EMD E6

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The EMC E6 was a Template:Convert, A1A-A1A, streamlined passenger train locomotive manufactured by Electro-Motive Corporation, and its corporate successor, General Motors Electro-Motive Division, of La Grange, Illinois. The cab version, E6A, was manufactured from November 1939 to September 1942; 91 were produced. The booster version, E6B, was manufactured from April 1940 to February 1942; 26 were produced. The Template:Convert was achieved by putting two Template:Convert, 12-cylinder, model 567 engines in the engine compartment. Each engine drove its own electrical generator to power the traction motors. The E6 was the seventh model in a long line of passenger diesels of similar design known as EMD E-units.

Compared with passenger locomotives made later by EMD, the noses of the E3, E4, E5, and E6 cab units had pronounced slants when viewed from the side. Therefore, these four models have been nicknamed "slant nose" units. Later E models had the "bulldog nose" of the F series.

One interesting E6 variant custom-produced for the Missouri Pacific was the model EMC AA. This was a motorcar-style unit which had only one prime mover and Template:Convert, and substituted a baggage compartment where the other diesel V-12 would have been. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific owned an equally interesting pair of similar power cars known as the EMC AB6, which were mechanically identical but had boxcabs in blunt noses. These acted as boosters behind conventional E6A models on the Rocky Mountain Rocket train between Chicago and Limon, Colorado, from where the E6A would take the Denver cars north and the AB6 would take the Colorado Springs section of the train south.

Original ownersEdit

Railroad Quantity
A units
Quantity
B units
Road numbers
A units
Road numbers
B units
Notes
Electro-Motive Corporation (demonstrator) 1 1940 to Seaboard Air Line 3014
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad 22 5 502–523 750–754 ACL 501 was built as an E3A, wrecked before delivery and rebuilt as an E6A
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway 4 3 12–15 12A, 13A, 15A
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 8 7 52, 57–63 57x–63x
Chicago and North Western Railway 4 5005A,B, 5006A,B
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad 5 627–631
Florida East Coast Railway 3 1 1003–1005 1051
Illinois Central Railroad 5 4000–4004
Kansas City Southern Railway 2 4, 5
Louisville and Nashville Railroad 16 450A,B–457A,B
Milwaukee Road 2 15A,B
Missouri Pacific Railroad 2 2 7002–7003 7002B–7003B
Seaboard Air Line Railroad 2 3015–3016 EMD Demonstrator 1940 became SAL 3014
Southern Railway 7 4 2800–2802
2900–2903
2900B–2903B
Union Pacific Railroad 6 7M1A, 7M2A, 8M1A, 8M2A, 9M1A, 9M2A
UP-C&NW joint City of Los Angeles 1 2 LA-4 LA-5, LA-6
UP-SP-C&NW joint City of San Francisco 1 2 SF-4 SF-5, SF-6
Total 91 26

Surviving unitsEdit

Two E6 locomotives survive today:

Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad E6A #630, was operated by the Midland Railway, in Baldwin City, Kansas. RI 630 has since been sold and will become part of a future museum in Manly, Iowa, along with Rock Island E8A 652. Both units have been cosmetically restored but currently are under a mechanical restoration at Mid-America Car in Kansas City, MO as of March 2017.

Louisville and Nashville E6A #770, built as L&N 450B, is located at the Kentucky Railway Museum, in New Haven, Kentucky. This unit is for display only, as it came to the museum without most of its internal parts.

See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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