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  2. Locomotive frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locomotive_frame

    Locomotive frame of a LNER Gresley Pacific locomotive during construction. A locomotive frame is the structure that forms the backbone of the railway locomotive, giving it strength and supporting the superstructure elements such as a cab, boiler or bodywork. The vast majority of locomotives have had a frame structure of some kind.

  3. Steam locomotive components - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_locomotive_components

    [5] [7]: 18 Early American locomotives had bar frames, made from steel bar; in the 20th century they usually had cast steel frames or, in the final decades of steam locomotive design, a cast steel locomotive bed – a one-piece steel casting for the entire locomotive frame, cylinders, valve chests, steam pipes, and smokebox saddle, all as a ...

  4. GCR Class 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GCR_Class_2

    It is a semi-new build locomotive being erected at Ruddington on the GCR Northern section (GCRN - Great Central Railway, Nottingham - GCRN) www.gcrn.co.uk. The build, with a potential boiler, cylinder block and tender chassis already found, and the rest costing about £950,000.

  5. Template:Infobox locomotive/sandbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Infobox...

    This template is for railway locomotives. For trams/streetcars, multiple units, passenger cars and freight cars, use Template:Infobox train. Template parameters [Edit template data] This template prefers block formatting of parameters. Parameter Description Type Status name name The name that will appear above the top line of the infobox. If it is the name of a specific locomotive, then it ...

  6. Cylinder (locomotive) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cylinder_(locomotive)

    The way the valve controlled the steam entering and leaving the cylinder was known as steam distribution and shown by the shape of the indicator diagram. What happened to the steam inside the cylinder was assessed separately from what happened in the boiler and how much friction the moving machinery had to cope with.

  7. Jenny Lind locomotive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny_Lind_locomotive

    Jenny Lind was the first of a class of ten steam locomotives built in 1847 for the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR) by E. B. Wilson and Company of Leeds, named after Jenny Lind, who was a famous Swedish opera singer of the period. The general design proved to be so successful that the manufacturers adopted it for use on other ...

  8. GWR 2251 Class - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GWR_2251_Class

    In British N gauge, the first model was the Langley whitemetal kit, designed to fit the Graham Farish 94xx/general purpose tank chassis. The next was the Peco ready-to-run model, introduced in 2007. This was a big step forward, and had DCC fitted as standard. [6] Production of these stopped around 2010.

  9. Furness Railway No. 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furness_Railway_No._3

    It was built in 1846 by Bury, Curtis, and Kennedy of Liverpool, [5] a company with which the Furness Railway's first locomotive superintendent James Ramsden had been an apprentice. It is an 0-4-0 version of Edward Bury 's popular bar-frame design of the period, with iron bar frames and inside cylinders , and is historically significant as the ...