Chicago and North Western class E-2
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chicago_and_North_Western_class_E-2 an entity of type: Thing
The Chicago and North Western Railway's Class E-2 was a 4-6-2 "Pacific" type locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company in Schenectady, New York in 1923. Twelve were originally built, and all were later converted. Four of these locomotives gained the Class E-2-a designation in late 1934 when they were converted to burn oil instead of coal, upgraded with larger drivers, and had other changes made in order to run at higher speeds in preparation for pulling the Twin Cities–Chicago 400 the next year. The other eight were converted to Class E-2-b, which was similar except they remained coal-fired.
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Chicago and North Western class E-2
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CNW class E-2
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CNW class E-2
xsd:integer
25618547
xsd:integer
984678864
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E-2-a/b:
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E-2: ,
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Piston valves
xsd:integer
1923
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E-2-a:
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Steam
xsd:integer
64463
xsd:integer
12
xsd:integer
2
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E-2-a:
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E-2-b:
xsd:integer
4
xsd:integer
2901
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The Chicago and North Western Railway's Class E-2 was a 4-6-2 "Pacific" type locomotive built by the American Locomotive Company in Schenectady, New York in 1923. Twelve were originally built, and all were later converted. Four of these locomotives gained the Class E-2-a designation in late 1934 when they were converted to burn oil instead of coal, upgraded with larger drivers, and had other changes made in order to run at higher speeds in preparation for pulling the Twin Cities–Chicago 400 the next year. The other eight were converted to Class E-2-b, which was similar except they remained coal-fired. The E-2-a was among the fastest steam locomotives in the world in 1935. It was recorded running in excess of 108 miles per hour (174 km/h) on a fall evening that year as it raced the 85 miles (137 km) from Milwaukee to Chicago in 65 minutes, attaining its highest speeds between Highland Park and Evanston. While fast for its day, it was not quite a match for the Milwaukee Road class A and later F7 engines, which ran the rival Hiawatha. Unlike the Hiawatha engines, the E-2s never ran with streamlined shrouds, though it appeared for a time that they would be replaced by streamlined class E-4 4-6-4 "Hudson" locomotives on the 400 route. C&NW ordered eight E-4s in 1937, later adding one more order to the total. However, the railway decided instead to use diesel-electric EMD E3 locomotives for the 400, which replaced the E-2-a engines on the route in 1939.
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E-2-a/b:
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E-2: ;
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Two
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All scrapped
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E-2-a/b:
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E-2:
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E-2-a: ,
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E-2-b:
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E-2, E-2-b: Coal;
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E-2-a: Oil
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1954
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4225
xsd:gYear
1923
xsd:gYear
1923
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
12