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2-6-0T

2-6-0 (Mogul)
Diagram of a single small leading wheel, and three driving wheels joined by coupling rods
Front of locomotive at left
SRC 89 19930000 PA Strasburg.jpg
Canadian National E-10-a class no. 89
Equivalent classifications
UIC class 1C
French class 130
Turkish class 34
Swiss class 3/4
Russian class 1-3-0
First known tank engine version
First use c. 1870
Country United Kingdom
Railway Garstang and Knot-End Railway
First known tender engine version
First use 1852-53
Country United States of America
Locomotive Pawnee
Railway Philadelphia and Reading Rail Road
Builder Baldwin Locomotive Works
Norris Locomotive Works
First known "True type" version
First use 1860
Country United States of America
Railway Louisville and Nashville Railroad
Evolved from 2-4-0
Equivalent classifications
UIC class 1C
French class 130
Turkish class 34
Swiss class 3/4
Russian class 1-3-0
First known tank engine version
First use c. 1870
Country United Kingdom
Railway Garstang and Knot-End Railway
First known tender engine version
First use 1852-53
Country United States of America
Locomotive Pawnee
Railway Philadelphia and Reading Rail Road
Builder Baldwin Locomotive Works
Norris Locomotive Works
First known "True type" version
First use 1860
Country United States of America
Railway Louisville and Nashville Railroad
Evolved from 2-4-0

Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives, 2-6-0 represents the wheel arrangement of two leading wheels on one axle, usually in a leading truck, six powered and coupled driving wheels on three axles and no trailing wheels. This arrangement is commonly called a Mogul.

In the United States of America (USA) and Europe, the 2-6-0 wheel arrangement was principally used on tender locomotives. This type of locomotive was widely built in the USA from the early 1860s to the 1920s.

Although examples were built as early as 1852–53 by two Philadelphia manufacturers, Baldwin Locomotive Works and Norris Locomotive Works, these first examples had their leading axles mounted directly and rigidly on the frame of the locomotive rather than on a separate truck or bogie. On these early 2-6-0 locomotives, the leading axle was merely used to distribute the weight of the locomotive over a larger number of wheels. It was therefore essentially an 0-8-0 with an unpowered leading axle and the leading wheels did not serve the same purpose as, for example, the leading trucks of the 4-4-0 American or 4-6-0 Ten-Wheeler types which, at the time, had been in use for at least a decade.

The first American 2-6-0 with a rigidly mounted leading axle was the Pawnee, built for heavy freight service on the Philadelphia and Reading Rail Road. In total, about thirty locomotives of this type were built for various American railroads. While they were generally successful in slow, heavy freight service, the railroads that used these first 2-6-0 locomotives didn't see any great advantages in them over the 0-6-0 or 0-8-0 designs of the time. The railroads noted their increased pulling power, but also found that their rather rigid suspension made them more prone to derailments than the 4-4-0 locomotives of the day. Many railroad mechanics attributed these derailments to having too little weight on the leading truck.


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Wikipedia

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