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Brand new and rebuilt Alco (and FM) prime movers and parts are still available. The worldwide market for rail and marine use is fairly large.http://www.fairbanksmorse.com/locomotive/
The NKP had 35 RS11's and the SP had 34. They were the largest numbers after the N&W's 99 (and of course the N&W inherited the NKP's 35). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALCO_RS-11
including the only RS11 with a steam generator
New Haven units also had steam generators.Jason
Oh yeah, I'm not saying they're insignificant on rosters. My point is that if you were the CMO of a railroad and were choosing what to standardize on for secondary service through attrition (ie, retirement) and rebuilding (for what you want to keep) you'd keep the stuff that is more common and has a larger manufacturer standing behind it. For reference, you can still get OEM parts for SW1s built in 1939. Probably using the same phone number you called to order them too.There's a lot more to managing a locomotive fleet than we usually see as railfans. Things like lease agreements, warranty options, support availability, parts availability and inventory, their value on the secondary market, etc... Those things were generally against Alcos in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. It's also why the current Alco users are generally all-in on them, or they represent a very significant part of their fleet (think Delaware-Lackawanna, A&M, Apache).