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The streetcars of the historic F-line fleet

F-line fleet operational status


Originally built for
Phildelphia Transportation Company, Philadelphia PA, 1948 (as car No. 2138)

Acquired by Muni from
Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, Philadelphia PA, 1992

Year Built
1948

Builder
St. Louis Car Co.

Modified/upgraded
1994

Contractor
Morrison-Knudsen

Seats
47

Weight
37,990 lbs.

Length
48' 5"

Width
8' 4"

Height
10' 3"

Motors
4 Westinghouse 1432J

Trucks
B-2

Brakes
Electric

You're onboard Car No. 1057
Built 1948.
Served Philadelphia 1948-89.
Purchased by Muni 1992.
Exterior paint design: Cincinnati.

This streetcar is painted to honor Cincinnati, which ran PCC streetcars from 1939 to 1951. Cincinnati was exceptional in requiring two overhead wires for streetcars, one to supply electrical power, the other to provide a ground and complete the circuit.

Almost every other streetcar system uses one overhead wire, with the tracks providing the ground. (Trolley buses use two wires because they run on rubber tires, and have no tracks to use as ground.) So Cincy’s PCCs looked different than everyone else’s.

That extended to the paint scheme, an eye-popping canary yellow with three bold green stripes around the body. Only PCCs got this treatment in Cincinnati—older streetcars were painted a prosaic transit orange (some old trolleys actually outlasted the PCCs). The financially ailing Cincinnati Street Railway Co. sold 52 PCCs—the newest just three years old—to Toronto before closing its last streetcar line in 1951.

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