Southern Pacific 4460

Southern Pacific 4460
SP No. 4460 on static display at the National Museum of Transportation
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderLima Locomotive Works
Serial number7812
Build dateJuly 1943
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-8-4
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Driver dia.73+12 in (1,867 mm)
Adhesive weight283,000 lb (128,000 kg)
Loco weight468,400 lb (212,500 kg)
Total weight867,500 lb (393,500 kg; 393.5 t)
Fuel typeBunker oil
Boiler pressure260 psi (1,800 kPa)
Cylinder size27 in × 30 in (686 mm × 762 mm)
dia × stroke
Performance figures
Tractive effort65,759 lbf (292,510 N),
76,050 lbf (338,300 N) with booster
Career
OperatorsSouthern Pacific
ClassGS-6
Number in class10
Numbers
  • SP 4460
Nicknames"War Baby", "Black Daylight", "The Forgotten Daylight", "Blacklight"
RetiredOctober 1958
PreservedApril 16, 1959
Current ownerNational Museum of Transportation
DispositionOn static display

Southern Pacific 4460 is the only surviving class "GS-6" steam locomotive, together with "GS-4" class Southern Pacific 4449, which is operational in excursion service. The GS-6 is a semi-streamlined 4-8-4 "Northern" type steam locomotive. GS stands for "Golden State" or "General Service". The locomotive was built by the Lima Locomotive Works (LLW) for the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) in 1943. The GS-6 lacked side skirting and red and orange "Daylight" paint found on previous locomotives of the GS class and were painted black and silver instead. The War Production Board controlled locomotive manufacturers during World War II and had turned down Southern Pacific's order of fourteen new Daylight locomotives in 1942. Southern Pacific re-designed the new fleet based on the older GS-2s, only with 260 psi instead of 300 psi, an all-weather cab, and a new GS-4 style tender. The design was finally approved, but the War Production Board reassigned four to the smaller and power-starved Western Pacific Railroad (only the tender from Western Pacific GS6/64 #484 remains). Their smaller size when compared to previous GS class locomotives and the fact that they were built during World War II earned them the nicknames "War Babies".