I'm building a model of a planned WWII/post-war ATSF 6-4-4-4 streamlined, cab-forward, oil-fired, 100 mph cruise steam locomotive that was never built, canceled in favor of F3s in the late '40s. It was essentially a cab forward T-1: 15 tons heavier, 10% less tractive force, simpler plumbing for lower maintenance. No official Santa Fe drawings or pictures of it exist: those that do were done years, - maybe decades, after the fact. Al those "artists renderings" show the loco with the firebox in front, smokestack at the rear.
I can understand why that (firebox front, smokestack rear) was the layout on the SP cab forwards. I understand the loco was designed originally as a standard cab-at-the-rear loco and then made into a cab forward. Certainly the easiest way to convert a design is to just turn the loco around, run oil lines the length of the loco from the tender to the firebox up front, etc.
But the ATSF 6-4-4-4 was going to be an entirely new design - not a modification, and its about the same cost to build either way, I think - and easier to move signals than oil, I think. So it has occurred to me that it's really no problem to put the cab with its controls and instrumentation and all in front and still have the firebox at the rear, close to the fuel, etc., (roughly a zillion B-17, B-24, and B-29 bombers built in that era had basically that same arrangement).
Is there some basic reason I am missing of why on a cab forward locomotive the firebox had to be right behind the cab? Were their cab forward locos with this arrangement - all I can find have firebox in front but also appear to have been modification of initial cab-rear designs.