Pennsylvania Railroad E7s | |
---|---|
PRR 7002 at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania | |
Power type | Steam |
Builder | Altoona Works, Alco |
Build date | 1916 |
Total produced | 90 |
Configuration | 4-4-2 |
Gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
Leading wheel diameter |
36 in (910 mm) |
Driver diameter | 80 in (2,000 mm) |
Trailing wheel diameter |
50 in (1,300 mm) |
Length | 68 ft 6 in (20.88 m) (including 55P58 tender)[1] |
Weight on drivers | 118,400 lb (53,705.3 kg)[1] |
Locomotive weight | 171,100 lb (77,609.7 kg)[1] |
Tender weight | 89,050 lb (40,392.4 kg) |
Fuel type | Coal |
Fuel capacity | 27,600 lb (12,519.1 kg)[1] |
Water capacity | 5,800 US gallons (22,000 l; 4,800 imp gal)[1] |
Boiler pressure | 205 psi (1,410 kPa) |
Firegrate area | 55.5 sq ft (5.2 m2) |
Cylinders | 2 |
Cylinder size | 22.5 × 26 in (572 × 660 mm) |
Tractive effort | 27,409 lbf (121,920 N) |
Preserved | PRR 7002 |
The Pennsylvania Railroad's class E2, E3, E7 steam locomotives were of the 4-4-2 "Atlantic" passenger type, frequently called “light Atlantics” after the introduction of the heavier, more powerful E6 Atlantics. All locomotives were similar in terms of wheel configuration and size, boiler capacity but differed in firebox type, valves and valve gear, and cylinder diameter. Classes E2 and E3 were built simultaneously rather than consecutively. Starting in 1916 a rebuilding program converted ninety class E2a,b,c to class E7s by replacing slide valves with piston valves and increasing cylinder diameter from 20.5 to 22.5 inches (520 to 570 mm). Fourteen class E2 were similarly converted to class E7sa. Ninety class E2a,d, E3a,d were converted to class E3sd. These improvements allowed many of the engines to remain in active service into the 1930s.
The sub-classes differed as follows:[2]
Class | Firebox | Cylinder size | Valves | Valve gear | Number built | Years built |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
E2 | Radial-stay | 20 ½” x 26” | Slide | Stephenson | 88 | 1901-02 |
E2a | Belpaire | 20 ½” x 26” | Slide | Stephenson | 93 | 1902-05 |
E2b | Belpaire | 20 ½” x 26” | Piston | Stephenson | 70 | 1903-04 |
E2c | Belpaire | 20 ½” x 26” | Slide | Stephenson | 22 | 1903 |
E2d | Belpaire | 20 ½” x 26” | Piston | Walschaerts | 32 | 1906-08 |
E3 | Radial-stay | 22” x 26” | Slide | Stephenson | 8 | 1901-02 |
E3a | Belpaire | 22” x 26” | Slide | Stephenson | 114 | 1903-05 |
E3d | Belpaire | 22” x 26” | Piston | Walschaerts | 56 | 1906-10 |
E7s | Belpaire | 22 ½” x 26” | Piston | Stephenson | 90 conv. fr. E2a,b,c | 1916-20 |
E7sa | Radial-stay | 22 ½” x 26” | Piston | Stephenson | 14 conv. fr. E2 | 1916-20 |
In the first decade of the Twentieth Century, classes E2 and E3 handled all of the fast passenger trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad. As train weights increased due to the switch to steel passenger cars and more cars per train, the “light” Atlantics were usually double-headed. Eventually, as Pacific class K2 and K3 became available, they were relegated to secondary service
This engine was built as a class E2 in 1902 for the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway as engine #2 (renumbered to 7002). In 1905, on the maiden westbound run of the Pennsylvania Special (renamed the Broadway Limited in 1912), the train was clocked by the conductor’s stopwatch over a 3-mile run west of Crestview, Ohio, at a record speed of 127.1 MPH. This claim is disputed by many as being “unofficial”. PRR #7002 was rebuilt to a class E7sa in August 1916 and scrapped in 1935. When the PRR was looking for an E7 class locomotive for preservation, they refurbished No. 8063 an E7s from PCC&StL and substituted 7002’s engine number and builder’s plate. The engine was donated to Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania in 1979 and put into operating order by Strasburg Rail Road where it ran for a number of years, sometimes double-heading with PRR D16 #1223. It last operated on December 20, 1989.
A (0-4-0): | A1 · A2 · A3 · A4 · A5s | B (0-6-0): | B1 (s) · B2 · B3 · B4 · B5 · B6 · B7 · B8 · B1 (e) | C (0-8-0): | C1 · C29 · C30 · C31 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
D (4-4-0): | D1 · D2 · D3 · D4 · D5 · D6 · D7 · D8 · D9 · D10 · D11 · D12 · D13 · D14 · D15 · D16 · D21 · D22 · D23 · D24 · D25 · D26 · D30 · D31 · D32 · D33 · D34 · D35 · D36 · D37 · D38 · D39 · D61 · "Odd D" #10003 | ||||
E (4-4-2): | E1 · E2 · E3 · E4 · E5 · E6 · E7 · E21 · E22 · E23 · E28 | ||||
F (2-6-0): | F1 · F2 · F3 · F21 · F22 · F23 · F24 · F25 · F26 · F27 · F30 · F31 · F61 | ||||
G (4-6-0): | G1 · G2 · G3 · G4 · G5 · G53 | H (2-8-0): | H1 · H2 · H3 · H4 · H5 · H6 · H8 · H9 · H10 | I (2-10-0): | I1s |
J (2-6-2 and 2-10-4): | J1 · J28 | K (4-6-2): | K1 · K2 · K3s · K4s · K5 | L (2-8-2): | L1s · L2s · L5 · L6 |
M (4-8-2): | M1 | N (2-10-2): | N1s · N2s | O (4-4-4): | O1 |
P (4-6-4): | P5 | Q (4-6-4-4 and 4-4-6-4): | Q1 · Q2 | R (4-8-4): | R1 |
S (6-4-4-6 and 6-8-6): | S1 · S2 | T (4-4-4-4): | T1 | ||
Articulated steam locomotives: | CC1s · CC2s · HC1s · HH1s · HH2s | Articulated electric locomotives: | AA1 · BB1 · BB2 · BB3 · DD1 · DD2 · FF1 · FF2 · GG1 | Non-standard: | E2b · E2c · E3b · E44 |