Three different railroads ordered the DR-6-4-2000 model with the 608NA 8-cylinder
naturally aspirated engine, but in visually different forms.
CNJ locomotives The
Central Railroad of New Jersey ordered six DRX-6-4-2000 locomotives for its then-subsidiary Wharton and Northern, #2000–#2005, which were unusual for North American diesel locomotives in that they had driving cabs at both ends. The first three #2000-2002 had the cab doors on the same level as the locomotive frame and were delivered with an orange roof. The last three had their doors on the cab floor level and were delivered with a dark blue roof. On the CNJ they were known as "Double-enders". The cab style was nicknamed "Babyface" and was used by several other Baldwin models. The original paint scheme was a deep, rich blue on the lower part of the locomotive and tangerine on the upper part. Almost all were retired around 1962–63, but #2004 was kept as a stationary heater in
Jersey City until mid-1968.
GM&O locomotives The
Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad ordered two locomotives in 1947, road #280 and #281, with #280 built in January and #281 in February. These were delivered in a single-ended "babyface" carbody. They mostly pulled the
Gulf Coast Rebel streamlined train from
St. Louis, Missouri to
Mobile, Alabama as a pair. Both were retired in October 1958 and scrapped in June 1965.
NdeM locomotive The Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México ordered one additional DR-6-4-2000 unit in August 1946 after purchasing the two demonstrators. This was assigned road #6002 and had nearly identical styling to the demonstrators, but used two 608NA engines instead of their VO power plants. It was scrapped in September 1957. ==606SC-engined DR-6-4-2000 locomotives==