Bikerbrent_RIP
Senior Member
Gee! Is this part of the Wabash Cannonball? :cheerful:
Gee! Is this part of the Wabash Cannonball? :cheerful:
Nice capture Sandpatch. That locomotive has the ridden hard & put away wet look to it.
What a great picture Sandpatch, I can almost hear those EMD prime movers! :encouragement:
Thank you. Yep, nothing like an old skool, unadulterated, unmuffled 2-Cycle EMD 567. Westbounds would be accelerating from the station stop here and I think I remember hearing enginemen notch the throttle back as they approached the diamond, then apply power again once they were past it. Somewhere I have an F-7 operating manual and I may have read in it that enginemen are supposed to do this at diamonds to prevent the traction motors from arcing across the rail that bridges the running rails at a diamond. Someday I'll take the time to check this out.
I would have thought is was a concern for wheel slip, anyway momentum should carry the engine through.
I'm not a train guy, per se, but this just made me sad. The first image is one I took in September 2019 in the small Oregon coastal town of Garibaldi. The steam engine is relic of the lumber industry. It was fenced in to protect it from being vandalized. Signs indicated that a group was raising funds for restoring it.
Now, three years later, I took the subsequent shots. It's still inside a fence but it has been moved from its previous location. The coal car is gone. The declining condition is apparent and there are no longer any indications that a restoration is planned.
From 2019
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From 2022
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I was driving thru Easton, Wa. when I saw a train stopped, as I went to take a shot the whisle blew and train started moving.