GE U25B
New Haven Railroad GE U25Bs at Danbury, Connecticut on July 28, 1968.
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderGE Transportation Systems
ModelU25B
Build dateApril 1959 February 1966
Total produced478
Specifications
Configuration:
  AARB-B
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Prime moverGE FDL-16
TransmissionDiesel electric
Performance figures
Power output2,500 hp (1,900 kW)
Career
Dispositionmost scrapped, a few in preservation

The GE U25B is General Electric's first independent entry into the United States domestic road switcher diesel-electric locomotive railroad market for heavy production road locomotives since 1936. From 1940 through 1953, GE participated in a design, production, and marketing consortium (Alco-GE) for diesel-electric locomotives with the American Locomotive Company. In 1956 the GE Universal Series of diesel locomotives was founded for the export market. The U25B was the first attempt at the domestic market since its termination of the consortium agreement with Alco.[1]

History

The U25B (nicknamed U-Boat) is the first commercially successful domestic diesel electric road locomotive designed, built, and sold by General Electric after its split with the American Locomotive Company (Alco), a company dating back to the steam era. GE had developed internal combustion-electric generating, control, and drive systems in the early 1920s, which provided the foundation for the use of internal combustion engines in railroading. Early applications were in motorized railcars and switch engines. The 1930s saw that technology adapted to high speed mainline locomotives. In 1940 GE partnered with Alco, who by that time were well-established as a manufacturer of diesel switch engines and were introducing their first diesel road locomotives. They were successful in building locomotives for switching and short-haul applications, having introduced the first road-switcher design in 1941 (which would supplant the carbody design developed by the Electro-Motive Corporation by the mid-1950s) and gained a 26% market share as of 1946.[2] Alco-GE's efforts in main line road locomotives had not been successful at breaking into EMD's dominant position in that market, although they introduced a successful gas turbine-electric locomotive to market in 1952. In 1953 GE went independent from Alco in locomotive production, with their new subsidiary GE Rail taking over the gas turbine-electric venture while they sought a supplier of more reliable diesel engines suitable for road locomotives. Production of Cooper-Bessemer powered Universal Series locomotives began in 1956 and some 400 export locomotives were sold before the U25B was offered in the United States. The U25B was announced by General Electric as a domestic model on April 26, 1960. It was the first locomotive powered by GE's highly successful FDL-16 engine.

The U-Boat put GE on the road to becoming the top locomotive producer in the U.S., much to the chagrin of EMD. It introduced many innovations to the U.S. diesel locomotive market, including a pressurized car body and a centralized air processing system that provided filtered air to the engine and electrical cabinet, thus reducing maintenance. The U25B was also the highest-horsepower four-axle diesel road locomotive in the U.S. at the time of its introduction, its contemporaries being the GP20 (2,000 hp) and the RS27 (2,400 hp or 1,800 kW).

Though many were produced and sold, the only remaining U25B locomotives are in museums, as many were retired or scrapped at the end of their service life by the end of the 1980s.

Rebuilds

M-K TE70-4S

Four Southern Pacific U25Bs were rebuilt by Morrison-Knudsen with a Sulzer V-12 prime mover. These locomotives, designated M-K TE70-4S, operated from 1978 to 1987.[3] The experiment proved unsuccessful, and no additional units were rebuilt.

U25BE

Two Southern Pacific U25Bs were rebuilt by the Southern Pacific Transportation Company themselves at their own Sacramento Shops into GE U25BE locomotives. Only SP #3100 was preserved while SP 3101 was scrapped in 1987.[4][5][6]

Preservation

Six U25Bs are known to be preserved today. Of these, only one remains in operating condition. Southern Pacific 3100 is now on permanent exhibit at the Orange Empire Railway Museum in Perris, California. Built in 1963, this locomotive was first numbered SP 7508. Later numbered SP 6800, it became a goodwill ambassador for the railroad in 1976 when it was painted in an elaborate red, white, and blue color scheme in celebration of the nation's bicentennial; it was later renumbered and repainted in standard SP livery and was donated to the museum. The 3100 is fully certified to run on any of the nation's railroads and is frequently used as motive power for offsite work trains.

Several more examples survive, all in varying states of preservation:

Original owners


RailroadQuantityNumbersNotes
General Electric (XP-24 testbed)2751–752Never sold, retained by GE
General Electric (demonstrator)4753–756High short hood; to Frisco 804–807
42501–2504to Union Pacific 633–636
451-54to Frisco 812, 814, 815, and 813.
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway161600–1615renumbered 6600–6615
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway382500–2537renumbered 8100–8137
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad6100–105to Burlington Northern 5424–5429
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad ("Milwaukee Road")12380–391380 retired 1966; remainder renumbered 5000–5010; renumbered 5050–5060
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad39200–238225–238 to Maine Central Railroad 225–238
Erie Lackawanna Railroad272501–2527to Conrail 2570–2596
Great Northern Railway242500–2523to Burlington Northern 5400–5423
Louisville and Nashville Railroad271600–1626
New York Central Railroad702500–2569to Penn Central 2500–2569; to Conrail 2500–2569
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad262500–2525to Penn Central 2660–2685; to Conrail 2660–2685
Norfolk and Western Railway135153515 was renumbered to 8138 (wreck replacement for Wabash unit)
Pennsylvania Railroad592500–2548, 2649–2658renumbered 2600–2658; to Penn Central 2600–2658; to Conrail 2600–2658
St. Louis – San Francisco Railway ("Frisco")24800–803, 808–811, 816-831804–807, 812-815 ex GE. Numbers 800–807 were high short hood units in black and yellow scheme; The next set (808–815) were low short hood units in black and yellow. The last 16, 816–831, were low hoods and delivered in the orange and white scheme. To Burlington Northern 5210–5233.
Southern Pacific Company687500–7567renumbered 6700–6767
Union Pacific Railroad12625–632, 637–640633–636 ex GE demonstrators 2501–2504. The only railroad, other than the Frisco, to have high short hood U25Bs.
Wabash Railroad15500–514to Norfolk and Western 3516–3529; renumbered 8139–8152
Total478

References

  1. Foster, Gerald L. (1996). A field guide to trains of North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 42. ISBN 0-395-70112-0.
  2. "ALCo vs EMD". UtahRails.Net. Retrieved January 25, 2013.
  3. Lustig 2003, p. 23
  4. Model Railroad Craftsman: Volume 56 - July 1987. Carstens Pub. 1987. p. 74.
  5. Shippen & Shine (1999), p. 24
  6. "Former SP "Snowflake"". Railfan & Railroad. Carstens Publications. 7: 30. 1988 via Google Books.
  7. "Milwaukee Road 5057 Project". Cascade Rail Foundation.
  • Shippen, Bill; Shine, Joseph W. (1999). Southern Pacific in Transition. Four Ways Publications. ISBN 9781885614261.
  • Marre, Louis A. (1995). Diesel Locomotives: The First 50 Years: A Guide to Diesels Built Before 1972. Railroad Reference Series. Waukesha, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing. ISBN 978-0-89024-258-2.
  • Komanesky, John. "General Electric U25B Roster". Extra 2200 South. Retrieved January 27, 2005 via The Diesel Shop.
  • Lustig, David (May 2003). "Whatever happened to SP's 'Popsicles'?". Trains. 63 (5): 23. ISSN 0041-0934.
  • Pinkepank, Jerry A. (1973). The Second Diesel Spotter's Guide. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing. ISBN 978-0-89024-026-7.
  • "What's up with the U25B". Trains Magazine. August 1960. pp. 40–41.
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