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(2) Are there any engine numbers, or a series of numbers, such as UP's Big Boys being 4000 thru 4024, or UP's oil-fired passenger Challengers being numbered starting with 3700 that have special significance for SPF's??
PRR colors YMMMV, The subject is very convoluted.Diesel passenger, Tuscan in various shade intensity, that changed over time.Diesel freight, DGLE (dark green locomotive enamel) is five parts black to 1 part green, Brunswick Green, again in various shade intensity, over the years. Black below walkways, safety yellow late transition era, vertical handrails and step edges.
Precisely my point. What I stated was the generality. The majority of images will show Tuscan.The PRR ran a lot of special trains and sometimes had to use freight power to do them, note all of the personnel surrounding the train. Not knowing what the gearing is on those two engines is the only thing that distinguished freight from passenger engines. And there are examples of Passenger geared engines in DGLE, but they were anomalies, or experiments that the railroad was trying as well.
The PRR had hundreds if not thousands of locomotives, and changed paint schemes all the time. Those photos are a point in time of a very small sample and yes as newer style locos came online the older nes were relegated to freight in many cases.
Although my favorite was the super late punk rock scheme like this:https://www.railpictures.net/photo/420796/
I think you mean "glam-rock" scheme. Looks like glitter all over the nose. DFF
Which newer style locos would have replaced the PRR E8 locos in passenger service?
We also know that vintage color photographs (especially scanned and displayed on computer screen) are not good for accurate color references.