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  1. Locomotive - Wikipedia

    A locomotive is a rail vehicle that provides the motive power for a train. Traditionally, locomotives pulled trains from the front.

  2. El Paso Locomotive FC | Homepage

    Tickets Schedule Club Matchday News Youth Soccer Shop Community Enter to Win OFFICIAL EL PASO LOCOMOTIVE FC MOBILE APP

  3. Locomotive | Definition, History, Design, Types, & Facts | Britannica

    locomotive, any of various self-propelled vehicles used for hauling railroad cars on tracks.

  4. LOCOMOTIVE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    locomotive adjective lo· co· mo· tive ˌlō-kə-ˈmōt-iv : locomotor sense 1 locomotive organs include flagella, cilia, pseudopodia, and limbs

  5. What Is A Locomotive? Definition, Types, Components, And Future

    A locomotive is a powerful and essential machine in the world of transportation. It is a type of engine that is specifically designed to propel trains and move heavy loads across railway tracks.

  6. List of U.S. locomotive types - Wikipedia

    List of U.S. locomotive types Steam classes ... Diesel types ... Categories: Lists of rolling stock Railway locomotive-related lists

  7. How Diesel Locomotives Work - HowStuffWorks

    A traditional locomotive simply relies on mechanical energy to drive the locomotive. On the other hand, a modern hybrid diesel locomotive combines both electrical and mechanical energies to give better …

  8. Steam locomotive - Wikipedia

    The most-manufactured single class of steam locomotive in the world is the 0-10-0 Russian locomotive class E steam locomotive with around 11,000 produced both in Russia and other countries such as …

  9. History of technology - Steam Locomotive, Railroads, Industrial ...

    Nov 24, 2025 · First was the evolution of the railroad: the combination of the steam locomotive and a permanent travel way of metal rails.

  10. Locomotives: The power of railroading | Trains Magazine

    May 30, 2023 · Before steam succumbed to the superior efficiency and lower costs of diesels, the major locomotive builders were Baldwin, American (Alco), Lima, and several railroads themselves.