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What was the most powerful British locomotive?

Gresley Class P2 No. 2007 Prince of Wales It was the most powerful express passenger steam locomotive ever built for a British railway.



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4472 Flying Scotsman, the GWR claimed that the Castle was Britain's most powerful express locomotive. In subsequent locomotive exchanges, the GWR locomotive won the battle in terms of speed, power and economy and this led to improvements being made to the LNER Pacific design.

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Shen24 with 24 axles and a power output of 28MW or almost 40,000 horsepower, it is the world's most powerful electric locomotive.

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Arguably the most famous train ever to grace the track, the Flying Scotsman was a pioneer of the late 1800s and put Great Britain on the map in terms of engineering. During its heyday, it would shoot up the East Coast Main Line connecting London Kings Cross with Edinburgh Waverley station.

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Alco PA Locomotives Arguably the most beautiful diesel locomotive ever built, sadly no Alco PAs were originally preserved. Today, one is under restoration.

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British Rail HS4000 - Wikipedia.

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New York Central's 20th Century Limited was dubbed “The Greatest Train Ever Made.”

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Flying Scotsman, a steam locomotive that represents British ingenuity and craftsmanship at its finest, marks its centenary in 2023.

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The Flying Scotsman: How the first 100mph locomotive became the most famous train in the world. The first train to officially hit 100mph may not even have been the first, and didn't hold the rail speed record for long; yet a century later its legend is undimmed.

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The oldest surviving steam railway locomotive in the world is Puffing Billy, which was built in 1813/14 for Christopher Blackett, owner of Wylam Colliery, near Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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The 4449 Daylight is considered one of the world's most beautiful steam locomotives. And one of the most photographed.

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The class J-1 and J-3a Hudsons of 1927 had 79 inch drivers. They were fast, powerful, very well proportioned, good looking, and may have been the best known steam locomotive. Honorable Mentions: CMStP&P Class F7.

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Puffing Billy is the world's oldest surviving steam locomotive, constructed in 1813–1814 by colliery viewer William Hedley, enginewright Jonathan Forster and blacksmith Timothy Hackworth for Christopher Blackett, the owner of Wylam Colliery near Newcastle upon Tyne, in the United Kingdom.

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The Australian BHP Iron Ore is the longest train ever recorded in history at approximately 4.6 miles (7.353 km). In the Pilbara region of Western Australia, BHP owns and runs the Mount Newman railway. This is a private rail network designed to transport iron ore.

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The most unusual steam locomotives ever built were the cab-forwards and camelback locomotives. The cab forwards had their driver and fireman's cab opposite the tender instead of next to it so that the crews could avoid being asphyxiated by smoke from the funnels as they traveled through sheds over the Sierra Nevada.

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A. Venice Simplon-Orient-Express is reputed as the oldest luxury train in the world.

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The Union Pacific Centennial is the largest and most powerful diesel locomotive ever built.

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