I belive there other unit is even more funney looking. has what looks like a sw1500 cab or something like that on the frount. And i see the link for it on second post now lol.
I see them all the time in Clinton Iowa. When i drive by there.
Modeling on the cheap
gmpullmanHere's a shot of the pair from the other end with the "engineer" on the ground with the control box. http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=706710
I love the 'picture window' on the second unit! Question is, why? What purpose was served by putting such a large window into the cab?
dbduck:
Great picture! I noticed that the step ladder is still there. It is lying on the top of the nose.
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
I am thinking that the various lights on the cab roof would let the operator on the ground know the status of the loco such as "forward/reverse" etc
another pic... http://www.railpictures.net/photo/523506/
We've seen that end before in here. One of young members was going to build it.
Mike.
My You Tube
It seems as though this locomotive is set up for remote-control operation. The engine was a former Grand Trunk, then C-V loco with the same number.
Judging by the two boxes, they are using this system:
http://www.cattron.com/dnn/Portals/0/pdf/brochures/QC.pdf
It looks like there is additional air lines there which may be used for air-operated car unloading systems. Electrically, this system seems to wire into the AAR M-U system. Pretty clever and economical.
Here's a shot of the pair from the other end with the "engineer" on the ground with the control box.
http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=706710
The electricians probably left the step ladder there for convenience. We could never get the electricians to return step ladders where I worked, either
Ed
So I decided on one side of my layout, among other things, I would model an ADM grain elevator, and a corn transload like that of Andy Sperandeo. When researching ADM, I ran across photos of this hilarious GP9.
Having a CP GP9 sitting in a box doing nothing, I think I'm going to try modeling this rather odd looking loco as a switcher, even though it's out of my preferred era.
But what's going on here? I see a ladder, and what appear to be some building lights bolted on to the top in a rainbow of colors, and a snow plow?
I've never seen the rounded roof used to so comical an effect. It looks like a distressed porcupine.
It appears to still live in Clinton, IA. Can anyone explain how it got to look like that?
Julian
Modeling Pre-WP merger UP (1974-81)