EMD SD40T-2


An SD40T-2 is a 6-axle road switcher diesel-electric locomotive built by General Motors Electro-Motive Division having a 16-cylinder EMD 645E3 diesel engine producing. 312 SD40T-2s were built for North American railroads between April 1974 and July 1980. This locomotive and the SD45T-2 are popularly called tunnel motors, but EMD's term is SD40-2s with "cooling system modifications" because they were designed for better engine cooling in mountainous areas. The difference between this locomotive and its non-tunnel motor cousin, the SD40-2, are the radiator intakes and radiator fan grills located at the rear of the locomotive.
This locomotive model was purchased by the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, the Southern Pacific Railroad, and its subsidiary Cotton Belt. Southern Pacific's version has a fuel tank and is long. Rio Grande's version has a smaller fuel tank. After merging with Rio Grande, the Southern Pacific and later Union Pacific owned every remaining SD40T-2.
In 2005, most of these units were owned by Union Pacific or leasing companies. By 2008, none were left in service on UP with SP or DRGW reporting marks. DRGW 5371 was the last one, retired in March 2008, and now resides at the Utah State Railroad Museum in Ogden Utah. Another SD40T-2 is preserved at the Boone & Scenic Valley Railroad in Boone, Iowa, and in late 2017, it was announced that another Rio Grande SD40T-2 was going to be donated to the Colorado Railroad Museum in Golden, Colorado. On August 22, 2018, UP 9871 was moved to the museum grounds, and was since “unpatched”, painted to resemble its original appearance from 1980, which included painting the number back to 5401. Three former Rio Grande units,5391,5413,and 8795 are still active on the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad out of Brewster, Ohio.

Original purchasers

Other owners