Canadian National 47
Canadian National 47
(ex-Grand Trunk Railway 1542)
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Type and origin |
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Power type |
Steam |
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Builder |
Montreal Locomotive Works |
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Order number |
Q-241 |
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Serial number |
54896 |
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Build date |
September 1914 |
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Specifications |
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Configuration |
4-6-4T |
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UIC class |
2′C2′ h2t |
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Gauge |
4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
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Leading dia. |
31.25 in (0.794 m) |
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Driver dia. |
63 in (1.600 m) |
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Trailing dia. |
31.25 in (0.794 m) |
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Minimum curve |
16° |
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Wheelbase |
39 ft 4.5 in (12.00 m) |
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Length |
50 ft 2.25 in (15.30 m) |
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Adhesive weight |
146,000 lb (66.2 t) |
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Loco weight |
275,000 lb (124.7 t) |
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Fuel type |
Coal |
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Fuel capacity |
5 long tons (5.1 t) |
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Water cap |
2,900 imperial gallons (13,000 l; 3,500 US gal) |
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Firebox: • Firegrate area |
47 sq ft (4.4 m2) |
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Boiler pressure |
210 lbf/in2 (1.45 MPa) |
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Heating surface: • Tubes and flues |
1,628 sq ft (151.2 m2) |
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• Firebox |
160 sq ft (15 m2) |
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Superheater:
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• Type |
Schmidt |
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• Heating area |
342 sq ft (31.8 m2) |
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Cylinders |
Two, outside |
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Cylinder size |
21 in × 26 in (533 mm × 660 mm) |
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Valve gear |
Walschaerts |
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Valve type |
11-inch (279 mm) piston valves |
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Train heating |
Steam heat |
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Train brakes |
Air |
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The Canadian National #47 is a preserved 4-6-4 tank locomotive in the United States of America. It is one of only three preserved CN 4-6-4Ts (CN #49 at the Canadian Railway Museum, Delson, Quebec and CN #46 at Vallée-Jonction, Quebec), and is the only Baltic type suburban tank locomotive remaining in the USA.
History
The #47 was built by the Montreal Locomotive Works in September 1914 for the Grand Trunk Railway as its number 1542, class K2, but became a CN locomotive after the creation of the Canadian National Railway in 1923. Its CN classification was X-10-a. Along with its sister locomotives, #47 was based in Montreal and was used exclusively in commuter service. Following retirement in 1959, #47 was sold to F. Nelson Blount, and it became a part of his Steamtown, USA collection. #47 was the first locomotive to run as a Steamtown excursion locomotive, and was intended to become the primary excursion power. It had been given a fresh overhaul in 1958 and was in top mechanical condition when acquired. However, it steamed for only 5 weeks in 1961 as the ICC denied its boiler certification. The maintenance records had been lost in a roundhouse fire in Canada, and it was not possible to verify her boiler condition to Government inspectors without an expensive overhaul.
Today
Currently, (September 2014) Canadian National #47 is preserved at the Steamtown National Historic Site in Scranton, Pennsylvania.