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Milwaukee Road F7 "Hiawatha" Simulator

VTVT29steamtrain•Created December 2, 2018
Milwaukee Road F7 "Hiawatha" Simulator
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Instructions

You can now drive a Milwaukee Road F7 4-6-4 steamer in the comfort of your own home with this simulator! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is CTTM's Hiawatha, animated to run forward and back. With sound and smoke. MMXVIII VT29steamtrain.

Description

Milwaukee Road class F7 Type and origin Power type Steam Builder American Locomotive Company Serial number 69064–69069 Build date August to September 1938 Total produced 6 Specifications Gauge 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge Leading dia. 36 in (914 mm) Driver dia. 84 in (2,134 mm) Trailing dia. 38 and 44 in (965 and 1,118 mm) Wheelbase Loco & tender: 89 ft 10 in (27.38 m) Length 100 ft 0 in (30.48 m) Axle load 72,250 lb (32,770 kilograms; 32.77 metric tons) Adhesive weight 216,000 lb (98,000 kilograms; 98 metric tons) Loco weight 415,000 lb (188,000 kilograms; 188 metric tons) Total weight 791,000 lb (359,000 kilograms; 359 metric tons) full Fuel type Coal Fuel capacity 50,000 lb (23,000 kilograms; 23 metric tons) Water cap 20,000 US gal (75,700 l; 16,700 imp gal) Firebox: • Firegrate area 96.5 sq ft (8.97 m2) Boiler pressure 300 lbf/in2 (2.07 MPa) Heating surface 4,166 sq ft (387.0 m2) Superheater: ​ • Type Type E • Heating area 1,695 sq ft (157.5 m2) Cylinders Two, outside Cylinder size 23 1⁄2 in × 30 in (597 mm × 762 mm) Performance figures Tractive effort 50,294 lbf (223.72 kN) Factor of adh. 4.29 Career Operators Milwaukee Road Numbers 100–105 Retired November 1949 to August 1951 Disposition All scrapped. The Milwaukee Road's class F7 comprised six (#100–#105) high-speed, streamlined 4-6-4 "Baltic" or "Hudson" type steam locomotives built by Alco in 1937–38 to haul the Milwaukee's Hiawatha express passenger trains. Following on from the success of the road's class A 4-4-2s, the F7s allowed the road to haul heavier trains on the popular Chicago–Twin Cities routes. The F7s are major contenders for the fastest steam locomotives ever built, as they ran at over 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) daily. One run in January 1941 recorded by a reporter for Trains magazine saw 110 miles per hour (180 km/h) achieved twice—in the midst of a heavy snowstorm. Baron Gérard Vuillet, a French railroading expert, once recorded a run between Chicago and Milwaukee where the locomotive reached 125 mph (201 km/h) and sustained an average 120 mph (190 km/h) for 4.5 miles (7.2 km).[1] However, the British locomotive LNER Class A4 4468 Mallard is officially accepted to be the world's fastest, with a run recorded at 125.88 mph (202.58 km/h) but authenticated at 126 mph in 1938. The Milwaukee F7s are accepted as the fastest steam locomotives by a different measure—scheduled speed between stations. In 1939, shortly after they were introduced into passenger service, the Twin Cities Hiawatha schedule was modified such that the engines would need to run the 78.3 mi (126.0 km) between Portage and Sparta, Wisconsin in 58 minutes—a start-to-stop average of 81 mph (130 km/h).[1] On July 27, 1950, F7 #102 was on a run between Chicago and Milwaukee on the "North Woods Hiawatha." 73 miles from Milwaukee, the right main crosshead overheated, broke, and dropped from the guide while the train was traveling at an estimated speed of over 100 mph. The engine was severely damaged, broken drive gear tore up ties and roadbed, two railroad employees were injured, and debris (including the main rod) was found as far as 1400 feet west of Edgebrook Station. The train itself continued to over 10,560 feet from the station until coming to a complete stop. The first one built, #100, was also the first withdrawn from service, on November 10, 1949; and the last one built #105 was the final one in service and was withdrawn August 10, 1951. All were scrapped.

Project Details

Project ID266930478
CreatedDecember 2, 2018
Last ModifiedDecember 2, 2018
SharedDecember 2, 2018
Visibilityvisible
CommentsAllowed

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