Originally Posted by Pingman:
Originally Posted by Rusty Traque:
Originally Posted by Diesel Dan:
Dan
Doubt it. The locomotives pictured are also depicted as E3/6's(more or less), which Wabash had exactly none of.
Rusty
Rusty or anyone else, I'm just now getting familiar with the family of EMD E units and their visual differences. How do you id the Wabash units pictured as E3 or E6 units? I know why they aren't E4 or E5 units. And also why they aren't E8 or E9 units. What distinguishes them from E7's?
Here's some line drawings that give a quickie identification of the E3/6, E7 and E8 courtesy of Railroad Paint Shop.
Bear in mind these are generic drawings without road-specific details, but they illustrate the differences reasonably well.
E3
The E3 was virtually identical to the E6, off the top of my head I don't know what differentiated them.
Now the E3/E4/E5 were at the end of the customization era. Note portholes and slotted pilot on this UP E3:
The slotted pilot on the City of St. Louis illustration appear to be part of the inspiration for the image. Some "artistic license" also appears to be involved. But the slotted pilot, numberboard location and lack of the vertical grill behind the doorway lead me to call it an E3/6.
The E7:
The E8:
Rusty