PRR M1

From TrainSpottingWorld, for Rail fans everywhere
PRR M1a on display at the 1939 World's Fair. Pipe on the smokebox and box behind stack are components of the feedwater heater.
PRR M1 #6891 in 1933. Note the outside steam delivery pipes from smokebox to cylinders, absent on the M1a/M1b, the single air compressor, and the smaller tender.

The Pennsylvania Railroad's class M1 steam locomotives were a class of heavy mixed-traffic locomotives of the 4-8-2 "Mountain" arrangement, which uses four pairs of driving wheels with a four-wheel guiding truck in front for stability at speed and a two-wheel trailing truck to support the large firebox needed for sustained power. Although built for both passenger and freight work, they spent most of their service lives hauling heavy high-speed freight trains. Many PRR men counted the M1 class locomotives as the best steam locomotives the railroad ever owned.

A single prototype, #6699, was built in 1923 at the railroad's own Altoona Works. It spent three years in intensive testing, including all kinds of main-line service as well as a session on the railroad's static locomotive test plant. Having received very favorable reports, a further 200 were ordered from commercial locomotive builders; 175 from the Baldwin Locomotive Works and 25 from Lima Locomotive Works. Breaking with the PRR tradition of random locomotive numbering, these were numbered in a solid block from #6800-#6999.

In 1930, a further 100 locomotives were ordered. These, classified as M1a, featured several improvements from the previous locomotives. Instead of separate cylinder block and smokebox saddle castings, the M1a featured a one-piece casting (first seen on the K5 Pacific) which included inside steam delivery pipes, instead of the outside, visible pipes of the M1. A Worthington feedwater heater was installed, with a boxlike mixing chamber fitted behind the stack. Twin cross-compound air compressors were hung next to each other on the left hand side of the locomotives, instead of the single compressor of the M1. The M1a locomotives were fitted as standard with larger tenders than the previous locomotives.

The M1a locomotives in particular were intended for passenger as well as freight service, and some bore decorative gold-leaf lining on tender and cab sides, but they proved better suited to freight work, and extensive electrification saw a surplus of K4s locomotives available for passenger trains.

The twin cross-compound air compressors on the side of the M1a.

Like most PRR steam locomotives, the M1 and M1a featured the square-shouldered Belpaire firebox. The square-topped section continued ahead of the firebox proper, revealing the presence of a combustion chamber - an extended firebox, giving more room for complete combustion of burning gases. The standard M1/M1a boiler used a working pressure of 250 pounds per square inch (1.7 MPa). 38 locomotives were later converted into class M1b; the differences were all in the boiler, those being the addition of firebox circulators—large tubes carrying water passing through the firebox space, increasing water circulation and heating area, and thus steam generation—and an increase in boiler pressure to 270 lb/in² (1.9 MPa). The only externally visible difference was extra cleaning plugs in the firebox sides, for washing out the circulators. The M1b had greater tractive effort, thanks to the greater pressure, and more power at speed, thanks to the increased steam-generating ability.

All were fitted with intermediate-size 72 inch (1.8 m) driving wheels, two 27 × 30 inch (762 mm) cylinders, and cast-steel KW pattern trailing trucks, similar to those fitted to K4s Pacifics. M1 and M1a tractive effort was 64,550 pounds force (287 kN) while that of the M1b was 69,700 pounds force (310 kN). The locomotive weight was 385,000 pounds (175 t). PRR standard small steel cabs were used. A distinctive spotting feature was a large cross-mounted air tank at the front of the locomotive above the pilot. There was a distinctive family resemblance with other PRR locomotives. After World War II, the M1 locomotives underwent similar front-end changes to those made to the K4s, including sheet steel drop-coupler pilots, the moving of the headlight to the smokebox top in front of the stack, the moving of the steam-driven generator to the smokebox front for easier maintenance, and the addition of a wide step above the air tank to service the air compressor.

A wide variety of tenders were fitted to M1 locomotives, of steadily increasing size. During later years, some hauled sixteen-wheel 210-F-75B tenders almost as long as the locomotives themselves. All were fitted with scoops to pick up water from track pans. On the rear tender decks, all were later fitted with "doghouses" to house the head-end brakeman on freight trains, giving him a view backward over the train and placing him out of the way of the engineer and fireman. Many had railing-like trainphone antennas added during the 1940s.

As dieselization progressed, the M1 locomotives were assigned heavier trains, while the diesels were assigned the high-speed freight trains previously the M1s' preserve. Their final years of service saw them hauling heavier trains than ever. Many remained in service until the withdrawal of steam from the PRR in mid 1957.

One locomotive, M1b #6755, was saved from the scrapper's torch for the PRR's historical collection housed at Northumberland, Pennsylvania. It is now in the possession of the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania.

See also

References

  • Staufer, Alvin W. (1962). Pennsy Power. Staufer. LOC 62-20878. 
  • Westcott, Linn H. (1960). Model Railroader Cyclopedia - Volume 1: Steam Locomotives. Kalmbach Books. ISBN 0-89024-001-9. 

External links