SD45
Ready-To-Roll
Photo: Photo by David Wilson, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 2.0 · Wikimedia Commons
Technical Specifics
Source Category
Locomotive
History
Full prototype page →The EMD SD45 entered production in 1965 as one of the most powerful single-unit diesel-electric locomotives available on the American market at the time. Built by General Motors' Electro-Motive Division, the SD45 was aimed at railroads seeking maximum horsepower in a single unit to handle heavy freight over demanding grades. Over the course of its production run, which extended through 1971, EMD delivered a total of 1,260 units to numerous Class I railroads across the United States. Buyers included some of the largest and most demanding freight carriers of the era, among them the Southern Pacific, Burlington Northern, Santa Fe, Pennsylvania Railroad, Great Northern, Union Pacific, Denver and Rio Grande Western, Southern Railway, Norfolk and Western, and Northern Pacific. Despite its impressive power output, the SD45 developed a reputation for reliability problems stemming from its twenty-cylinder prime mover. The large engine was prone to crankshaft failures caused by flexing of the engine block, a problem that required EMD to reinforce the block design partway through the locomotive's production life. Some railroads concluded that the extra 600 horsepower the SD45 offered over the sixteen-cylinder SD40 did not justify the added maintenance burden, particularly since at low speeds, where tractive effort was constrained by wheel-to-rail adhesion rather than raw power, the two locomotives performed comparably. These concerns gradually shifted railroad purchasing preferences toward the SD40 and ultimately toward the more refined SD40-2 introduced in 1972. The SD45 was succeeded in the EMD catalog by the SD45-2, which incorporated the Dash-2 modular electrical system, but the type never regained the commercial momentum it had briefly enjoyed. The SD45's legacy extended well beyond its original service lives. Southern Pacific undertook an extensive rebuild program at its Sacramento Shops, converting 167 units into the SD45R configuration under its M-99 program. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe rebuilt 115 examples into the SD45u variant between 1979 and 1989. A number of units were re-engined with sixteen-cylinder 645 prime movers and downrated to approximately 3,000 horsepower, effectively converting them to SD40-2 equivalents. Montana Rail Link operated a fleet that retained the original twenty-cylinder engines into the 21st century, making that railroad a notable holdout for the type in something close to its original configuration. Several examples have been preserved at railroad museums across the country, including the first production unit, Great Northern 400, known as "Hustle Muscle," which is maintained by the Great Northern Railway Historical Society.
Model Train Manufacturers
Brands that produce EMD SD45 in HO scale
Available as HO Models
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Real-world information about this equipment type
EMD SD45
locomotive · SD45