Back in '06 I was up in Minnesota for a couple weeks on fire duty with a Forest Service crew. I was riding in the back seat of their truck all the way up and back, and as we neared Duluth, Minnesota on the way home I saw a really big locomotive sitting on the west side of the road. Well that engine just appeared in a slide/video show on YouTube, and I have been having a good time watching it. It was uploaded by whj58, and I include his writeup for your educational pleasure.
"Yellowstone Locomotive Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway Minnesota
DM&IR 2-8-8-4 steam locomotive.These locomotives were based upon 10
2-8-8-2s that Baldwin had built in the 1930s for the Western Pacific
Railroad. The need for a larger, coal burning firebox and a longer,
all-weather cab led to the use of a four-wheel trailing truck, giving
them the "Yellowstone" wheel arrangement. They were the most powerful
Yellowstones built, producing 140,000 lbf (620 kN) of tractive effort,
and had the most weight on drivers so that they were not prone to
slipping.
Eight locomotives (class M-3) were built by Baldwin in
1941. The Yellowstones met or exceeded the DM&IR specifications so
ten more were ordered (class M-4). The second batch was completed late
in 1943 after the Missabe's seasonal downturn in ore traffic, so some of
the new M-4s were leased to and delivered directly to the Denver &
Rio Grande Western.
The next winter the D&RGW again leased the
DM&IR's Yellowstones as helpers over Tennessee Pass, Colorado and
for other freight duties. The Rio Grande returned the Yellowstones after
air-brake failure caused Number 224 to wreck on the Fireclay Loop. This
was despite the Rio Grande's earlier assessment that these Yellowstones
were the finest engines ever to operate there.
DM&IR's were the
only Yellowstones to have a high-capacity pedestal or centipede tender,
and had roller bearings on all axles. Some of the locomotives had a
cylindrical Elesco feedwater heater ahead of the smoke stack, while
others had a Worthington unit with its rectangular box in the same
location.
Only one Yellowstone was retired before dieselization took
place on the Missabe; Number 237 was sold for scrap after a wreck. The
rest of the 2-8-8-4s were retired between 1958 and 1963 as diesel
locomotives took over.
Three of the eighteen built still survive and
are on display: Number 227 at the Lake Superior Railroad Museum in
Duluth, Minnesota, Number 225 in Proctor, Minnesota, and Number 229 in
Two Harbors, Minnesota."
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