ALCO S-1 and S-3

ALCO S-1 and S-3

Mid-Continent Railway No. 7, an S-1, rests between trains on October 10, 2004
Type and origin
Power type Diesel
Builder
Build date
  • April 1940–June 1950 (S-1)
  • February 1950–November 1953 (S-3)
Total produced
  • 543 (S-1)
  • 300 (S-3)
Specifications
AAR wheel arr. B-B
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Trucks
  • Blunt (S-1)
  • AAR type A (S-3)
Wheel diameter 40 in (1,000 mm)
Minimum curve 50°
Wheelbase 30 ft (9.14 m)
Length 45 ft (14 m)
Width 10 ft 2 12 in (3.112 m)
Height 14 ft 4 38 in (4.378 m)
Loco weight 199,000 lb (90,000 kg)
Fuel capacity 635 US gal (2,400 L)
Prime mover Alco 539
Engine type Four-stroke diesel
Aspiration Natural
Displacement 9,572 cu in (156.86 l)
Generator GE GT 552-A
Traction motors 4 × GE 731
Cylinders Straight 6
Cylinder size 12 12 in × 13 in (318 mm × 330 mm)
Performance figures
Power output 660 hp (490 kW)
Tractive effort 49,790 lb (22,580 kg)
Career
Locale North America, Brazil, United Kingdom
[1][2]

The ALCO S-1 and S-3 were 660 horsepower (490 kW) switcher diesel-electric locomotives produced by ALCO and their Canadian subsidiary Montreal Locomotive Works (MLW). Basically, the two locomotives differed only in trucks, with the S-1 using ALCO's own Blunt trucks, and the S-3 riding on standard AAR type A switcher trucks. The S-1 was built between April 1940 and June 1950, with a total of 543 completed, while the S-3 was constructed between February 1950 and November 1953 (MLW until 1957) with total sales of 300. A modified version, the S-10, was built by MLW only; 13 were built between January and June 1958.

Identification

The S-1 and S-3 are distinguishable externally from the very similar S-2 and S-4 1,000 horsepower (750 kW) switchers in that they have a smaller exhaust stack with a round base and a smaller radiator shutter area on the nose sides. The S-1/S-3 radiator shutter area is taller than it is wide, while the S-2/S-4 radiator area is wider. The smaller stack is due to the lack of turbocharging.

The S-10 is not externally distinguishable from later Canadian-built S-3 locomotives; it differed mostly in electrical equipment.

Original owners

The S-1 and S-3 models were sold to an extensive list of railroads and industrial operators, as detailed below. Major owners of the S-1 included the New York Central Railroad (NYC), with 71 locomotives; the New Haven with 65 locomotives; the L&N with 45 locomotives; the C&NW, with 29 locomotives; and the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) with 27 locomotives. Major customers for the S-3 included the CP, with 101; the CN, with 49; the NYC, with 43 locomotives; the B&M, with 16; and the PRR, with 13. The MLW S-10 was sold only to the CP.

The totals below include export orders and MLW-built locomotives.

S-1

ALCO constructed approximately 535 S-1s for the US market between 1940–1950.[1][3] In addition, it produced a single S-1 for Canadian Car and Munitions (of Canada), five for Estrada de Ferro Central do Brasil in Brazil, five for Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México in Mexico, and five for the Steel Company of Wales in the United Kingdom.[4]

Railroad Quantity Road numbers
Alabama Great Southern Railroad 2 6501–6502
Alameda Belt Line 3 D-1–D-3
Alco (demonstrator) 1 660
Alco (plant switcher) 1 5
Alco/War Department 1 GT-1304
American Steel and Wire 1 2
Ann Arbor Railroad 2 2–3
ARMCO Steel 3 E106–E108
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway 2 2303–2304
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 6 223–227, 250
Belt Railway of Chicago 3 304–306
Birmingham Southern Railroad 2 100, 101
Boston and Maine Railroad 10 1163–1172
Broward County Port Authority 1 410
Canadian Car and Munitions 1 5
Estrada de Ferro Central do Brasil 5 3001–3005
Central of Georgia Railway 2 4, 6
Central Railroad of New Jersey 2 1024, 1025
Champlain Paper and Fibre 1 25
Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad 3 103–105
Chicago and North Western Railway 29 1202–1205, 1213, 1223–1229, 1232–1236, 1247–1258
Chicago Great Western Railway 5 11–15
Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway 3 56, 57, 69
Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway 2 6000–6001
City of Prineville Railway 1 101
Donner Hanna Coal Company 1 2
Day and Zimmerman (Iowa Army Ammunition Depot) 1 3-100
Defense Plant Corporation 2 DPC25.23, DPC25.24
Delray Connecting Railroad 4 66, 68, 70, 72
Des Moines Union Railway 4 1–4
Detroit and Mackinac Railway 1 646
East St. Louis Junction Railroad 1 100
Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Railway 5 213–217
Erie Railroad 16 306–321
Ford Motor Company 4 6601–6604
Great Lakes Steel Corporation 1 32
Green Bay and Western Railroad 1 102
Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad 4 661–664
Hunken Conkey Construction 2 1001–1002
Inland Steel 7 53, 56, 61, 62, 64–66
Inland Waterways Corporation 1 1
Iowa Transfer Railroad 1 2
John Morrel and Company 1 7
Kansas City Terminal Railway 5 40–44
Kewaunee, Green Bay and Western Railroad 1 103
Lehigh Valley Railroad 1 117
Long Island Rail Road 14 404–408, 413–420, 421
Louisville and Nashville Railroad 45 16–29, 34–68
Maine Central Railroad 8 953–960
Massena Terminal Railroad 2 8, 9
Minnesota Transfer Railway 5 60–64
Missouri Pacific Railroad 2 9007, 9008
Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway 4 1–4
Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México 5 5000-5004
Newburgh and South Shore Railway 7 3–7, 9, 10
New Orleans and Lower Coast Railroad 3 9013-9015
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad 65 0931–0995
New Jersey, Indiana and Illinois Railroad 1 1
New York Central Railroad 71 590, 685–744, 864–873
New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad 1 85
Northern Pacific Railway 1 131
Northern Pacific Terminal 5 30–34
Pennsylvania Railroad 27 5661–5670, 5954–5956, 9100–9103, 9237–9246
Point Comfort and Northern Railway 1 5
Port Huron and Detroit Railroad 2 51, 52
Portland Terminal Company 4 1005-1008
Procter & Gamble 1 9
Pullman Railroad 2 20, 21
Reading Company 5 50-54
Red River Ordnance Depot 1 7372
Republic Steel 9 15–17, 312–314, D840, D841, D810
River Terminal Railway 1 52
St. Louis and O'Fallon Railway 1 51
Seaboard Air Line 1 1201
Sheffield Steel Corporation 3 11–13
Solvay Processing Division, Allied Chemical 3 1–3
South Buffalo Railway 4 51, 52, 60, 61
Southern Pacific Company 4 1017–1020
Southern Railway 3 2000, 2001, 2006
South Omaha Terminal Railway 5 1–5
Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway 2 10, 11 10 Sold to City of Prineville 102, 11 to Burlington Northern 11
Steel Company of Wales (UK) 5 801–805
Studebaker 2 2, 3
Tennessee Central Railway 1 51
Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company 3 700–702
Tennessee Copper 2 104, 105
Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis 4 521–524
Texas and New Orleans Railroad 1 10
Texaco 1 19
Texas City Terminal Railway 2 30, 31
Texas Pacific-Missouri Pacific Terminal Railroad of New Orleans 2 3, 4
Timken Rolling Bearing Company 2 5911, 5912
Toledo, Angola and Western Railway 1 101
Traux Truer Coal 1 10
Union Railroad 4 451–454
Upper Merion and Plymouth Railroad 1 54
U.S. Army 11 7132-7136, 7141-7142, 7374-7375, 7459-7460
Wabash Railroad 9 151–159
Weirton Steel 3 200, 203, 204
Western Maryland Railway 1 102
Western Pacific Railroad 8 504–511
Youngstown Sheet and Tube 5 661–665
Total 543

S-3

ALCO and the Montreal Locomotive Works constructed approximately 300 S-3s for the North American market between 1950–1957.[1][3] ALCO built 137; MLW built 163:[5]

Railroad Quantity Road numbers
Manufactured by ALCO
Aluminum Company of America 1 8
Ann Arbor Railroad 4 4–7
Boston and Maine Railroad 16 1173–1188
Brooks and Scanlon 2 101, 102
Champion Paper 1 2104
Chicago and North Western Railway 6 1262–1267
Davenport, Rock Island and North Western Railway 7 1–7
Davidson Chemical Division, W.R. Grace and Company 1 101
El Dorado and Wesson Railway 1 18
Ford Motor Company 7 6605–6611
Frederick Snare Corporation 1 7
General Portland Cement 1 1
Graysonia, Nashville and Ashdown Railroad 1 51
Greater Portland Public Development Corporation 1 661
Humble Oil 1 997
Louisville and Nashville Railroad 7 69–75
Maine Central Railroad 2 961, 962
Manistique and Lake Superior Railroad[6] 1 1
Mount Hood Railroad 1 50
New York Central Railroad 43 874–916
Pennsylvania Railroad 13 8873–8885
Solvay Processing Division, Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation 1 2
Southern Pacific Company 10 1023–1032
Swift and Company 1 664
Texas and Northern Railway 2 3, 4
Texas City Terminal Railway 1 32
Texaco 2 21, 22
Washington, Idaho and Montana Railway 1 30
West Pittston and Exeter Railway 1 6
ALCO total 137
Manufactured by MLW
Bathhurst Power and Paper 1 3
Canadian Arsenals 1 1
Canadian National Railway 49 8450–8498
Canadian Pacific Railway 101 6500–6600
Essex Terminal Railway 1 103
LaSalle Coke 1 4
National Harbours Board 8 D2–D9
Price Brothers 1 106
MLW subtotal 163
Total 300

S-10

MLW constructed 13 S-10s, all for the Canadian Pacific Railway:[3]

Railroad Quantity Road numbers
Canadian Pacific Railway 13 6601–6613

Preservation

Ex-Canadian Pacific MLW S-3 No. 6568 on display at the Saskatchewan Railway Museum

Numerous S-1 and S-3 locomotives remain in use, and several are preserved:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Foster, Gerald L. (1996). A Field Guide to Trains of North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 6. ISBN 0-3957-0112-0. OCLC 33242919.
  2. Dorin, Patrick C. (1972). Chicago and NorthWestern Power. Superior Publishing. pp. 134–135. ISBN 0-87564-715-4.
  3. 1 2 3 Pinkepank, Jerry A. (1973). The Second Diesel Spotter’s Guide. Milwaukee, WI: Kalmbach Publishing Company. pp. 221–222. ISBN 0-89024-026-4.
  4. "Alco/MLW S-1 Roster". The Diesel Shop. 18 December 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  5. "Alco/MLW S-3 Roster". The Diesel Shop. 18 December 2010. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  6. "The Alco S-3". American-Rails.com. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  7. "Western Pacific 512". Western Pacific Railroad Museum. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  8. "Locomotives". Saskatchewan Railway Museum. Retrieved 28 November 2015.

External links

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