A southern Ontario terminal location is assumed for this photo of New York Central 4-6-2 No. 4707 being turned by a roundhouse hostler. Belonging to class K3p, No. 4707 had high 79-inch drivers, 23½x26-inch cylinders, and 200 p.s.i. of boiler pressure. With a weight of 289,100 pounds, she exerted 30,900 pounds of tractive effort. These Pacifics had a grate area of 57 square feet, an evaporative heating surface of 3420 square feet, and 825 square feet of superheating surface. They were outshopped in 1920 by the American Locomotive Company. The photo, by an unidentified photographer, was taken around 1940 after the Central's 1936 renumbering but before all its locomotives had been repainted with the Gothic lettering that endured into the diesel era. Tom Rock of Rock on Trains contributed the image to our collection.