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120 B30-7As, and the A signified they were powered by a 12 cylinder FDL versus the 16 cylinder version FDL in the B30-7. MP had B30-7As with cabs. BN also had 8 standard B30-7s of Frisco heritage, powered by the 16FDL.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Don't forget ATSF's SD45-2b's which if I remember correct were ordered from EMD in that configuration...
As we ramble hopelessly off the subject, ...
Of course this only solved half the problem when the cab ends up on the 'right' side of the train.
...until they removed the drawbars and installed couplers On paper, drawbars seems to the the answer until management 'improved' the idea...
https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/view/32482215/n-scale-gp30-phase-1-the-atlas-model-railroad-co/2Just sayin...Edit: Good God! Just realized I wrote that 10 years ago...
What's wrong with this picture? If they had to retreat, a normal occurrence, the engineer has no choice but to operate backwards sighting down all those hoods. In reality they would use a rearward-facing cab at the other end of the consist.
I recall reading that the Atlantic Coast Line bought F3s to run with their drawbarred FTs, i.e., they could have FTA+FTB-F3A, rather than FTA+FTB or FTA+FTB-FTB+FTA. But, that must not have solved the problem, because the ACL figured out how to replace those drawbars on the FTs, and, eventually, those sets were broken up for more flexibility in assignment.
I'm now recalling heated debates "back then" about whether they were "B30-7ABs" or something to that effect, and the answer was no, there was no specific model distinction, at least not from GE.