I just came across this interesting installation of a steel water tank located between two highways and a grade crossing!
Short And Stout by 95wombat, on Flickr
Do this on your layout and get ready for some finger wagging. "You would never see a tank in a location like that!"
Cheers, Ed
U-3-b,
Thanks for reply....I had the opportunity to visit Durand one day years ago. Was a busy place from what I've read. I don't remember seeing a tank then (maybe somewhere around 2010 or so), but it had probably been razed long before. Good that the station there has been essentially left intact. I looked at a Google satellite view of the trackage and yards at Elsdon, but didn't see a tank. Again, the GTW probably removed it decades ago.
I think I've now got enough info from this forum and elsewhere for the appropriate size and placement of the Tichy tank I'm assembling.
-Chuck
Ok...thanks, Ed...looks like somewhere between 4 and 7 standoffs will be acceptable. Also, the photo of the roofline gives me a good idea of how to position the gussets.
Yes, Don Tichy's kits and various detail pieces have supplied me with just what I need for my 1920s-era railroad. The detail he incorporates is remarkable.
It's been a while so I had to look. I only see the four on the leg and one solid bracket at the top.
Tichy_Tank by Edmund, on Flickr
The ladder stays pretty straight and the cage helps to stiffen it.
Tichy_Tank Ladder by Edmund, on Flickr
I built mine probably twenty years ago. Don Tichy has contributed many fine kits and details to the hobby.
Hope that helps, Ed
Ed,
As I noted earlier, I'm assembling the Tichy tank now. When you got to the point of adding the ladder standoffs did you only use 4, per the instructions, or did you use 7? The ladder sections each have 7 pairs of posts for standoffs. It seems like it would be more realistic to use all 7 (there are enough standoffs in the kit to do it) since they're about 5 scale feet apart. Seems that distance would be closer to a simulation of the prototype as far as stability of the ladder is concerned. Also, as far as I can tell, the only way for the ladder to reach the roof edge is to cement part of another ladder section to the main one....agree?
Grand Trunk Western had a number of CB&I tanks. There was one in Durand and Elsdon and a few other places.
gmpullman doctorwayne Definitely not me... I'd question the integrity of that "fall prevention" lanyard he has attached to his harness. The knot around the 4 x 4 looks pretty iffy, too. You're supposed to have a shock absorbing device on there, too! 20101203 08 Roofer by David Wilson, on Flickr I'm OK with heights as long as I have something solid to hold on to. The top of a tank like that, I'd have to pass. Regards, Ed
doctorwayne Definitely not me...
I'd question the integrity of that "fall prevention" lanyard he has attached to his harness. The knot around the 4 x 4 looks pretty iffy, too. You're supposed to have a shock absorbing device on there, too!
20101203 08 Roofer by David Wilson, on Flickr
I'm OK with heights as long as I have something solid to hold on to. The top of a tank like that, I'd have to pass.
Regards, Ed
My first job between undergraduate and graduate school was as a water system inspector for the Kentucky Health Department. This included having to inspect municipal water towers. Back in the day, no one had heard of ladder safety cages or harnesses. I had to climb open ladders that often leaned outwards at the top to get onto a platform around the top. Being young I relished the adventure. Now that I'm older and wiser, there's no way in heck that I'd do that again!
Ray
Thanks for the recipe, the Bear!
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
MidlandMike,
You're right....I'd forgotten about R&N's engine. Hadn't heard of the Little River RR....yeah, the website indicates their 4-6-2 is operational. According to the website of the Oregon Rail Heritage Center, where the Portland 4-6-2 is located, restoration work is ongoing. Of course, what a lot of folks consider as the cream of U.S. 4-6-2s, viz. Pennsy's K4s, the #1361 engine may yet be restored to operation.
Thanks for info....
staybolt I can't think of an operational 4-6-2 here in the States...
Reading & Northern has one. I think the "Little River" in Michigan, and the one in Portland are still operational.
Yeah, "The Virus" put a squeeze, and worse, on a lot of activities. I've got all 5 vaccs., but I still wear a mask where there's a bunch of people.
We had a 4-8-2 [SLSF RR (aka "Frisco")] operating 20+ yrs. ago, but according to what I've read, insurance costs, limited access to RR mainlines for excursions and boiler inspection expense put it back in storage. Re insurance, that issue I think has been the main one that has derailed a lot of excursion train aspirations here in the States. U.S. society has become very litigious over the years.
Not familiar with Flickr features, but let me try this (BB code?) for that confection photo: Christmas treats by JaBearz, on Flickr
Don't know which album, but under the "photostream" section it appears on page 1 of 15.
stayboltand, according to your Register, you've got working 4-8-2s there, too!
No, to the contrary the Bear, I'm happy to see a working steam engine at a water tank, or anywhere else! Off the top of my head I can't think of an operational 4-6-2 here in the States and, according to your Register, you've got working 4-8-2s there, too! None here, to my knowledge. Speaking of steel tanks, which was the genesis of this thread, I notice the one in your photo seems to be steel also. And another thing I notice is those (working?) semaphores down the track. As far as I know, all are gone here. Once in a while in a monthly NRHS chapter Zoom program semaphores will show up in a 1980s shot somewhere out West where a railroad's "get rid o' those old things" campaign hasn't caught up yet. Love seeing those blades move when a train passes. After all, the mechanical age and the steam age were contemporaneous.
Hey, definitely off subject, but I can't resist asking....on your Flickr page, what are those delicious-looking confections in a photo about halfway down the page with Christmas/Winter scenes? Point me to the recipe!
staybolt In that regard, are there any such artifacts left where you are in NZ?
Peter-
A sad, to steam enthusiasts anyway, story about that water servicing installation is that it was operational until an Amtrak train knocked down the water column connected to that tank (how, I'd like to know). I don't think it's been repaired and re-erected....I don't see it in a Google sat. view of the place. Kind of doubt Amtrak reimbursed the owner, U.P. (?). Think excursions using S.P. 4449 and/or S.P.&S. 700 took on water there. If anymore run, guess the fire dept. in Mt. Shasta (town) could be the source.
stayboltbuilt by the railroad. Other SP tanks I've seen also have that shape.
Chuck, You might be correct about SP building the Elmira water tank, the one at Black Butte near Weed, Ca. looks similar, and from what I gather was built by SP in 1926.
Regards, Peter
Thanks, all, for your photos and suggestions. In fact, I've had the Tichy tank kit for a while, but am just getting around to assembling it. Since there are variations in shape and capacities available with the kit I wanted to see examples of actual installations by the railroads before deciding on shape and size.
Wayne, your scratch-built cylindrical tanks are nicely done. Re water columns...I've got a couple of those Tichy columns, one of which came with the Tichy tank kit. By the way, re another subject, viz. paint color, I've tried your idea for "grimy" black by adding green to black, and like the result a lot....I posted a comment on your Dec./2021 reply under the subject "Engine Black vs Black (and where to find grimy black?)".
Thanks, "the Bear", for the brasstrains. com link, as well as the others. The Overland Models brass tank design is very similar to the tank installed by the Ft. Worth and Denver (FW&D) RR at Childress, TX, except for the extra-long third spout on the model (guess for reaching adjacent parallel track). In fact, when I first got the modeling "bug" back in 1969 I had purchased a magazine with a 1945 photo of the FW&D's terminal, showing the tank there. Many years later, well into the computer age, I contacted BNSF RR (which had absorbed the FW&D) to see if their files might have the original print that they might copy for me. Sure enough, they did, and their very accommodating historian sent me the photo on a CD. That photo now serves as the background "wallpaper" for all my computer "devices". It's a scene of the sort that intrigues me, viz. steam-era servicing infrastructure. In that regard, are there any such artifacts left where you are in NZ? Here in the U.S., about all that's left are a few concrete coaling towers, maybe a partial roundhouse or two and a rare turntable.
The Pennsy tank and the one at Savanna, IL, Ed, both have the hemispherical bottom. Think I noted when looking at Pittsburg-DesMoines Steel info that that company used that shape. I spent a little time around Savanna while camping up the road at Mississippi Palisades State Park, but only came across the small museum with a Milwaukee Road passenger car. I suppose that tank may have been in what is now a CP yard (don't see the tank in a Google satellite view now) since I think that road absorbed the Soo Line which had acquired the Milwaukee Road before that. I also checked Google sat. for the Pontiac, IL tank. Looks like it's gone, but may have been across the track from the current Amtrak station.
Wonder if the cylindrical-shaped tank you show on the SP, Peter, was built by the railroad. Other SP tanks I've seen also have that shape.
Don't know the builder of the abandoned S.P. water-tower at Elmira, Ca.
doctorwayneDefinitely not me...
gmpullmanAnybody up for a little roofing job? 20101203 04 Roofer by David Wilson, on Flickr
Definitely not me...I'd be hunting for fresh underwear.
Wayne
This is what the PRR was building:
PRR Steel Tank by Edmund, on Flickr
I recall seeing one or two still standing. There was a large one in Fort Wayne but I don't recall when it was scrapped.
Illinois Central Gulf - Pontiac, IL by d.w.davidson, on Flickr
Short & Squat:
SAVANNA by rrradioman, on Flickr
Another style:
Tank-Steel by Edmund, on Flickr
An interesting detail I learned when I was building the Tichy tank was the arrangement for rotating the ladder around the circumference of the tank for inspection or painting.
Or are you looking for a cylindrical type?
201005_30_chapelle by lmyers83, on Flickr
Anybody up for a little roofing job?
20101203 04 Roofer by David Wilson, on Flickr
Good Luck, Ed
https://www.tichytraingroup.com/Portals/0/Instructions/7012.pdf?ver=GqAXc0aH19zvt0oi6lM6WA%3d%3d
This too is a model, but...
https://www.brasstrains.com/Classic/Product/Detail/088005/HO-Brass-Model-Structure-OMI-3262-Chicago-Bridge-Iron-Co-100000-Gallon-Steel-Water-Tank-w-3-Spouts-Custom-Weathered
That company name sorta rings a bell in my withered brain, but it also reminded me of the water towers that my hometown of Hamilton, Ontario built, when the city began to build and expand atop the Niagara Escarpment.They weren't for trains, though, but were simply large, multi-legged storage towers for municipal water supply. The tanks were shaped like giant hamburger buns.
I have several "wood" water towers on my layout, but I also added some water storage towers that I scratchbuilt from some cardboard tubes used for various types of rolled paper. None of them have spouts of any type, but they're all supposedly connected to nearby standpipes (water columns)....
Here's one of them...
...with another standpipe just a little way down the track...
...here's another one, in the background, and with a standpipe visible...
...and another just a few hundred feet down the track, just barely visible at upper left...
...here's the third one, on the layout's partial upper level...
...with the standpipes on the south side of the coaling tower...
I think that if someone had limited room for their layout, perhaps one water tower in the distance would be enough, with standpipes/water columns wherever they'd be needed. (Kits for the latter are available from Tichy.)
I'm looking for photos of installations of the subject company's tanks at representative railroad sites. Before I model such a tank I'd like to see some typical examples the railroads used. From what I understand CB&I built quite a few tanks for various roads from the late 19th century on into the 20th century. I would think the company would have advertised that product with photos and text, but I have yet to find anything. So far, I've Googled it, looked at the Lib. of Congress site and Railway Age Gazette archives with no luck. Anybody have other suggested sources?
-Chuck/St. Charles, IL