

Union Pacific O Scale Premier Dash-8 Diesel Engine w/Proto-Sound 3.0 (Scale Wheels)
Overview
After extensive testing of several prototypes, GE delivered its first production units in 1984, models B32-8 and B39-8 - "B" for two-axle trucks, "32" or "39" for 3200 or 3900 horsepower, and -8 to indicate the new model, succeeding the second-generation -7 lineup. In part due to the recession of the early 1980s, orders didn't really heat up until late 1987, when GE uprated its prime mover to 4000 horsepower and changed the model's name to "Dash 8." In the ensuing years, as GE took the lead from EMD in North American locomotive sales, the Dash 8 series became a best seller, with over 1500 units delivered by the end of production in 1994.
From the beginning, the Dash 8 was offered in both four-axle (Dash 8-40B) and six-axle (Dash 8-40C) versions. With six-axle units outselling four-axle units almost seven to one, the sales numbers told the story of what was happening out on the road: as engine power increased, twelve wheels were proving superior to eight in getting all that muscle onto the rails. A 1991 Santa Fe order for 83 Dash 8s would prove to be the last four-axle road freight diesels GE ever built.
Up in the cab, another dramatic change was occuring. Following the lead of the Canadian National Railroad, where the wide-nosed "comfort cab" or "safety cab" had been standard for over a decade, the Union Pacific Railroad worked with both GE and EMD to design a safer, more comfortable cab. GE No. 606, the original -8 prototype, became a test bed for the new "North American cab," with much input from UP engine men and crews. Introduced in 1989, the wide-nosed Dash 8-40BW and Dash 8-40CW and their EMD counterparts established the look of the American road diesel as we know it today.
Did You Know?
The microprocessor in the prototype Dash 8 recognizes whether the engine is overheating in a tunnel, as opposed to a malfunction on the open rails, and allows it to keep operating at full power for ten minutes, so the crew doesn't find itself stranded in a tunnel.