QUOTE: Originally posted by mudchicken Silver Metal Compressing Vinton, TX Atlas Iron & Metals Denver, CO Progress Rail Services Pueblo, CO (Outside CF&I Rocky Mountain Steel Mill) Frequently, tank cars become pipe culverts after removing the ends. (Baytown, TX Ed!) Grain farmers love old covered hoppers. (especially raised in the air)....ditto aggregate and concrete batch plants.... Four boxcars and some prefab gables make a bulletproof tack barn. Boxcars fell out of favor now that so many sea-cans / containers are available. Highway departments love the smaller old tank cars for tar storage. Flatcars are now portable temporary bridges in many places.
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QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard Sask Tinplater: I believe CPR 3100 is located at the Canada Science and Technology Museum in Ottawa, and not at the Canadian Railway Museum in Delson. See http://www.sciencetech.technomuses.ca/english/collection/rail5.cfm Isambard
QUOTE: Originally posted by kevinstheRRman Can't they melt them down and use them for somehting else?
Isambard
Grizzly Northern history, Tales from the Grizzly and news on line at isambard5935.blogspot.com
QUOTE: Originally posted by athelney QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater I've seen similar sights in real life. In Regina, Saskatchewan there's a scrapyard with piles of old rolling stock (mainly covered hoppers) stacked up like that. There are a couple of hoppers balancing rather precariously at the top that I have a feeling would come crashing down if the wind picked up just a bit. Some of the cars appear to have been in accidents, having their sides ripped open, but most don't seem to have anything wrong with them. It really is too bad. Sask Tinplater, I'll bet you've been looking at a pile of stuff ready for the fiery furnaces at IPSCO! In 1960 my wife and I visited friends in Regina, he, Ted, being a new melt shop superintendent at IPSCO. With great pride Ted took me out to look at IPSCO's source of scrap material, an enormous pile of CPR and CNR steam locomotives, maybe five stories high! It was enough to make a steam buff cry! You are correct, indeed! The scrapyard itself is actually called Wheat City Metals, but it is right at IPSCO and all their metal obviously gets sent there to get melt down. I actually never knew that IPSCO was around for that long or that steam locomotives were ever scrapped there. That's very interesting to know...and also very sad to imagine that sight! They did save one steam locomotive, thankfully. At IPCSO, there are some waterslides as well as some elk in a fenced-in field that serve as a family attraction (if you ask me, putting waterslides right next a steel smelter doesn't quite make sense, but whatever). At the parking lot, CP 4-8-4 #3101 is on display along with a heavyweight passenger car and a wooden caboose. The 3101 is a very rare engine as it is one of only two 4-8-4's that CP ever used. The other (3100) is on display at the Canadian Railway Museum in Delson, Quebec. I believe IPSCO was founded in 1959, with those locomotives providing the first major source of "grist" for the mill's electric arc furnaces. Thanks for the info on CPR #3101. It looks in pretty good condition. Who maintains it? Hey Isambard/ Sask- Tinplater - you guys seem to have a vast knowledge of old stuff in Canada -- were there any train scrapyards out here in BC ? - Have never seen any , you thoughts!
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater I've seen similar sights in real life. In Regina, Saskatchewan there's a scrapyard with piles of old rolling stock (mainly covered hoppers) stacked up like that. There are a couple of hoppers balancing rather precariously at the top that I have a feeling would come crashing down if the wind picked up just a bit. Some of the cars appear to have been in accidents, having their sides ripped open, but most don't seem to have anything wrong with them. It really is too bad. Sask Tinplater, I'll bet you've been looking at a pile of stuff ready for the fiery furnaces at IPSCO! In 1960 my wife and I visited friends in Regina, he, Ted, being a new melt shop superintendent at IPSCO. With great pride Ted took me out to look at IPSCO's source of scrap material, an enormous pile of CPR and CNR steam locomotives, maybe five stories high! It was enough to make a steam buff cry! You are correct, indeed! The scrapyard itself is actually called Wheat City Metals, but it is right at IPSCO and all their metal obviously gets sent there to get melt down. I actually never knew that IPSCO was around for that long or that steam locomotives were ever scrapped there. That's very interesting to know...and also very sad to imagine that sight! They did save one steam locomotive, thankfully. At IPCSO, there are some waterslides as well as some elk in a fenced-in field that serve as a family attraction (if you ask me, putting waterslides right next a steel smelter doesn't quite make sense, but whatever). At the parking lot, CP 4-8-4 #3101 is on display along with a heavyweight passenger car and a wooden caboose. The 3101 is a very rare engine as it is one of only two 4-8-4's that CP ever used. The other (3100) is on display at the Canadian Railway Museum in Delson, Quebec. I believe IPSCO was founded in 1959, with those locomotives providing the first major source of "grist" for the mill's electric arc furnaces. Thanks for the info on CPR #3101. It looks in pretty good condition. Who maintains it?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater I've seen similar sights in real life. In Regina, Saskatchewan there's a scrapyard with piles of old rolling stock (mainly covered hoppers) stacked up like that. There are a couple of hoppers balancing rather precariously at the top that I have a feeling would come crashing down if the wind picked up just a bit. Some of the cars appear to have been in accidents, having their sides ripped open, but most don't seem to have anything wrong with them. It really is too bad. Sask Tinplater, I'll bet you've been looking at a pile of stuff ready for the fiery furnaces at IPSCO! In 1960 my wife and I visited friends in Regina, he, Ted, being a new melt shop superintendent at IPSCO. With great pride Ted took me out to look at IPSCO's source of scrap material, an enormous pile of CPR and CNR steam locomotives, maybe five stories high! It was enough to make a steam buff cry! You are correct, indeed! The scrapyard itself is actually called Wheat City Metals, but it is right at IPSCO and all their metal obviously gets sent there to get melt down. I actually never knew that IPSCO was around for that long or that steam locomotives were ever scrapped there. That's very interesting to know...and also very sad to imagine that sight! They did save one steam locomotive, thankfully. At IPCSO, there are some waterslides as well as some elk in a fenced-in field that serve as a family attraction (if you ask me, putting waterslides right next a steel smelter doesn't quite make sense, but whatever). At the parking lot, CP 4-8-4 #3101 is on display along with a heavyweight passenger car and a wooden caboose. The 3101 is a very rare engine as it is one of only two 4-8-4's that CP ever used. The other (3100) is on display at the Canadian Railway Museum in Delson, Quebec.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater I've seen similar sights in real life. In Regina, Saskatchewan there's a scrapyard with piles of old rolling stock (mainly covered hoppers) stacked up like that. There are a couple of hoppers balancing rather precariously at the top that I have a feeling would come crashing down if the wind picked up just a bit. Some of the cars appear to have been in accidents, having their sides ripped open, but most don't seem to have anything wrong with them. It really is too bad. Sask Tinplater, I'll bet you've been looking at a pile of stuff ready for the fiery furnaces at IPSCO! In 1960 my wife and I visited friends in Regina, he, Ted, being a new melt shop superintendent at IPSCO. With great pride Ted took me out to look at IPSCO's source of scrap material, an enormous pile of CPR and CNR steam locomotives, maybe five stories high! It was enough to make a steam buff cry!
QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater I've seen similar sights in real life. In Regina, Saskatchewan there's a scrapyard with piles of old rolling stock (mainly covered hoppers) stacked up like that. There are a couple of hoppers balancing rather precariously at the top that I have a feeling would come crashing down if the wind picked up just a bit. Some of the cars appear to have been in accidents, having their sides ripped open, but most don't seem to have anything wrong with them. It really is too bad.
QUOTE: Originally posted by wisser 20-30 years ago there was a scrapyard just south of Mojave. I remember ther was a sign that said boxcars $50. The catch was YOU had to transport them, and they did not come with trucks. I wonder what happened to that place. There is still some sort of yard there, but it's nowhere near the size it once was.
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Originally posted by talbanese At least a loco is hauling then away, and not a truck!!!!!
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!!
QUOTE: Originally posted by locomutt QUOTE: Originally posted by louisnash In the old L&N Decoursey yards in Covington KY they have a scrap yard similar to the one shown in the link. The last time I was there they had a whole lot of old coal hoppers just piled up in a group. The company that is there now repairs RR rolling equipment and I was told they make the frogs for the switches as well. Locomuttt: I heard that where the slugger field is now was also a rail yard. I can't remember which RR used it. Seems I was told that PRR used it. Brian (KY) Brian, you are correct,also NYC used it.[:)] And I had wondered about what happened to Decoursey. Years ago, Louisville was home to the PRR,NYC,B&O,C&O,IC,Southern,and of course the L&N,plus the K&IT which is now part of the NS family.[:)] Now basicly,all we have here:NS,CSX<&P&L
QUOTE: Originally posted by louisnash In the old L&N Decoursey yards in Covington KY they have a scrap yard similar to the one shown in the link. The last time I was there they had a whole lot of old coal hoppers just piled up in a group. The company that is there now repairs RR rolling equipment and I was told they make the frogs for the switches as well. Locomuttt: I heard that where the slugger field is now was also a rail yard. I can't remember which RR used it. Seems I was told that PRR used it. Brian (KY)
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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