The American licensee of the
Fairlie Patent steam locomotive was the firm of
William Mason, located in
Taunton, Massachusetts. Mason's first Fairlie locomotive was the
Janus, an
Double Fairlie built in 1871.
Janus was not commercially successful and was not repeated, so Mason experimented with a different design. In 1869, a
Single Fairlie locomotive had been designed and constructed by
Alexander McDonnell for the
Great Southern and Western Railway in
Ireland. This had a single boiler with one articulated, powered truck beneath it and a second, unpowered truck beneath the cab and bunker. Mason developed a set of standard plans based on this design with modified steam delivery systems.
Onward was a largely successful engine, but certain design elements proved troublesome. Bolts worked loose, center castings were too light, and the steam pipes and gaskets were insufficient. Mason also developed a sliding seal for the exhaust from the moving cylinder saddle into the smoke box. Although better, Mason's improvements took up much-needed space between the driving wheels, forcing Mason to use an outside valve gear (generally the
Walschaerts valve gear). Additionally, the reversing shaft had to be mounted on top of the boiler, with a long lifting link dropping down to the radius rod, a feature unique to Mason Bogies due to the rotating truck and tight clearances. Another problem with the early Bogies was poor tracking. Despite the drivers being articulated, excessive flange wear on the leading driver set required the use of a pilot truck. Nonetheless, these engines were in high demand, and even
Onward was brought back under UP from Nevada to the
Utah and Northern Railway despite the protests from
Nevada Central, which owned the locomotive. ==Production and service==