Transport Fever 2

Transport Fever 2

USA Baldwin 2-6-2 'Prairie'
14 Comments
Kashi 31 Mar, 2022 @ 4:00am 
heh heh cum
coenvijge 2 Jul, 2021 @ 2:45am 
THANKS!
___:loco::carriage::carriage::steamthumbsup::steamthumbsup::carriage::carriage::carriage::tvloco:___
Dourbracken 18 Jun, 2021 @ 2:46am 
Fantastic job with this! My one note is that the intro date is oddly late. In the U.S. these were used from right around 1900, and they were widespread by 1910. However, for some reason, it is not available until 1920.
KiddBoston 17 Jun, 2021 @ 9:26am 
What is the start year of this loco? Started in 1900 and its not there, would be good to know some more info on it
phillydopey 11 Jun, 2021 @ 11:42am 
big chungus co
cdaguiar 11 Jun, 2021 @ 5:11am 
funny:steamhappy::steamthumbsup:
TheOneWhoIs 9 Jun, 2021 @ 7:35pm 
Finally some smaller North American locomotives! The monsters are great and all, but they don't pay in branch service!
Neighbor Kid 7 Jun, 2021 @ 6:22pm 
Great overall, the bounding box on the coupler's both front and rear could be a little bit closer to the other train cars.
DawnLine 7 Jun, 2021 @ 11:49am 
Blast Hardcheese some were
KiddBoston 7 Jun, 2021 @ 9:43am 
OMG thank you so much sir, thank you for making this mod. This is the kind of stuff the game needs and you are doing us all a great service!!
ColonelClusterFunk 7 Jun, 2021 @ 9:08am 
Benedick Cummerbunch & Sons
jmf0401 7 Jun, 2021 @ 6:50am 
Thanks again SteveM4 for another good model. Can't wait to see more American stuff.
jmf0401 7 Jun, 2021 @ 6:49am 
Yes. In fact, many locomotives, not just in America, were built this way. For instance, if you look at some Russian locomotives, they have that. It's most common on freight engines with many driving wheels where the designers compromise speed for pulling power. They make the wheels smaller but more numerous to increase surface area in contact with the track and therefore give more traction. It's likely that the boiler was also big enough to warrant putting it at a higher position so the firebox wouldn't hit the ground.
Just a few reasons to explain this.
Blast Hardcheese 7 Jun, 2021 @ 4:42am 
I'm not sure I understand the reason for the massive gap between the boiler and the wheels. Were they really built that way?