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EMD NW5
*** Shopping-Tip: EMD NW5
Image:GN NW5 187.jpg thumb|300px|[[Great Northern Railway (US)|Great Northern Railway NW5 #187, brand-new in this EMD builders' photograph.]]
The '''EMD NW5''' was a 1,000 hp (750 kW)
road switcher diesel-electric locomotive built by
General Motors Corporation General Motors'
General Motors Electro-Motive Division Electro-Motive Division of
La Grange, Illinois between December
1946 and February
1947. A total of 13 were produced, of which the majority (ten locomotives) went to the
Great Northern Railway (US) Great Northern Railway. A further two were delivered to the
Union Belt of Detroit (though lettered "Fort Street Union Depot") as their #1 and #2, one of which is still in existence today at the
Florida Gulf Coast Railroad Museum. The final locomotive was sold to the
Southern Railway (US) Southern Railway where it became #2100.
The NW5, like the
EMD NW3 NW3 that preceded it, was basically an
EMD NW2 switcher hood,
prime mover (a
V12 EMD 567 diesel engine) and main generator on a stretched frame and riding on road
bogie trucks (the standard EMD
Blomberg B design). Large, road-sized fuel and water tanks were fitted between the trucks under the frame. The NW5 design was also fitted with a
steam generator to heat
passenger cars. The NW3 had this fitted in an extended cab and extended hood section, and the NW5 had a standard EMD switcher cab about three-quarters of the way down the frame, above the inboard axle of the rear truck, and a fairly high short hood on the other side to take the steam generator.
This was fundamentally identical to what
ALCO had done to create the successful
ALCO RS-1 RS-1 design—fitting a switcher long hood and cab on a stretched frame and road trucks, with a short hood on the other side for the
steam generator—and the NW5 can be seen as EMD's answer to the RS-1. However, EMD were seemingly not very keen on producing road switchers at the time; ''Hayden'' speculates that the small profit and small numbers were not appealing, and that only when the prospects of high sales became more obvious did they place much interest in the concept. Historically, railroads had not realized much profit on local and
branchline service, and therefore were unwilling to spend much on equipment for them; most were handed down from more prestigious service.
Subsequent history
All ten Great Northern units survived to the
Burlington Northern Railroad merger. In BN service, the initial '1' of their numbers was replaced by a '9', and they were repainted into the railroad's green and black scheme. #989 burned in
1978 and was retired, but all other locomotives survived till withdrawal from BN service in
1982; this was a service life of 35 years for their first owners. Most were scrapped at this point.
Locomotive #186 was sold to the
Colorado and Eastern Railroad and subsequently to the
Denver Terminal Railway, both times keeping its BN number of 986.
Unit #187 was sold to
Pacific Transportation Services as #1001; it was subsequently sold to Repco as their #187, then to the
Molalla Western Railway under the same number, then to related
East Portland Traction; the two latter systems merged into the
Oregon Pacific Railroad in
1997. Currently the locomotive is stored out of service at
Milwaukie, Oregon.
Burned #189 was rebuilt by the
Diesel Electric Service Corporation and entered service with
Phoenix Steel under its BN number of 989. It was retained when Phoenix Steel became Citisteel, and was scrapped in October
1993.
Locomotive #190 was sold to the Colorado & Eastern and then subsequently to the
Kyle Railroad, keeping its BN number of #990.
Unit #192 was sold to the Colorado & Eastern and passed from there to the
Kyle Railroad, then to the
Iowa Southern Railroad. Today it is in service in
Duluth, Minnesota for the
North Shore Scenic Railroad and resides at the
Lake Superior Railroad Museum.
References
* {{cite book|author=Hayden, Bob (Ed.)|title=Model Railroader Cyclopedia-Volume 2: Diesel Locomotives|publisher=Kalmbach Books|year=1980|id=ISBN 0-89024-547-9}}
* Laundry, Mark. ''[http://yardlimit.railfan.net/emd/nw5/index.html The Yard Limit Spotters Guide: EMD NW5]''. Retrieved
January 26,
2005.
* {{cite book|author=Pinkepank, Jerry A.|title=The Second Diesel Spotter's Guide|publisher=Kalmbach Publishing Co., Milwaukee, WI|year=1973|id=ISBN 0-89024-026-4}}
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Category:B-B locomotives
Category:EMD locomotives NW5
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