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  2. Pennsylvania Railroad class T1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_class_T1

    An N Scale PRR T1 4-4-4-4 scratch building project; A group that intends to build a full-size PRR T1; YouTube video displaying the operation of T1's on the Pennsylvania Railroad - At 3 minutes and 15 seconds, an example of the T1's infamous wheel slip can be observed.

  3. Pennsylvania Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad

    1870: "Pennsylvania Central" is split into lines east (renamed Pennsylvania Railroad) and lines west Pennsylvania Company is formed to hold securities from companies West of Pittsburgh; Use of track pans begins on PRR at Sang Hollow, Pennsylvania; [13] Pennsy reaches Cincinnati, Ohio, with lease of Little Miami and St. Louis, Missouri, with ...

  4. Penn Line Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penn_Line_Manufacturing

    Their thinking was that the potential for realism coming from more elaborate layouts made HO the best compromise. This was at a time when HO gauge was far from the standard it is today. Penn Line produced about a half dozen different locomotives based on prototypes from the Pennsylvania Railroad, hence the choice of the company name Penn Line.

  5. Pennsylvania Railroad locomotive classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad...

    Class A was the 0-4-0 type, an arrangement best suited to small switcher locomotives (known as "shifters" in PRR parlance). Most railroads abandoned the 0-4-0 after the 1920s, but the PRR kept it for use on small industrial branches, especially those with street trackage and tight turns.

  6. Pennsylvania Railroad class S1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_class_S1

    [4] [28] 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 Locomotive Works for the T1 in 1940, it had already begun developing duplex designs for fast locomotives since 1938, including a rigid-frame 4-2-2-4 and ...

  7. Pennsylvania Railroad 5550 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Railroad_5550

    Pennsylvania Railroad 5550 (PRR 5550) is a mainline duplex drive steam locomotive under construction in the United States. With an estimated completion by 2030, the locomotive will become the 53rd example of the Pennsylvania Railroad's T1 steam locomotive class and the only operational locomotive of its type, [7] as well as the largest steam locomotive built in the United States since 1952.

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