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ALCO DH643
Southern Pacific #9152, formerly #9020. |
Power type |
Diesel-hydraulic |
Builder |
American Locomotive Company (ALCO) |
Order number |
S-3374 |
Serial number |
S-3374-01 – S-3374-03 |
Model |
DH643 |
Build date |
September 1964 |
Total production |
3 |
AAR wheel arr. |
C-C |
UIC classification |
C'C' |
Gauge |
4 ft 8½ in (1435 mm) |
Length |
75 ft 10 in (23.11 m) |
Locomotive weight |
378,000 lb (171 t) |
Prime mover |
ALCO 251C, 2 off |
Engine type |
Four stroke diesel |
Aspiration |
Turbocharger |
Displacement |
8,016 cu in (131.36 l), 2 off |
Cylinders |
V12, 2 off |
Cylinder size |
9 in × 10½ in (229 mm × 267 mm) |
Transmission |
Voith hydraulic |
Top speed |
77 mph (124 km/h) |
Power output |
4,300 hp (3,200 kW) |
Tractive effort |
95,000 lbf (420,000 N) |
Locomotive brakes |
Straight air |
Train brakes |
Air |
Career |
Southern Pacific Railroad |
Number |
9018–9020 (later 9150–9152) |
Locale |
North America |
The ALCO DH643, also known as the Century 643DH, was a twin-engine diesel-hydraulic locomotive, the first diesel-hydraulic road unit built in the United States. It had a C-C wheel arrangement and generated 4,300 horsepower (3,200 kW). Only three were built, all for Southern Pacific Railroad in 1964 (#9018–#9020). The Alco DH643s joined 21 Krauss-Maffei diesel-hydraulics already on the Southern Pacific's roster. These hydraulic-drive diesels spent most of their service lives in the flat San Joaquin Valley in California.
Dissatisfaction over the poor performance of diesel-hydraulic locomotives, as well as their use of foreign-made components (the hydraulic transmission was of German Voith design), eventually led Southern Pacific to scrap the DH643s in 1973.
[edit] Original Owners
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