THE FREIGHT LOCOMOTIVES
Electro-Motive F-9's
Road numbers 281LABC through 289LABC
The Santa Fe's last new F-unit purchase came in 1956 when F-9's 281LABC through 289LABC were delivered. They came from the factory in blue/yellow with the passenger nose emblem. These units had single headlights, vertical slit grilles, vertical slit filter openings between the portholes, ari piping on the roof, 48" D/B fans, and wide fuel tanks with abbreviated skirting as carried over from late F-7 production. The F-9's were initially assigned in Texas and seldom strayed from there until the late 1960's when they were placed in service system wide.
Many of the F-9's went into the CF-7 rebuild program and three of them gave up their prime movers for rebuild of three Alco RSD-15's into CRSD-20's, 01 and 02. A number of the F-9's were repainted into the yellow warbonnet freight scheme during the 1970's with at least three variations in the nose emblem known to exist. Some units had a blue nose stripe ukp and over the headlight to the base of the windshield (286L, 285C) some had an abbrevaiated stripe that ended just below the headlight (284C, 289C), others had just the nose emblem without a nose stripe (287C, 288L)
F-9B's differed little in external appearance from F-7B's. Any F-7B could be reworked to an F-9B with addition of a Highliner 48" D/b fan, Detail Associates vertical slit grilles, air piping on the roof and fuel tank modifications.
As with the FT's, the F-3, F-7, and F-9 freight units underwent modifications over the years that gave them distinct Santa Fe character. Grab irons were added above the cab windows and up the right side of the nose on A-units and many, but not all, had wrecking lugs on the nose and rear carbody and nose MU receptacles installed. Those A-units that never had nose MU installed reportedly caused a lot of headaches at engine terminals in their later years as they had to be placed at one end or the other of whatever locomotive consist they were to operate with.
Most F-7 units had the fuel tank skirts completely removed while F-9's were delivered with precious little skirting. All locomotives received radio antennas of various types, some F-7's getting the very early Sinclair "wagon wheel" antennas very soon after they were built. A few F-7's had flat plate antennas, but most had either the "wagon wheel" type at the left rear of the roof or a simple "can" type on the roof mounted directly on the carbody.


