QUOTE: Originally posted by M636C Dave, The standard boiler fitted RS-2 and RS-3 had an exhaust stack located next to the cab in a streamlined casing located between the hood top windows on the short hood end. The photo on pages 8 and 9 of Classic Trains Spring 2004 shows the stack casing on New Haven 532 very clearly. The Milwaukee RS-3 locomotive illustrated elsewhere does not show this stack. Peter
QUOTE: Originally posted by M636C Without trying to labour the point, there are photos of RS-3s in secondary service in the last two issues of Classic Trains. The Winter 2003 issue shows some NYC trains, and the Spring 2004 issue includes some Milwaukee trains. On page 49 of the Winter issue, a pair of NYC RS-3s are seen coupled short hoods together on a train with two baggage cars leading, typical of the trains being described. Peter
QUOTE: Originally posted by drephpe Look's like ya know a lot more than yer lettin on. Great string.
QUOTE: Originally posted by drephpe Ya know, by the time we get through, ol' Kozzie's going to have so much info on this he won't know what to model and his head will explode. This is all great regional data that should be interestng to lots of us. Kozzie and Peter are getting me, for one, very tuned in to what goes on down under. But all of it is fascinating. The new Monon stuff is great. Lets keep it rolling!
QUOTE: Originally posted by M636C Head End cars were usually parcels or mail. They were sometimes box cars (if they had trucks that allowed them to run at passenger speeds) but mostly baggage cars with an occasional travelling post office. Amtrak's current "Material Handling Cars" are quite typical. They were usually railroad owned, but some cars were lettered for the "Railway Express Agency", effectively a parcels service (like UPS today). There were some trains that were mainly run for mail and parcels, but had a coach attached for any passengers on offer. I remember seeing the "Westlander" at Ipswich in 1993 with twelve refrigerator cars and about six passenger cars, and thinking "just like an American train". Peter
QUOTE: Originally posted by drephpe Kozzie-- RE: Cotton Belt Pax. No, they were RS-3's on a lot of their line haul trains. By that time, there wasn't much to their service. Usually 3-4 head end and a couple of coaches made it down to Dallas from St. Louis, after they had pulled out of Ft Worth and pulled the diner-loungesand sleepers off in the early 1950's. They had the fastest line to Memphis but one of the slowest to St. Louis because they went up the east side of the Mississippi River from Arkansas thru East St. Louis andthen back across. So not much business by that time. The only other pax units they had was a couple of Daylight PA's and the only FP7 ever painted Daylight (all modified with a silver roof).
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