Trains.com

gottahurrynotmuchtime

655 views
8 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    June 2001
  • From: US
  • 13,488 posts
gottahurrynotmuchtime
Posted by Mookie on Tuesday, July 6, 2004 12:55 PM
I am outta here in less than 2 hours and not back until Thursday- so here is my report for this week!

1: #6664 - SD60 - Norfolk Southern! Had a really odd whistle - first time I have seen one on the lead - do they always sound that "different"? Or just bad whistle?

2: Coal train pretty much made up - but must have been adding a few more cars on the rear. Do the hostler engineers do that? Any situation that the road engineer does anything more than enter and leave the yard? What is the union's call on this one?

3: Do they allow any smoking inside the cab?

4: Saw a couple of coal trains with a FRED on the rear locomotive (helper) and some without. I see more without than with, but why would they need a FRED on a backward running helper and why aren't they on all of the helpers?

5: Situation: You have two engines on head-end, none on rear on one train. And you have one engine on head-end and one helper on rear on another train. Which is more difficult to start from a dead stop - from a slack standpoint? Seems to me the rear engine would help keep the slack in check better than the two or more engines on the front end?

And some food for thought:

Talked with a gentleman that is there a lot of the time when we are. He said he watches 10 different places around town and out of town. He said he just did a 16 hour day at our location a few weeks ago - he tries to do it once a year. Saw 74 trains go by in that 16 hours.

He has a wedding band, but think he may be a widower and just looking to take up a lot of free time. Either that or she is mighty patient.

Now Mookie likes to sit, but 16 hours? Would have to drag a small house behind Millie for Porta-Potty, refrigerator, microwave, books, well, you get the idea. He does it all in the cab of a small pickup truck! That's my hero!

And referring back to my lousy engineer posting - just want to have it footnoted that I watched an MT coal train and a loaded coal train - both came in, came to a dead stop and started up - with only the slightest ripple in the entire train. It was so nice and quiet! Mookie smiled!

Until Thursday-

Mookie

She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, July 6, 2004 1:15 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

I am outta here in less than 2 hours and not back until Thursday- so here is my report for this week!

1: #6664 - SD60 - Norfolk Southern! Had a really odd whistle - first time I have seen one on the lead - do they always sound that "different"? Or just bad whistle?

2: Coal train pretty much made up - but must have been adding a few more cars on the rear. Do the hostler engineers do that? Any situation that the road engineer does anything more than enter and leave the yard? What is the union's call on this one?

3: Do they allow any smoking inside the cab?

4: Saw a couple of coal trains with a FRED on the rear locomotive (helper) and some without. I see more without than with, but why would they need a FRED on a backward running helper and why aren't they on all of the helpers?

5: Situation: You have two engines on head-end, none on rear on one train. And you have one engine on head-end and one helper on rear on another train. Which is more difficult to start from a dead stop - from a slack standpoint? Seems to me the rear engine would help keep the slack in check better than the two or more engines on the front end?

And some food for thought:

Talked with a gentleman that is there a lot of the time when we are. He said he watches 10 different places around town and out of town. He said he just did a 16 hour day at our location a few weeks ago - he tries to do it once a year. Saw 74 trains go by in that 16 hours.

He has a wedding band, but think he may be a widower and just looking to take up a lot of free time. Either that or she is mighty patient.

Now Mookie likes to sit, but 16 hours? Would have to drag a small house behind Millie for Porta-Potty, refrigerator, microwave, books, well, you get the idea. He does it all in the cab of a small pickup truck! That's my hero!

And referring back to my lousy engineer posting - just want to have it footnoted that I watched an MT coal train and a loaded coal train - both came in, came to a dead stop and started up - with only the slightest ripple in the entire train. It was so nice and quiet! Mookie smiled!

Until Thursday-

Mookie




1. Probably poor maintenance.

2. On NS it is probably the train crew or a local or yard crew making up the train. No hostlers and NS likes to get the full 8 from everyone.

3. No.

4. Don't need a marker on a light locomotive normally.Headlight on dim is approved as a marker. Probably left on there from last use or to be carried to the rear of the train for hanging.

5. Depends upon whether lead unit can control rear unit or not. If it is a DPU you could control it just as if it was MUed I believe (we don't have DPU units so I haven't tried this) so I don't think you could bunch the slack effectively the way you could with a manned helper. Any input from you other right seaters?

LC
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, July 7, 2004 9:51 PM
...well you're not supposed to smoke, but if you get a crew and both of them smoke then there's not too much stopping them.

They just have to make sure not to leave their butts in the cab -- destroy all evidence!
  • Member since
    June 2001
  • From: Lombard (west of Chicago), Illinois
  • 13,681 posts
Posted by CShaveRR on Thursday, July 8, 2004 9:45 AM
Li'l Sister,

I have a friend, about your age, who goes to Fostoria, Ohio, at least yearly with one or more of his married sons (I never hear about the wives), and spend 24 hours or better documenting the trains at the site. I'm sure there are some "food-and-facility" breaks in there somewhere...or maybe they use a camper. He says he's getting too old to keep this up much longer. I know from experience that his wife is very tolerant, and somewhat knowledgeable (sort of in the same league as Driver Ed). All three of his sons are competent and thoroughly knowledgeable railfans...I've only met one of their wives, and that was at the wedding.

BC

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)

  • Member since
    September 2003
  • From: Louisville,Ky.
  • 5,077 posts
Posted by locomutt on Thursday, July 8, 2004 10:24 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by macguy

...well you're not supposed to smoke, but if you get a crew and both of them smoke then there's not too much stopping them.

They just have to make sure not to leave their butts in the cab -- destroy all evidence!


UH,Which BUTTS[?][:D][}:)]
(and I do smoke)

Being Crazy,keeps you from going "INSANE" !! "The light at the end of the tunnel,has been turned off due to budget cuts" NOT AFRAID A Vet., and PROUD OF IT!!

  • Member since
    June 2001
  • From: US
  • 13,488 posts
Posted by Mookie on Thursday, July 8, 2004 12:08 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR

Li'l Sister,

I have a friend, about your age, who goes to Fostoria, Ohio, at least yearly with one or more of his married sons (I never hear about the wives), and spend 24 hours or better documenting the trains at the site. I'm sure there are some "food-and-facility" breaks in there somewhere...or maybe they use a camper. He says he's getting too old to keep this up much longer. I know from experience that his wife is very tolerant, and somewhat knowledgeable (sort of in the same league as Driver Ed). All three of his sons are competent and thoroughly knowledgeable railfans...I've only met one of their wives, and that was at the wedding.

BC
Maybe he does have a wife somewhere, that does things he doesn't like to do - he just looks like he would be good husband material. He doesn't seem to be really knowledgeable about the way the railroad works, only interested in stats - kinda like Brother Carl - but BC knows how the railroad works, too! He brings his own food to the site - been there at lunch with him. The rest I don't know. Just a curious situation.

SJ

She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw

  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Upper Left Coast
  • 1,796 posts
Posted by kenneo on Thursday, July 8, 2004 6:58 PM
DPU Control:

I'm not a right seater, but do have an answer. Some, like the early radio controlled units that the SP had (long and short snout SD40T's) were either on and slaved to the mother (the one with the engineer) or off. The new ones are able to be controlled independently from the mother (as if they had a live driver) or slaved, or off line.

Interesting note for the Mook --------- Back in the late 70's and early 80's, the SP converted some BH class box cars [AAR mech class XM] ("High" cubic 40 foot long with 6 foot door box cars) that they put radio recievers and diesel air compressors and a radio controlled automic brake valve (26L, I think, not sure). Called an air repeater car. Was used to help control unwanted train movement from slack action in 10,000 foot trains. That train from Trona to Long Beach that ranaway on Cajon sure could have used one, but they were all cut up when the SD40T2 DPU's came along.
Eric
  • Member since
    June 2002
  • From: Independence, MO
  • 1,570 posts
Posted by UPTRAIN on Thursday, July 8, 2004 9:46 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie

I am outta here in less than 2 hours and not back until Thursday- so here is my report for this week!

1: #6664 - SD60 - Norfolk Southern! Had a really odd whistle - first time I have seen one on the lead - do they always sound that "different"? Or just bad whistle?

2: Coal train pretty much made up - but must have been adding a few more cars on the rear. Do the hostler engineers do that? Any situation that the road engineer does anything more than enter and leave the yard? What is the union's call on this one?

3: Do they allow any smoking inside the cab?

4: Saw a couple of coal trains with a FRED on the rear locomotive (helper) and some without. I see more without than with, but why would they need a FRED on a backward running helper and why aren't they on all of the helpers?

5: Situation: You have two engines on head-end, none on rear on one train. And you have one engine on head-end and one helper on rear on another train. Which is more difficult to start from a dead stop - from a slack standpoint? Seems to me the rear engine would help keep the slack in check better than the two or more engines on the front end?

And some food for thought:

Talked with a gentleman that is there a lot of the time when we are. He said he watches 10 different places around town and out of town. He said he just did a 16 hour day at our location a few weeks ago - he tries to do it once a year. Saw 74 trains go by in that 16 hours.

He has a wedding band, but think he may be a widower and just looking to take up a lot of free time. Either that or she is mighty patient.

Now Mookie likes to sit, but 16 hours? Would have to drag a small house behind Millie for Porta-Potty, refrigerator, microwave, books, well, you get the idea. He does it all in the cab of a small pickup truck! That's my hero!

And referring back to my lousy engineer posting - just want to have it footnoted that I watched an MT coal train and a loaded coal train - both came in, came to a dead stop and started up - with only the slightest ripple in the entire train. It was so nice and quiet! Mookie smiled!

Until Thursday-

Mookie




1. NS units have a K5LA type horn, all NS units sound like this it most likely sound's "odd" since you've never seen one on the head end.

2. Road engineer unless the train is terminating.

3. Not on BNSF, they have NO SMOKING signs inside on the windows...guys smoke on UP units though.

4. FREDs are in pool service just as most locomotives are except they don't usually leave the railroad, when there is a spare FRED laying around they put it on a train, helpers turn on their rear headlights (or front if they are running long hood forward). Most road trains will have a FRED but locals here and there still use just a red flag on the end if they are less than 15 carlenths.

5. Helper equipped trains most of the time.

Food for thought. I can do it from the cab of a locomotive for 12 hours at a time, does that count? I do have a microwave and port-o-potty...I mean...."bathroom". When you do it for 26 years (like I have) you get lots of practice.[:D][:)][8D][:p][^][;)]

Pump

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, July 8, 2004 10:05 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by locomutt

QUOTE: Originally posted by macguy

...well you're not supposed to smoke, but if you get a crew and both of them smoke then there's not too much stopping them.

They just have to make sure not to leave their butts in the cab -- destroy all evidence!


UH,Which BUTTS[?][:D][}:)]
(and I do smoke)
Better yet Smoke a pipe, Kapp and Peterson's rules the world of fine bri[swg]ar

Join our Community!

Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.

Search the Community

Newsletter Sign-Up

By signing up you may also receive occasional reader surveys and special offers from Trains magazine.Please view our privacy policy