Co-Bo
{{Short description|Locomotive wheel arrangement}}
{{One source|date=August 2023}}
File:DE10 1727.jpg C-B class]]
Co-Bo or Co′Bo′ is a wheel arrangement in the UIC classification system for railway locomotives. It features two uncoupled bogies. The capital letter indicates the number of axles on the bogie, the 'o' indicates that they are driven, so the "Co" bogie has three driven axles and the "Bo" bogie has two.
The arrangement has been{{Clarify|reason=is it no longer used? Have all these locomotives been destroyed?|date=May 2025}} used to even out axle loading. The weight distribution of the locomotive depends on the power unit, the engine and generator. If these are not placed symmetrically, the weight distribution is also biased to one end. Placing three axles beneath the engine end and just two beneath the other, with the lighter ancillaries, gives more even loading per-axle.
{{ToC here}}
Examples
=Diesel=
The British Railways Class 28 is the first (and only) diesel locomotive with a Co-Bo wheel arrangement, where the wheels are independently driven.
==C'B'==
File:DE10-1081 in Ajikawaguchi IMG 6709 20130811.JPG
A similar wheel arrangement, with five axles across two bogies, is also used in Japan for the Class DE10, DE11, and DE15 locomotives. As these are diesel-hydraulic locomotives, they are of C-B arrangement, not Co-Bo. A hydrodynamic transmission on the locomotive frame is driven by the prime mover, then drive to each bogie is taken by cardan shafts. The axles of each bogie are all driven, and all geared together, rather than having separate traction motors.
=Steam=
Some Engerth steam locomotives were built to the Fink system, with the four trailing wheels driven by a crankshaft and connecting rods, thus making them 0-6-4-0Ts instead of 0-6-4Ts.
=Electric=
The {{ill|Hungarian Railways Class V55|hu|MÁV V55 sorozat}} also used a Co'Bo' wheel arrangement with three-phase slip-ring motors driving each axle.
In fiction
BoCo is a fictional Co-Bo locomotive, a British Rail Class 28. The locomotive appeared in the Railway Series book Main Line Engines{{Cite book|first=Wilbert |last=Awdry| title=Main Line Engines |publisher=Gunvor and Peter Edwards |year=1966}} and the Thomas & Friends television series.