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Canadian National class E-7 2-6-0

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Canadian National class E-7
Type and origin
Reference:[1]
Power typeSteam
Build date1898–1908
Total produced204
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte2-6-0
 • UIC1′C
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Driver dia.63 in (1.6 m)
Wheelbase24 ft 3 in (7.39 m)
Length60 ft 8 in (18.49 m) including tender
Boiler pressure200 psi (1,400 kPa)
CylindersTwo
Cylinder size20 in × 26 in (510 mm × 660 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort28,000 lbf (120 kN)
Career
Retired1957

Canadian National Railway (CN) Class E-7 steam locomotives were of 2-6-0 wheel arrangement in the Whyte notation, or 1′C in UIC classification. These locomotives were built for the Grand Trunk Railway (GT) from 1898 through 1908. Some of the class had been built as compound locomotives with 200 psi (1,400 kPa) boilers feeding 22.5-inch (570 mm) and 35-inch (890 mm) by 26-inch (660 mm) cylinders; but all save one had been rebuilt as simple single expansion locomotives beginning in 1911. GT began adding superheaters to these locomotives in 1913. CN simplified the last compound and continued the superheating conversions, but some locomotives never received superheaters. Most of the class were scrapped in the 1930s; but number 713 worked on the Berlin Subdivision branch to Lewiston, Maine, until replaced by diesel locomotives in 1957, and was preserved in the Canadian Railway Museum.[1]

Builder Works numbers Dates CN numbers GT numbers Notes[1]
Baldwin 15659–15664 1898 661–666 1375–1380
Schenectady 4663–4666
4685–4686
1898 667–672 1381–1386
GT shops 1295–1300
1311
1313–1317
1319–1332
1334
1347
1390
1416
1899–1903 673–675
708–731
750–751
810
1387–1414
1427–1429
Dickson 1184–1189 1901 676–678
732–734
1415–1420
Brooks 3752–3757 1901 679–684 1421–1426
GT shops 1318
1333
1335–1346
1348
1366–1375
1378–1389
1391–1415
1417–1429
1455–1479
1900–1904 735–749
752–809
811–835
863–864
1200–1299 built as compound saturated engines
MLW 30678–30683
30685–30687
1905 836–844 1300–1308 built as compound saturated engines
MLW 30684 1905 852 1430
CLC 664–678 1905–1906 845–851
853–860
1309–1323 built as compound saturated engines
Baldwin 31678–31680
31761–31763
31779–31780
31808–31810
31837
31860
31885–31886
32857–32858
32867–32870
32879–32880
32892
32922
1907–1908 685–707
861–862
1431–1455

References

  1. ^ a b c Clegg, Anthony; Corley, Ray (1969). Canadian National Steam Power. Trains & Trolleys: Montreal. pp. 72–75.