Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license.
Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat.
We can research this topic together.
Class D6 (formerly Class K, pre-1895) on the Pennsylvania Railroad was a class of 4-4-0steam locomotive.
Nineteen were built by the PRR's Altoona Works (now owned by Norfolk Southern) between 1881 and 1883. They were equipped with 78-inch (1,981 mm) drivers.
Seven were later converted to 72-inch (1,829 mm) drivers and classified D6a.
The D6 was one of the first American 4-4-0s to place the firebox above, rather than between, the locomotive's frames.
This added about 8 inches to the possible width of the firebox, enabling a larger, easier to fire and more powerful locomotive; the maximum fire grate area increased to about 35 sq ft (3.25 m) from the previous maximum of about 18 sq ft (1.67 m).
The innovation was not wholly new, having been first seen on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad's 1859 Vera Cruz, designed by James Milholland of that road and built in their own shops; the Reading used this design until the invention of the Wootten firebox in 1877.
It was subsequently adopted by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1881 for six locomotives constructed for the Central Railroad of New Jersey; these were followed by the Pennsylvania Railroad locomotives, which garnered more attention for this design feature, in addition to having larger drivers than most previous 4-4-0s.
^ Pennsylvania Railroad. "D6 Diagram". PRR.Railfan.net. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
^ Staufer, Alvin F. & Pennypacker, Bert (1962). Pennsy Power: Steam and Electric Locomotives of the Pennsylvania Railroad, 1900–1957. Staufer. LCCN62020878.
"Mechanical Stokers for Locomotives". Cassier's Magazine. Vol. XXXII, no. 1. New York: Cassier Magazine. May 1907. p. 75.
Report of the Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Convention of the American Railway Master Mechanics' Association in Convention at Tremont Temple, Boston, Mass., June 15th, 16th and 18th, 1886. Cincinnati, Ohio: Aldine. 1886.