UP 420 #460 is on display at the Pony Express Museum in Marysville KS

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UP 420 #460, Marysville, KS

#460 was built as #1680 for the Union Pacific by Burnham, Williams & Co., an early incarnation of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, in 1901, one of fifty eight Class 1640 Vauclain compound Consolidation type (2-8-0) locomotives (#1640-1699). In 1915, the class was renumbered Class 420 #420-#477, #1697 becoming #460.

As built, #1680 weighed 184,870 lbs, 160,570 lbs on its 57” drivers. The driver wheelbase was 15’ 3” and the engine wheelbase 23’ 11”. Fitted with Stephenson valve gear and 15½” x 30” high pressure cylinders and 26” x 30” low pressure, it had a 33.9 sq ft grate and 247.2 sq ft firebox. With a total heating surface of 2,502 sq ft and operating at a boiler pressure of 200 psi, it delivered 31,719 lbs tractive effort. The tender weighs 115,798 lbs light and has a capacity of 6,000 gallons of water and 11 tons of coal.

Like other Vauclains bought by the UP in the early 20th Century, the 1640s were soon converted to simple expansion locomotives. The main advantage claimed for compounding was lower fuel and water consumption, but Vauclains had relatively high maintenance costs which largely offset any fuel economies.

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UP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, Marysville
UP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, MarysvilleUP 420 #460, Marysville
UP 420 #460, Marysville

In 1918, the low pressure cylinders were removed, the high pressure cylinders enlarged to 21” x 30” and the Stephenson valve gear was replaced with Walschaert valve gear.

Some time later, the UP added a 417 sq ft Schmidt superheater, removing 136 small tubes in favour of 28 flues, but little else changed. The engine weight rose to 187,891 lbs, 163,205 lbs on the drivers. The firebox dropped to 191 sq ft and total heating
surface to 2,436 lbs. However, tractive effort rose by 20% to 39,458 lbs.

Many of 420 Class worked into
the 1950s. #460 was donated to the City of Marysville, KS, in 1956 and is on display at the Pony Express Museum. You can see other 420s on the UP #423, UP #477 and UP #421 pages of this website.

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