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・ PRPF4B
・ PRPF6
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・ PRPSAP1
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・ PRR 1223
・ PRR 1361
・ PRR 1737
・ PRR 3750
・ PRR 3936 and 3937
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PRR 4800
・ PRR 4859
・ PRR 4876
・ PRR 4877
・ PRR 4935
・ PRR 520
・ PRR 6755
・ PRR 7002
・ PRR 7048
・ PRR A1
・ PRR A5s
・ PRR AA1
・ PRR B1
・ PRR B6
・ PRR C1


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PRR 4800 : ウィキペディア英語版
PRR 4800

PRR 4800, nicknamed "Old Rivets", is a GG1-class electric locomotive located at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania, outside of Strasburg, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is the prototype GG1 and was originally numbered 4899. Built by General Electric in 1934, the locomotive competed against a prototype, the R1, built by rival company Westinghouse. 4800 was kept in service by the Pennsylvania Railroad and its successors, Penn Central and Conrail, until 1979. It was sold the next year to a local chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. 4800 was dedicated in 1982 at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania and was designated an Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark in 1983.
== Construction and testing ==

In 1933, the Pennsylvania Railroad decided to replace the P5, and instructed General Electric and Westinghouse to design an electric locomotive that was more powerful than the P5, capable of speeds of , have a lighter axle load and to be double-ended with a cab in the center of the carbody. Westinghouse designed the R1 #4800, and General Electric submitted the GG1, then numbered 4899.
The frames, running gear and riveted body for the prototype GG1 were built by Baldwin Locomotive Works. The partially built locomotive was then shipped to the General Electric factory in Erie, Pennsylvania for the installation of its electrical components. Twelve traction motors, two on each of the GG1's six powered axles, produced that was transmitted to the driving wheels by a quill drive.〔〔 Unlike other GG1s, access steps were installed at each end of the locomotive to ease maintenance of the pantographs; the pantographs were mechanically linked to a safety plate that blocked access to the steps when the pantographs were raised.〔 The finished locomotive was long and tall, with both of its pantographs lowered.〔
GG1 4899 was extensively tested against the R1 from August to November 1934; both locomotives were substituted on regular passenger service between New York City and Philadelphia. Both locomotives were found to be capable of rapid acceleration with short-term power outputs of up to . The GG1, however, did not exert as much lateral force on the rails as the R1, because it was articulated, which allowed for a smaller turning radius than the rigid R1. The Pennsylvania chose the GG1 over the R1 and immediately ordered another 57 locomotives.〔 As the number scheme used by the Pennsylvania prevented the first locomotive in the class from being 4899, the R1 and GG1 prototypes, essentially, swapped numbers. The Pennsylvania also enlisted the assistance of Raymond Loewy to refine the aesthetics of the GG1s. Loewy recommended that all subsequent models of the class should have a welded body rather than the riveted body on the prototype. This led to the nickname "Old Rivets" being given to 4800.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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