Everything about A Unit totally explained
An
A unit, in
railroad terminology, is a
locomotive (generally a
diesel or
electric locomotive) equipped with a driving
cab, or crew compartment, and the
control system to control other locomotives in a
multiple unit, and therefore able to be the lead unit in a
consist of several locomotives controlled from a single position. This terminology is generally used in
North America, since only there was it commonplace to build
B units—cabless locomotive units which normally couldn't lead a train.
Typical driving cab features, and therefore A unit features, include windshields, rectangular side windows, crew seats, heating, and sometimes, radios, air conditioning and toilets. B units always lack all of these features, except that some
EMD F-units have an extra porthole-style side window(s) for a
hostler (an employee permitted to move a locomotive in a yard only — not on the road).
This terminology has fallen out of use for newer locomotives, since it only really applied to the
cab unit style of locomotive. Thus, the term
cab unit is used only when an A unit has a
carbody design.
Hood unit "
road switcher" types were generally equipped with driving cabs and the term "A unit" wasn't generally applied to them, although the rare cabless road switchers were still called B units.
In some cases, A units were converted to B units. If the unit had been involved in a collision which damaged the cab, it was sometimes more cost-effective to rebuild the unit without the cab. In rarer cases, B units were converted to A units. The
Chicago and North Western Railway converted several
E8B units purchased from the
Union Pacific Railroad. The cabs on the rebuilt units were referred to as "Crandall Cabs."
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