Electric Locomotives
| Class | DRG number | Year of Manufacture | Type | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ES 1 to ES 3 | E 00 02 | 1911 | 2'B1' | |
| ES 4 | 1912 | 1'D1' | ||
| ES 5 | 1913 | 1'C1' | ||
| ES 6 | 1914 | 1'C1' | ||
| ES 9 to ES 19 | E 01 09 - E 01 19 | 1914 - 1922 | 1'C1' | |
| (ES 51 to ES 57) | E 06 01 - E 06 07 | 1924 - 1926 | 2'C2' | Procured by the DRG |
| EP 201 | 1912 | 1'D1' | Originally classified as EG 501 | |
| EP 202 to EP 208 | E 30 02 - E 30 08 | 1915 | 1'C1' | |
| EP 209/210 and EP 211/212 | E 49 00 | 1922 | 2'B + B1' | |
| (EP 213 and EP 214) | E 42 13 + E 42 14 | 1924 | B'B' | Procured by the DRG |
| (EP 215 and EP 219) | E 42 15 - E 42 19 | 1924 - 1925 | B'B' | Procured by the DRG |
| EP 235 | E 50 35 | 1917 | 2'D1' | |
| EP 236 to 246 | E 50 36 - E 50 46 | 1923 - 1924 | 2'D1' | |
| EP 247 to 252 | E 50 47 - E 50 52 | 1923 - 1924 | 2'D1' | |
| EG 502 to EG 505 | E 70 02 - E 70 05 | 1911 | D | |
| EG 506 | E 70 06 | 1911 | D | |
| EG 507 and EG 508 | E 70 07 + E 70 08 | 1913 | D | |
| EG 509/510 | 1911 | 1'B + B1' | ||
| EG 511 to EG 537 | E 71 11 - E 71 37 | 1914 - 1922 | ||
| EG 538 abc to EG 549abc | E 91 38 - E 91 49 | 1915 | B + B + B | |
| EG 551/552 to EG 569/570 | E 90 51 - E 90 60 | 1919 - 1923 | C + C | |
| EG 571ab to EG 579ab | E 92 71 - E 92 79 | 1923 - 1925 | Co + Co | |
| (EG 581 to EG 594) | E 91 81 - E 91 94 | 1925 - 1926 | C'C' | Ordered by the DRG |
| (EG 701 to EG 725) | E 77 51 - E 77 75 | 1924 - 1926 | (1B)(B1) | Ordered by the DRG |
| EV 1/2 | E 73 03 | 1911 | Bo + Bo | |
| EV 3/4 | 1913 | Bo + Bo | ||
| EV 5I | 1910 | A1A | ||
| EV 5II | E 73 05 | 1923 | Bo'Bo' | |
| EV 6 | E 73 06 | 1926 | Bo'Bo' | Ordered by the DRG |
| EB 1 to EB 3 | 1914 | B |
Read more about this topic: List Of Prussian Locomotives And Railbuses
Famous quotes containing the words electric and/or locomotives:
“A sociosphere of contact, control, persuasion and dissuasion, of exhibitions of inhibitions in massive or homeopathic doses...: this is obscenity. All structures turned inside out and exhibited, all operations rendered visible. In America this goes all the way from the bewildering network of aerial telephone and electric wires ... to the concrete multiplication of all the bodily functions in the home, the litany of ingredients on the tiniest can of food, the exhibition of income or IQ.”
—Jean Baudrillard (b. 1929)
“The flower-fed buffaloes of the spring
In the days of long ago,
Ranged where the locomotives sing
And the prairie flowers lie low:”
—Vachel Lindsay (18791931)