine trucks and drive axles as well as the tender trucks Besides the lightweight reciprocating parts were manufactured by Timken High Dynamic Steel and designed by Timken engineers 9 To get enough steel between the crank and axle the back end of each main rod was offset 1 1 8 inches 29 mm from the crank in the driver so the big end made a 26 inch 660 mm circle while each side rod pin made a 28 1 4 inch 718 mm circle Boiler steaming quality and streamlining EditThe boiler for the S1 was the largest built by the Pennsylvania Railroad with 660 square feet 61 m2 of direct heating surface and 500 one inch diameter tubes the total heating surface area of S1 was 7 746 square feet 719 6 m2 it was 99 3 as massive as the boiler for Union Pacific s 4000 class Big Boy locomotives In terms of drawbar horsepower the S1 was 13 more powerful than the Big Boy with 7 200 hp and 6 345 hp respectively The large Belpaire firebox met the Pennsy s standards its heating surface area included that supplied by seven American Arch circulators Water passed through 5 5 inch horizontal tube met at the centerline with the other cross tube forming the bottom of the 7 inch vertical tube that sprayed the water up into the steam space above the crown sheet The lowest set pair of tubes was forward with the side openings of the other six steadily rising toward the back A large Worthington 6 SA feedwater heater was fitted with a 7 SA pump to handle the enormous boiler s thirst The six wheel leading and trailing trucks were added as the locomotive was too heavy for four wheel units The streamlined Art Deco styled shrouding of the locomotive was designed by Raymond Loewy 1 2 a design concept based on his earlier streamlining design for PRR K4s 3768 in 1936 for which he received U S Patent No 2 128 490 Raymond Loewy conducted the wind tunnel test by using the clay model of S1 at Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory for the design of its streamlined shrouding and it was the same laboratory where he conducted testing of the streamlining of PRR K4s 3768 The design of the smoke lifting plate around the smokestack on S1 was improved based on the wind tunnel test result from Guggenheim 10 Construction costs and testing EditThe cost of the S1 was 669 780 00 equal to 13 047 891 today 3 which was over twice the cost of a PRR T1 4 4 4 4 6111 cost 310 676 No 6100 was completed at Altoona on December 21 1938 without the streamlined casing On the same day it made its first road test with two cars running backward to Huntingdon and returned to Altoona at speeds up to 50 miles per hour 80 km h During the run it was stopped and checked for overhang on all tight curves Assistant Chief of Motive Power Locomotive Carleton K Steins 1891 1973 noted superior riding and steaming qualities 11 During another pre service road test the S1 was clocked at 73 miles per hour 117 km h towing 90 freight cars 12 1939 World s Fair display Edit The S1 at the New York World s Fair of 1939 The S1 was displayed at the New York World s Fair of 1939 40 with the lettering American Railroads rather than Pennsylvania Railroad as 27 eastern railroads had one combined 17 acre 6 9 ha exhibit which also included the Baltimore and Ohio Class N 1 7 To reach the Fair the S1 took a circuitous route over the Long Island Rail Road Many obstacles like some of the third rail guards had to be temporarily removed while other obstacles were passed at a crawl to reach the fairgrounds S1 was towed facing backward by smaller freight engines like PRR Ils and took a round about route to the fair site She ran up the Bel Del interchanged with the Lehigh and Hudson River Railway at Belvidere and NH at Maybrook The S1 traveled over the Poughkeepsie and Hell Gate Bridge crossed over the Hudson River and then brought it across on the NY Connecting 13 On March 13 1939 the S1 lettered American Railroads on the tender arrived at New York World s Fair At the Fair the drive wheels operated under the locomotive s steam power 3 ran continuously on the roller platform at 60 mph 97 km h all day long Film footage shows that all the wheels on S1 besides the drive wheels were also placed on rollers powered by electricity every time S1 started its performance by moving the drive wheels all the wheels were rolling including the wheels on the tender s truck The World s Fair was open for two seasons from April to October each year and was officially closed on October 27 1940 During the five month break between October 1939 and April 1940 No 6100 was put back on the system for passenger service and road testing There is photo evidence showing that the S1 was hauling the Manhattan Limited a named train serving as an alternative to the Broadway Limited in November 1939 14 Popular Mechanics described S1 as the Pride of American Railroad in an article in their June 1939 issue 15 The New York World s Fair of 1939 attracted nearly 25 million visitors S1 s first 50 000 service mile was accumulated from this fair s live steam show After the World s Fair the S1 was re lettered for the Pennsylvania Railroad fleet As one of the most important exhibits of the World s Fair S1 was used by the PRR for various publicity purposes her image was featured in calendars stamps advertisements brochures puzzles etc The American Bank Note Company issued a series of posters in 1939 published by the Eaton paper company as part of an advertising campaign One of the posters depicts the S1 hauling the Broadway Limited 16 Service history Edit PRR S1 6100 hauling the Trail Blazer PRR s premier luxury all coach train between New York and Chicago in Nov 1942 The S1 began its passenger train services starting from December 1940 on the run between Chicago and Pittsburgh On its first run out of Fort Wayne Indiana the crew was led by H H Lehman Fireman C J Wappes Road Foreman and Frank Ritcha Engineer Due to its gigantic size the S1 had to turn on the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad s wye at Chicago before going eastbound and was unable to go through the 130 lb switch No 8 just to the west of Pittsburgh Union Station 17 This problem wasn t fixed until 1946 which also prevented the PRR class T1 operating through Pittsburgh The S1 was so large that it could not negotiate the track clearances on most of the lines of the PRR system in its brief service life it was restricted to the mainline between Chicago Illinois and Crestline Ohio 283 miles 446 km It was assigned to the Fort Wayne Division and based at the Crestline engine house As such the S1 had to be turned on the wye at Crestline whenever it was in town and suffered from repeated derailments as a result 18 Based on photographic evidence the S1 hauled the Broadway Limited New York to Chicago and Liberty Limited Washington D C to Chicago in the first few months of its revenue service and was then assigned to haul other popular heavier and commercially successful passenger trains such as The General The Trail Blazer and The Golden Arrow on this route 3 Monthly mileage reports from the Hagley Library indicated that the S1 racked up 10 388 mile 16 718 km per month equivalent to twenty round trips between Chicago Illinois and Crestline Ohio which in Aug 1941 was a very spectacular figure for an experimental engine compared to K4s monthly average of 6 000 to 8 000 miles This implied that the PRR had high regard for the S1 s power and speed The S1 helped PRR to handle the extreme busy wartime traffic until the end of WWII and paid off her high construction cost within one year Crews liked the S1 partly because of its very smooth ride at speed The great mass and inertia of the locomotive together with the unique massive 6 wheel trailing truck soaked up the bumps and the surging often experienced with duplex locomotives Operating performance and alleged speed records Edit PRR S1 6100 was seen hauling the Liberty Limited eastbound at New Freedom PA in April 1941 In terms of tractive effort and drawbar horsepower the PRR S1 was the most potent reciprocating steam locomotive ever built for passenger service Starting tractive effort calculated in the usual way 85 mean effective pressure comes out 76 400 lbf 340 kN but the engine used 70 6 limited cutoff presumably to increase port openings at short cutoff so the railroad claimed a correspondingly lower tractive effort jargon During a test run between Chicago Illinois and Crestline Ohio in December 1940 the S1 managed to reach 100 97 miles per hour 162 50 km h on level track with 1 350 tons of passenger stock behind her which was equal to 24 postwar lightweight passenger cars 19 In this test run the S1 also achieved an average speed of 66 miles per hour 106 km h which was 27 faster than the average schedule speed of the route Some publications from Germany stated that the S1 was able to reach 120 01 miles per hour 193 14 km h in other road tests during the late 1940s with a lighter load behind her but PRR never claimed this record On Apr 19 1941 during an excursion run organized by the Detroit Railroad Club the S1 reached 105 miles per hour 169 km h on the route between Fort Wayne and Chicago 20 An article Riding the Gargantua of the Rails 21 in the Dec 1941 Popular Mechanics Magazine cites a speed recorded by assistant road foreman Charlie Wappes of the Fort Wayne Division during the S1 s test runs at 133 4 miles per hour 214 7 km h with 12 heavyweight passenger cars in its back There are other stories of the S1 reaching or exceeding 140 miles per hour 230 km h In the German trade press and literature from 1945 there was a report of a record run of the S1 citing railroad officials of Interstate Commerce Commission that a speed of 141 2 miles per hour 227 2 km h was reached when the engine was trying to make up time for a delayed westbound train the Trail Blazer 22 Its high speed capability was such that many have claimed that the S1 exceeded on multiple occasions the 126 mph 203 km h record steam locomotive speed set in 1938 by the British LNER locomotive 4468 Mallard The engine was claimed to have exceeded 156 mph 251 km h on the Fort Wayne Chicago run as it was reported that the PRR received a fine for the feat The streamlining designer of the train Raymond Loewy himself wrote in 1979 On a straight stretch of track without any curves for miles I waited for the S1 to pass through at full speed I stood on the platform and saw it coming from the distance at 120 miles per hour It flashed by like a steel thunderbolt the ground shaking under me in a blast of air that almost sucked me into its whirlwind Approximately a million pounds of locomotive were crashing through near me I felt shaken and overwhelmed by an unforgettable feeling of power by a sense of pride at the sight of what I had helped to create Suspected design flaws EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Detail view of the driving wheels and cylinders note the rollers upon which the wheels rested while on display The lack of curve compatibility led to the S1 not being used for its intended long distance express service Although the S1 had less than half 47 its total weight on the driving wheels its Factor of adhesion was still very close to the much more successful PRR Q2 Santa Fe Northern 4 8 4s the 2900s and the renowned N amp W Class J 4 8 4s More than half of its weight was being carried by the massive six wheel pilot leading and trailing trucks instead of the drivers This left the two sets of four duplex driving wheels susceptible to wheel slippage However during the 5 1 2 years service history of the S1 no serious accident occurred due to wheel slippage The S1 managed to serve between Chicago and Crestline Ohio for almost 5 1 2 years made it having the longest serving record among all experimental steam engine prototypes of the PRR such as the Q1 4 6 4 4 and S2 turbine 6 8 6 Mitigation measures EditTo increase the adhesion and improve performance PRR enlarged the sand dome on the S1 It ensured the supply of sand for steam sanding and slightly increased the axle load above the first and second set axle The S1 was partially de skirted in 1942 to improve the visibility of the reciprocating parts for the crews and better operation 23 Suspension springs of the pilot truck and trailer truck were fine tuned to straighten out the overall weight distribution to achieve better performance Railway Historian and Author Alvin F Staufer agrees that she S1 was oversized and thus unable to visit most roundhouses or handle tight curves but contends She was an excellent steamer and gave trouble free service 24 Retirement Edit Based on the experience gained from the S1 PRR improved the design of the T1 A total of 52 of them were ordered from 1940 to 1945 According to an official report from PRR dated December 1 1945 which is now stored in The Hagley Museum and Library No 6100 was awaiting engine truck repairs at Crestline It was expected to be returned in service after a few days This is one of a solid proof that the S1 was still in service at least until December 1945 At the time at least 13 T1 4 4 4 4s were already put into service The design flaws of the S1 led to only one example being produced Before the S1 was officially put in revenue service the PRR already ordered the T1s Unlike her duplex sisters the S1 didn t install any form of Poppet Valve Gear even though it was proposed to install Franklin Type A rotary cam poppet valve gear when she was already under construction but such proposal was rejected due to technical difficulties in 1938 23 this decision unexpectedly prevented a lot of troubles that would have been caused by the problematic Franklin poppet valve gears in the T1 s service life The total service years or total service mileage of the S1 from Nov 1939 to March 1940 Dec 1940 to May 1946 was ironically slightly longer than some of her younger duplex sisters A time book belonging to Pennsy engineman Byron Breininger from the Ft Wayne division records a trip to Chicago on No 6100 at 8 59 AM on May 5 1946 This run was possibly one of its last in service as less than two years later PRR president Martin W Clement announced that by May of this year 1948 we expect all of our through passenger trains west of the electrified territory to be dieselized 25 Preservation of the S1 was discussed inside PRR s board but due to the deteriorating financial situation since 1946 6100 was scrapped in 1949 3 26 The PRR continued developing the T1 class of 4 4 4 4 duplex locomotives but wheel slip and mechanical failures also plagued the T1 Before Pennsylvania Railroad commissioned Baldwin for a 4 4 4 4 duplex passenger engine T1 in 1940 Baldwin Locomotive Works already begun the development of designs for fast locomotives with duplex drive since 1938 including a rigid frame 4 2 2 4 and three cylinder 4 4 4 for lightweight trains and the preliminary design for a 4 4 4 4 for heavy trains BLW presented these designs to several railroads but only the PRR adopted the duplex concept 27 In Oct 1939 when PRR S1 was still on display in the 1939 40 World s Fair Baldwin Locomotive Works placed a stock order to build a 4 4 4 4 duplex high speed passenger locomotive as a demonstrator with bullet nose streamlining by noted industrial designer Otto Kuhler but before it could be built the PRR placed an order for two locomotives of this type in July 1940 This implied that the PRR S1 was a showpiece exclusively built for the World s Fair instead of replacing the K4s as the new prime power of the PRR The PRR T1 was developed at the same time when the S1 was under construction or on display in the World Fair 28 Cultural references Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The stylish appearance of the S1 has proved to be very popular The S1 was represented in a 1939 painting by railroad artist Grif Teller that appeared in the Pennsylvania Railroad s picture calendar The American Bank Note Company issued a series of posters published by the Eaton paper company as part of an advertising campaign in 1939 one of the posters depicts the S1 hauling the Broadway Limited Famed artist Emmanuel Zurin s Bronze sculpture Train futuriste a 43 inches long sculpture which features some elements of S1 s front end styling like the bullet head lines and curves at the pilot and its 6 wheel trucks CD Album Night Train Classic Railroad Songs Volume 3 by Various Artists Published by Rounder in 1998 a painting of S1 was used on the cover of the Album CD Album Black Diamond Express to Hell by Various Artists Published by Rev A W Nix in 2006 features a perspective drawing of S1 which was used as the backbone of the cover s art design In the PC game Gadget Invention Travel amp Adventure one of the trains the player travels on is pulled by an S1 modeled locomotive The Danish pop group Laid Back s third album Play It Straight released in 1985 features a three quarter view of the S1 s bow on its cover albeit in a gaudy pinkish red hue it never wore in service The S1 appears in the Sandman comic series book IX In the anime The Galaxy Railways the engine for Vega Platoon Iron Burger is loosely based on the S1 with the 4 8 8 4 wheel arrangement used for the Union Pacific Big Boy which was used as the basis for Big One the engine for Sirius Platoon A locomotive inspired by the S1 appears in the PC game Grim Fandango as the Number Nine the best vehicle for travel to the eternal rest Solomon Islands Stamps release a set of stamp in 2017 Neofile SI 17212a with S1 and other express steam locomotives from all over the world like the LNER A4 Mallard on it S1 was placed next to the LNER Mallard 29 A streamlined locomotive similar to the S1 appears in Batman The Animated Series season 1 episode 2 Christmas with the Joker Aunt Billie s toy trains in the 2007 film Meet the Robinsons are loosely based on this particular locomotive design Engine Engine No 9 a 34 page children s chapter book by Edith Thacher Hurd illustrated by Clement Hurd published in 1940 by Lothrop Lee amp Shepard Co of Boston has as its main character an anthropomorphic steam locomotive Clement Hurd s illustrations show No 9 to be nearly identical to a PRR class S1 except for its 4 6 2 Pacific wheel arrangement making No 9 considerably shorter than a 6 4 4 6 PRR class S1 There are Lionel and MTH models of 6100 See also Edit PRR locomotive classificationReferences Edit a b c Raymond Loewy Locomotives The Avanti Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 09 02 a b It s a bird It s a plane No it s an office tool The Home Forum gt Essays The Christian Science Monitor September 23 2004 Retrieved 2007 09 04 a b c d e f g Actual Production Models Shown Brochures www lionel com 2003 Retrieved 2007 09 03 PRR Chronology 1936 PDF PRR Chronology Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society April 2015 Retrieved 2018 07 21 PRR Chronology 1937 PDF PRR Chronology Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society April 2015 Retrieved 2018 07 21 Pennsy Power by Alvin F Staufer 1962 Page 217 a b Reed Brian June 1972 Pennsylvania Duplexii Loco Profile 24 Windsor Berkshire Profile Publications Limited pp 267 271 Black Gold Black Diamonds The Pennsylvania Railroad amp Dieselization Volume 1 by Eric Hirsimaki July 1997 Page 85 86 Waide Collection of Vintage Railroad Advertisements 1840 1949 https waidephoto smugmug com Trains Waide Collection of Vintage i NcMc82c A Streamliner Raymond Loewy and Image making in the Age of American Industrial Design John Wall Page 81 PRR Chronology 1937 PDF PRR Chronology Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society April 2015 Retrieved 2018 07 21 The Keystone Magazine Vol 27 No 2 Summer 1994 PRR S 1 Duplex Volume 1 YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 05 Pennsy s Big Engine in the snow Classic Trains Magazine April 1st 2014 http ctr trains com photo of the day 2014 04 pennsys big engine in the snow Popular Mechanics Million Pound Iron Horse is 140 Feet Long https archive org stream PopularMechanics1939 Popular Mechanics 06 1939 page n109 The Pennsylvania Railroad S 1 http www jitterbuzz com stream html essone https prrt1steamlocomotivetrust org faq php Question No 9 Where it will run Crestline PRR Engine Facility Duplex and Experimentals Dampflokomotiven in den USA 1825 1950 Band 2 Die technische Hochblute der Dampftraktion 1921 1950 Page 112 1972 Autoren BUCHMANN Black Gold Black Diamonds The Pennsylvania Railroad amp Dieselization Volume 1 by Eric Hirsimaki July 1997 Page 105 http streamlinermemories info PRR Gargantua pdf Popular Mechanics Magazine Dec 1941 Rekord Lokomotiven Die schnellsten der Schiene 1848 1950 P 134 1988 by Wilhelm Reuter a b Loco Profile 24 Pennsylvania DuplexII 1972 Pennsylvania Duplex Drive Locomotives in the USA https www steamlocomotive com locobase php country USA amp wheel Duplex amp railroad prr Railway amp Locomotive Historical Society Newsletter Winter 2007 PRR Chronology 1945 PDF PRR Chronology Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society April 2015 Retrieved 2016 02 20 A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY ITS PREDECESSORS AND SUCCESSORS AND ITS HISTORICAL CONTEXT Christopher T Baer 1939 A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY 1939 http www prrths com newprr files Hagley PRR1939 204 15 15 pdf SOLOMON ISLANDS STAMPS 2017 http www neofila com stamps world solomon islands htm Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pennsylvania Railroad S1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pennsylvania Railroad class S1 amp oldid 1133502135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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