Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
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QUOTE: Originally posted by UPTRAIN Dynamics were for grades...if you don't need grades why use that option?
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH Question on the grades mentioned above: How long were they?
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR Thanks for the correction on the numbers, Mr. Hegewisch! For some reason I was thinking there were ten ex-CGW SD40s (which, by the way, originally had dynamic brakes that CNW wanted nothing to do with!).
Hi CNW Fans,
Replying to an old post. A few comments: CNW bought the nondynamic brake SD45s new. In the 80's they bought quite a few SD45s second hand with dynamic brakes. Someone with more time on their hands and interest could review the rosters and figure out what stayed and what went but I believe at least three of the original nondynamic brake SD45s went to UP along with some of the dynamic brake SD45s CNW bought second-hand. One has to assume (although I do not know for a fact so please do not quickly correct me!) that they cannibalized some of the second-hand SD45s to get a passable version. On the - to me - more interesting question, I am unaware of any HO manufacturer offering an SD45 without dynamic breaks until Scale Trains starting offering them recently. Cool! If you modeled the '80s into the '90s it would be entirely appropriate to run nondynamic brake and dynamic brake SD45s together. I am not sure about the Walther Proto SD45s - someone who has seen them up close and personal should be able to offer guidance. And if you have a CNW SD45 with dynamic brakes it is not a crazy hard project to convert. Kelly Dufford had an article out there on how to modify a standard Kato model into a more correct nondynamic brake version (along with the nose bell common on so many of CNW's locomotives). A question again for someone with time and interest, when/if CNW sold off any of their original nondynamic brake SD45s to other roads that preferred dynamic breaks, did they convert them or run them as-is. (Perhaps all of the nondynamic break versions eventually were scrapped - IDK.) One last tid-bit, if you read up on the CNW, they (along with the Wisconsin Central if memory serves me), played around with the idea of pulling the 20 cylinder engine for the EMD 16 cylinder engine and at least in one case for a CAT 16 cylinder engine but chose instead to buy SD50s followed by SD60s and then GEs meanwhile dumping most of their older locomotives including the trove of Alcos running around in northeastern Wisconsin and the UP of Michigan. Probably someone has way more detail than me but I find it interesting that CAT eventually bought EMD and its newest locomotives feature an engine that reflects both EMD and CAT technology. Finally, pre-pandemic, maybe 6-8 years ago, when I was still going into my office in Chicago on the Metra Milwaukee Road West Line, I saw a string of SD45s and a couple of SD45-2s (mostly Santa Fe) but a few other roads as well, sitting in the yard at Bensenville. No idea if they were going to a scrapper or one hopes to a second career with a regional. And then a few days later, they were gone.
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