The 1925 design was by Milwaukee Road Chief Mechanical Engineer
C. H. Bilty, with detail design by the
Baldwin Locomotive Works, who actually built them. They represented the best of American locomotive practice at the time, and were given all the latest devices and fittings. A
Coffin feedwater heater was fitted, which was the Milwaukee's favorite type; this was installed flush in the extended
smokebox, and thus was not at all obvious. Possibly because of this, the boiler
lagging was continued over the smokebox, which was not common; most North American locomotives had bare smokeboxes which were graphited, rather than painted. The associated steam-driven
centrifugal water pump was located under the cab at the left rear. The class F6-a was fitted with the tender-mounted Wilson Water Conditioner instead of the Coffin feedwater heater.
Valve gear was of the low-maintenance
Baker type, with (of course) power reverse. A
front-end throttle was installed, with the distinctive linkage running along the boiler on the engineer's side. A
mechanical lubricator, driven from the
crosshead on the engineer's side, fed oil to the cylinders, valves, guides and other parts of the running gear. Many of the locomotives were fitted with a speedometer, which was attached to the engineer’s side frontmost leading axle. A single air pump for the locomotive and train
air brakes was fitted to the fireman's (left) side, with air tanks under the running boards on both sides. Like all larger North American coal-burning locomotives of the time, an
automatic stoker was fitted; the two-cylinder engine to drive this was under the cab floor on the fireman's side. == Modifications ==