Girish Mahajan (Editor)

MLW M 420

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Power type
  
Diesel-electric

AAR wheel arr.
  
B-B

Total produced
  
90 + 8 B-units

MLW M-420

Builder
  
Montreal Locomotive Works(MLW)

Build date
  
May 1973 - February 1977

Gauge
  
4 ft 8 ⁄2 in (1,435 mm)

The Montreal Locomotive Works M-420 is a diesel-electric locomotive built between 1973 and 1977 in Montreal Quebec, Canada. A total 88 units were built for Canadian railways, including 8 B-units built for the British Columbia Railway; most of production went to the Canadian National Railway. Only seven units were sold outside of Canada, to Ferrocarriles del Estado in Venezuela and Providence and Worcester Railroad in the United States.

Contents

The M-420 was one of the first locomotive models (along with the GMD-built GP38-2) to use the wide-nosed Safety (or Comfort) Cab, pioneered by Canadian National Railway. By the early 1990s, variations on this cab design had become the standard of the industry. As with wide-nosed GMD units from the same period, references to the model commonly add a "W" at the end of the model name, but it is not part of the official model designation. Most M-420 units rode on MLW ZWT (Zero Weight-Transfer) trucks.

Variations

Other variations of the M-420 were the M-420R, the M-424 built for service in Mexico and the M-420TR switcher. The M-420R was built for the Providence and Worcester Railroad using trade-in parts and rode on Type B trucks, but otherwise resembled the M-420. The M-424 was an M-420 with dynamic brakes uprated to 2,400 horsepower (1.79 MW). The M-420TR was built in two variations, with two M-420TR units sold to Roberval and Saguenay Railway and fifteen slightly different units (sometimes referred to as M-420TR-2) sold to Ferrocarril del Pacifico. Both M-420TR variations bore little resemblance to the other models, with a lowered hood, shorter frame and end-cab design.

Service with CN and BCOL

CN M-420 units provided service on the eastern side of Canada until their retirement in the late 1990s. By the time they were retired, many units were over 20 years old, and major Canadian railroads were purging their rosters of MLW and Alco locomotives to replace them with newer EMD and GE units. Bombardier-built HR-412 units, purchased by CN and designed as successor to the M-420, were retired at the same time.

Service as power generators in Winter 1998

During the winter of 1998, a severe ice storm cut off power to many homes and businesses in Ontario and Quebec. CN M-420 3502 was hoisted off the rails by crane and rolled along a street in Boucherville QC in order to provide power in the community. The engine was driven approximately 1,000 feet (305 m) under its own power to the city hall, where it then became a portable power generator. M-420 3508 was also lifted from the tracks to provide power to a school being used as a shelter, but problems prevented this from happening, and 3508 remained on standby. Both engines suffered minor gear case damage and carved grooves in the pavement.

M-420 today

Following their retirement from CN and BC Rail, some M-420 units were scrapped, but many were sold to shortline railways across North America for continued service. Omnitrax purchased several units, including some of the M-420B units from BC Rail. Larger shortlines such as Omnitrax have begun to scrap or sell their MLW units as a result of increased maintenance and reliability issues. The St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad used a fleet of eleven former CN M-420 units as road power from 1998 to 2001. The Great Western Railway in Saskatchewan uses an entire roster of MLW M-420s. Due to the high cost of painting, many M-420s on shortlines still retain their CN livery with the CN logo painted over. West Tennessee Railroad acquired three M-420s (3510, 3560, and 3576); 3510 was wrecked and scrapped, while the other two units remain in service in an attractive maroon-and-gray paint scheme.

References

MLW M-420 Wikipedia