A duplex locomotive is a steam locomotive that divides the driving force on its wheels by using two pairs of cylinders rigidly mounted to a single locomotive frame; it is not an articulated locomotive. The concept was first used in France in 1863, but was particularly developed in the early 1930s by the Baldwin Locomotive Works, the largest commercial builder of steam locomotives in North America, under the supervision of its then chief engineer, Ralph P. Johnson.
Closeup of the second set of cylinders on the Pennsylvania Railroad class S1.
0-6-6-0T duplex locomotive built by Jules Petiet in 1863
The sole example of the N-1 class.
The S1 at the 1939 New York World's Fair.
A 4-4-4-4 steam locomotive, in the Whyte notation for describing locomotive wheel arrangements, has a four-wheel leading truck, two sets of four driving wheels, and a four-wheel trailing truck. While it would be possible to make an articulated locomotive of this arrangement, the only 4-4-4-4s ever built were duplex locomotives—with two sets of cylinders driving two sets of driven wheels in one rigid frame, essentially a 4-8-4 with divided drive.
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's #5600 George H. Emerson.
Rearward cylinders and gear of the sole N-1
The Pennsylvania Railroad's controversial class T1 duplex locomotive