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Reply to "Question on Prototypes: Were steam tenders "married" to their locos, or did they interchange at will?"

To echo an earlier post, tenders weren't swapped around willy-nilly. Yes an engine built in 1908 might only have it's original tender until 1940, when it might be replaced with a larger one whose added water and fuel supply allowed it to go longer between stops, and it used until it was retired in 1955. In 1995 the engine, which had been on static display, was restored to working condition - but the tender had considerable rust damage, so a tender that was available that had been used in maintenance of way service after it's engine was scrapped was found and mated to the restored engine. So yes the tender could change, but it wasn't like coupling a car to the engine where it would have one tender one day and a different one tomorrow.

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