EMD DD35A

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EMD DD35A
EMD DD35A
A DD35A and a DD35 back to back at Laramie, Wyoming.
Power type Diesel-electric
BuilderGeneral Motors Electro-Motive Division (EMD)
Build date
AAR wheel arr.D-D
Gaugeft 8½ in (1435 mm)
WheelbaseBetween truck centers: 65 ft (19.81 m)
Truck wheelbase: 17 ft 1.5 in (5.22 m)
Lengthft in
Width10 ft 4 in (3.15 m)
Heightcab roof: 14 ft 11.375 in (4.56 m)
overall: 16 ft 4 in (4.98 m)
Total weight545,500 lb (247,400 kg)
Fuel capacity8230 US gallons (31,154 L)
Prime mover2 × EMD 567
Aspirationturbocharged
CylindersV16
Power output5000 hp ( kW)
Safety systemsLeslie Supertyfon model S5TRRO or S3LR horns
CareerUnion Pacific

The EMD DD35A was a 5,000 hp (3,700 kW) diesel locomotive of D-D wheel arrangement built by General Motors' Electro-Motive Division exclusively for the Union Pacific Railroad. They were a cab-equipped variant of the previous, cabless booster (B unit) EMD DD35 (sometimes erroneously called the 'DD35B'). Fifteen DD35A locomotives were built between May and July 1965; they were assigned road numbers 70 through 84. A further development of the 8 axle, twin-engined locomotive produced the final, best known type, the DDA40X "Centennial".

Like its cabless predecessor, the DD35A was essentially two EMD GP35 locomotives on a common frame, riding on a pair of 4-axle Flexicoil trucks. The cab of a GP35 was fitted to the front end, requiring a longer frame than the DD35; the fuel tank beneath was lengthened, and the center pass-through walkway was offset a little to the rear because of the single cab. Another difference was that the DD35A was fitted with the new flared radiator section EMD was testing on its EMD 645-engined demonstrators (the prototype SD40 demonstrators).

The DD35s were initially quite unreliable; some of this was blamed on sand from the internal sandboxes getting in electrical gear, so new sandboxes were fitted on the walkways in 1969. The DD35s were about the last EMD road units to be built with DC generators and old-fashioned switchgear, which were more troublesome than the later equipment.

Once teething troubles had been overcome, the DD35s were reasonably successful, but they were less flexible than smaller units and thus with the economic downturn of the early 1980s they were withdrawn from service. All were gone by 1981. In their final months of service they operated around Salt Lake City, Utah. No examples of this type remain.

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