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favorite passenger train.

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favorite passenger train.
Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 10, 2002 12:32 PM
o.k.,you have a favorite engine model,how about your favorite passenger train,past or present?
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 10, 2002 12:57 PM
CRESCENT LIMITED
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Posted by gbrewer on Sunday, February 10, 2002 1:37 PM
pre-amtrak: the old California Zephyr.
more recently: the Canadian
the Silverton
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Posted by Steve4031 on Sunday, February 10, 2002 2:32 PM
The Canadian is the Micheal Jordan of today's passenger trains.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 10, 2002 3:22 PM
Nowadays the new Acela(hate that name) trainsets running at speed on the NEC(in Mass. and R.I where I reside the new catenary facilitates higher speeds than south of NH). Watching one of these blast by at over 100 MPH is something else. As a kid(early 1970's) the then Illinois Central bilevel commuter EMU's were the coolest thing I'd ever ridden on,on the ground anyway(sorry but that 747 out of Logan in 1973(Seagulls ingested into one of the starboard engines leading to an emergency landing) also impressed me mightily). As to the early impressions of airline versus railroad safety,I believe that it was also in seventy three that my dad was fortunately late for his train,missing a horrendous fatal wreck when one of the IC's old brown steel heavyweight electrics plowed into the back of a new,aluminum Bilevel at a suburban Chicago station,opening the new car up like a can of tuna.
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Posted by thirdrail1 on Sunday, February 10, 2002 4:50 PM
"La Aguila Azteca" from San Antonio to Mexico City, followed by the "Broadway Limited" from Chicago to New York, and then the "Panama Limited" from New Orleans to Chicago. I have fond memories of all three.
"The public be ***ed, it's the Pennsylvania Railroad I'm competing with." - W.K.Vanderbilt
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Posted by Soo2610 on Sunday, February 10, 2002 6:59 PM
The old Super Chief. My wife worked on it as a registered nurse.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 10, 2002 10:21 PM
The beautiful orange and brown trains of the Illinois Central and the City of Miami in particular with the E's and the dome coach and the obs on the rear.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, February 25, 2002 6:45 AM
pre-Amtrak..how about KCS's beautiful Southern Belle's?
Amtrak era..how about the California Zephyr? Beautiful ride through the rockies/sierras.
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Posted by BRAKIE on Monday, February 25, 2002 8:05 PM
C&Os F.F.V.= Fast Flying Virginian.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt  Safety First!"

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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 26, 2002 4:23 AM
I like the look of the old Southern Pacific Daylight colored passenger trains and their steamers. Although I've never seen one running. My favorite is Amtrak's "Cascades" trains in the Pacific Northwest paint scheme (tan, dark read and dark green with silver). I can see the train right behind where I work twice a day, zooming by with it's F59 at one end, an aerodynamic baggage car at each end, 11 passenger cars and an F40 on the opposite end of the F59, (an F40 in Amtrak Cascades paint that is!). It's a pretty fast and very beautiful train, (and very comfortable too!). I hope the F40s go on working this train for a while, I've seen a few more F59phi coming around though. Who knows what will happen to Amtrak and these great trains.
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Posted by BJRubino on Wednesday, February 27, 2002 2:22 PM
Amtrak's Coast Starlight (despite all of it's problems, it has some breath-taking scenery)

BJR
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, February 27, 2002 6:26 PM
The Empire Builder. Leaving Portland OR. a nice quiet dinner up the Columbia gorge. Fall asleep in central WA, and then wake up in the middle of the Rockies for breakfast.
On our last trip to Chicago the car attendant did not have a corkscrew. (you get a compimentary bottle of wine leaving PDX) We had one and for every bottle we opened for her she gave us one for ourselves. 8 bottles total for our 2 day trip.
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Posted by douginut on Thursday, February 28, 2002 10:44 PM
The Electroliner on the long gone Chicago, North Shore and Milwaukee. I would stand waiting for my "L" to go to grammar school and at 8:10am the southbound Electroliner would stop at Wilson avenue. like clockwork. The smell of ozone and the frantic conductor shepherding passengers off and on the train.
the flock of little dents in the blue-green and salmon with little specks of rust. also the worn cuffs of the conductor gave the perceptive observer clues to the state of that railroad.
Then it was gone.
Doug, in Utah
Doug, in UtaH
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 1, 2002 3:30 PM
Northern Pacific North Coast Limited
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Posted by gbrewer on Friday, March 1, 2002 7:30 PM
Yea! A good choice, Doug. I rode it once, just a week before the end. But I preferred the older cars of the CNS&M and even more those of the CA&E.
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Posted by KenRuben on Saturday, March 2, 2002 1:12 AM
The Super chief did not feature Courier Nurses (aka Registered Nurses). The San Francisco Chief, El Capitan and Texas chief did but I don't remember till what year.

As an aside, the Super Chief and El Capitan were combined into one train in 1958 (with separate sections during the Summer and Christmas holiday seasons) and as far as I remember, the Courier-Nurses served the El Capitan section.

Maybe some of the other Trainsonline readers can supply some input as to when the Courier-Nurses were discontinued.

Finally some of my favorite trains pre-Amtrak as already mentioned in this thread (in no particular order):

1. California Zephyr.
2. Coast Daylight.
3. Super Chief-El Capitan.
4. City of Los Angeles-Challenger.
5. Electroliner.
6. Panama Limited.
7. Empire Builder.
8. North Coast Limited.
9. Broadway Limited.


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Posted by Soo2610 on Saturday, March 2, 2002 6:44 PM
Ken...It's possible I have my trains wrong and it was the San Francisco Chief. She hired on in 1966 right out of nursing school. Job description required that she be an RN and also required that she serve as tour guide on the train pointing out all the scenic highlights. Still have her dark blue woolen uniform in the closet, which unfortunately, she no longer fits into. Says it wasn't the most comfortable at station stops in the desert! Anyway, she only made about four runs and quit. Didn't like idea of porters having keys to her sleeping quarters.
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Posted by KenRuben on Saturday, March 2, 2002 8:18 PM
Hi Len:

Thanks very much for your reply.

I am somewhat surprised about the porters having keys to your wife's sleeping quarters on (perhaps) the San Francisco Chief when she was a Courier-Nurse.

I will check with other friends of mine along the rail internet sites later who are Santa Fe oriented like I am as to the history of the
Courier-Nurse service (my memory isn't real good on it although I rode both El Capitan and the San Francisco Chief when they had such service).

Incidentally, I am originally from Chicago (how far is Crystal Lake from there)?

---"Ken"---
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Posted by Soo2610 on Sunday, March 3, 2002 10:04 PM
About 55 miles northwest on the former C&NW line. Second to last stop on Metra, Woodstock is the last stop. Still see a lot of UP autoracks and grain trains.
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Posted by bkkkthevine on Thursday, March 7, 2002 9:06 PM
Pre Amtrak - City of Los Angeles a great train with great ambience - dome diner with trout cooked to order - although the scenery wasn't spectacular.
Post Amtrak - Coast Starlight - the route is scenic the service is good, but the high level cars exaggerate the less than satisfactory condition of the UP owned track.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, March 17, 2002 7:08 AM
korinke@skyeone.com The Illinois Central RR from Rockford to Iowa in my youth visiting the grand parents. Also have the lionel production of the ICRR pasenger set that was introduced I believe in the mid 1980's. Lots of pleasant memories. I now reside in south Florida by a one time ACL line and CSX line but is finally a South Central RR line owned by United States Sugar Company. This little community along with the county I reside burned down the only railroad pasenger depots they had (two of them) rely pathetic to let some old history and nostalga slip through their fingers for future generations in the area to enjoy. I managed to salvage the top of the semafor signal after they bulldozed it over and I'm in the process of restoring it.
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, March 23, 2002 10:05 AM
As a kid in the early '60s, my Grandpa and I would go down to the ATSF depot in Ft. Madison, Iowa (see it on the Milepost 235 web cam) every Friday night. We'd watch the Super Chief, Kansas City Chief and the El Capitan. We'd also watch the Mark Twain Zephyr on the CB&Q track.

I rode the Chief many times to Chicago, transfer to the South Shore and end-up in South Bend. Those were the days!
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, March 23, 2002 7:02 PM
My Favorite passenger train would have to be VIA Rail Canada trains 199, 198, 299, and 298. These trains run from Victoria to Courtenay and return on the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway on Vancouver Island, in British Columbia.


Tyler
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, March 25, 2002 8:04 AM
The Wall Street
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Posted by mnwestern on Tuesday, March 26, 2002 4:38 PM
I never got to ride them (I wasn't even born at their peak), but I would say my favorite passenger trains would be the Milwaukee Road's 100 mph Hiawatha's between Chicago and Minneapolis, the C&NW's 400s, and the Great Northern's Empire Builder. The route between Chicago and the Twin Cities wasn's as famous and the Chicago to New York runs, but competition was fierce between Milw, CB&Q, C&NW, etc.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 28, 2002 1:33 AM
My favorite was Great Northern's Western Star, after it had been combined with the Fast Mail as Trains 27 west and 28 east, St. Paul to Seattle. It featured high quality passenger accomodations and lots of old mail and express cars, behind multiple F's and later SDP-40s. Excellent food in diner or lounge and cheap sleep in leg-rest coaches or 1947 Pullman sleeping cars. In the winter, there were only 2 coaches plus a dinner and a 16-4 sleeper, but in the late 50s, one of the coaches was a dome! Only bad thing: In the summer, there was a round-end ob that had express cars behind it!
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, March 30, 2002 1:23 PM
The Washingtonian southbound and the Montrealer northbound trough New England
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Posted by CP5415 on Wednesday, August 27, 2003 11:45 PM
#1 - Canadian
#2 - The origional California Zephur

Gordon

Brought to you by the letters C.P.R. as well as D&H!

 K1a - all the way

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Posted by kenneo on Thursday, August 28, 2003 12:29 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by michaelm1

The Empire Builder. Leaving Portland OR. a nice quiet dinner up the Columbia gorge. Fall asleep in central WA, and then wake up in the middle of the Rockies for breakfast.


Absolutely!! And then, breakfast, if the Spokane connection was late Westbound, down the Gorge into Portland! That train was quite a sight with the NP's two-tone green for a Pasco setout to connect with the North Coast Limited, the orange and green of the GN's Empire Builder, and the SPS's power and observation car. All of that ended with the BN merger. Fudge (Yes Mookie, it's still around!)
Eric

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