Detailed
Information: UP #4014 EXCURSION FEATURES:
Excursion Version with oil tender from UP 3985 per prototype configuration
Reporting marks only on rear tender face per prototype 2019 configuration
In service appearance Commemorative box UP
#4014 PROMONTORY FEATURES:
Great Race to Promontory versionwith oil tender from UP 3985 per prototype configuration
Reporting marks only on rear tender face per prototype 2019 configuration
Freshly shopped shiny appearance Commemorative box Chalk marking Big
Boy factory applied to smoke box face, per prototype during summer 2019.
This marking is a subtle nod to history and ALCO legend. See details on the last
page of this order sheet. Big
Boy No. 4014 was delivered to Union Pacific in December 1941. The locomotive was
retired in December 1961, having traveled 1,031,205 miles in its 20 years in service.
Union Pacific reacquired No. 4014 from the RailGiants Museum in Pomona, California,
in 2013, and relocated it back to Cheyenne to begin a multi-year restoration process.
In 2019 UP #4014 was brought back to life. It had been almost 60 years and multiple
generations since the last time a 4-8-8-4 Big Boy operated under its own
power. SURVIVING 4-8-8-4 BIG BOY PRESERVATION INFO:
4004: Holliday Park 4005: Forney Transportation Museum 4006: Museum of
Transportation 4012: Steamtown National Historic Site 4017: National Railroad
Museum 4018: Museum of the American Railroad 4023: Kenefick Park PRESERVATION
VERSION FEATURES:
As delivered from ALCO in service 1940s era Coal Tender Twenty-five
Big Boys were built exclusively for Union Pacific Railroad, the first of which
was delivered in 1941. The locomotives were 132 feet long and weighed 1.2 million
pounds. Because of their great length, the frames of the Big Boys were hinged,
or articulated, to allow them to negotiate curves. They had a 4-8-8-4 wheel arrangement,
which meant they had four wheels on the leading set of pilot wheels
which guided the engine, eight drivers, another set of eight drivers, and four
wheels following which supported the rear of the locomotive. The massive engines
normally operated between Ogden, Utah, and Cheyenne, Wyo. There
are seven Big Boys on public display in various cities around the country. They
can be found in St. Louis, Missouri; Dallas, Texas; Omaha, Nebraska; Denver, Colorado;
Scranton, Pennsylvania; Green Bay, Wisconsin; and Cheyenne, Wyoming. Source
Union Pacific Railroad |