Banner
Navigation
loco-info.com
The reference for locomotives and railcars
Navigation
Explore
Search
Compare
Settings

Navigation

Page views since 2023-01-26: 10,557,190
Seaboard Air Line class T60-I4
go back
United States | 1896
17 produced
Image of locomotive
Railway and Locomotive Engineering, January 1897

The class T60-I4, numbered 552 to 568, were 17 4-6-0 freight locomotives built by the Pittsburgh Locomotive Works in 1896. Designed by W.T. Reed, they had small drivers of 58 inches and cylinders of 19 by 24 inches. No. 559 was sold to the Raleigh & Charleston in 1917. Of the other 16 locomotives, around one half was retired in 1922 and 1923 and the rest between 1928 to 1930.

General
Built1896
ManufacturerPittsburgh
Wheel arr.4-6-0 (Ten-wheeler) 
Gauge4 ft 8 1/2 in (Standard gauge)
Dimensions and Weights
Wheelbase21 ft 11 in
Rigid wheelbase11 ft 9 in
Total wheelbase48 ft 3 in
Service weight131,150 lbs
Adhesive weight104,800 lbs
Total weight211,950 lbs
Axle load39,900 lbs
Water capacity4,000 us gal
Fuel capacitycoal
Boiler
Grate area23.4 sq ft
Firebox area144 sq ft
Tube heating area1,448 sq ft
Evaporative heating area1,592 sq ft
Total heating area1,592 sq ft
Power Plant
Driver diameter58 in
Boiler pressure180 psi
Expansion typesimple
Cylinderstwo, 19 x 24 in
Power
Power sourcesteam
Estimated power800 hp (597 kW)
Starting effort22,855 lbf
Calculated Values
steam locomotive
freight
last changed: 02/2026
Search
loadding loading...

We use cookies to save the following settings:

  • selected navigation structure
  • selected language
  • preferred units
  • spelling of railway company names

If you refuse the use of cookies, the settings will only be retained for the current session and will be reset to the default values the next time you visit the site.

Display of units

Here you can set the desired unit system for the technical data.

  • Metric: Lengths in meters, weights in tonnes, and volumes in cubic meters
  • Imperial (UK): Lengths in feet/inches, weights in long tons and volumes in imperial gallons
  • Imperial (US): Lengths in feet/inches, weights in pounds, and volumes in US gallons
  • Individual: Depends on the country of origin of each locomotive
Operator names

Here you can set the display of railway company names.

  • Short: Abbreviation or short form of the name
  • Standard: commonly used name, partially translated to English
  • Complete: full name in local language