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LESSONS FROM RAILROADING APPLIIED TO OTHER FIELDS

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 7:55 PM

Firelock76
Actually, steel goes way back before the railroads, in one form or another, all the way back to ancient Rome.  Think body armor and edged weapons.

I recall watching a show about the making of a draw knife in colonial times.  Since steel was expensive/hard to get/etc, only the cutting edge was steel, the rest of the tool was wrought iron.  Much of the show dealt with how the steel was welded to the iron using heat and hammers.

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 7:44 PM

"Shotwelding" stainless steel as invented/ perfected by the Edward G. Budd Co. - the first practical technique to join that alloy by welding. 

- Paul North. 

"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
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Posted by wanswheel on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 3:18 PM
Excerpt from A Nation of Steel by Thomas J. Misa
The Pennsylvania Railroad was the outstanding example of the virtual fusion of user and producer that could result in this sector.  A large number of employees with "second" careers, the prevalence of insider contracting, and strategic personal investing by its top officers all contributed to this result.  Andrew Carnegie was only the most famous of its middle managers that had successful second careers in closely related fields.  Before becoming steel producer par excellence, Carnegie climbed the Pennsylvania's corporate ladder and proved himself an able manager of its western division.  After leaving the railroad in March 1865 with twelve years service he enjoyed close relations with Thomas A. Scott and J. Edgar Thomson, the Pennsylvania's vice president and president, respectively.  Thomson, Carnegie said, was the "great pillar in this country of steel for everything." 
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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, May 19, 2015 3:04 AM

But for the USA, or North America in general, Carnegie certainly deserves the second place.  The Bessemer process in England had each major stage in the process take place at different locations, even different organizations, requiring some transport from one to another.  From what I learned, mainly from the Morris book THE DAWN OF INNOVATION, is that Carneigie, put these processes together, adopted asssembly-line techniques, and in any case brought the Bessemer process to the USA, making steel more economically than it was in England.  And it was the Pennsylvania Railroad that gave Carnegie the iniative to do this.

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Posted by wanswheel on Monday, May 18, 2015 1:57 PM

Firelock76

Actually, steel goes way back before the railroads, in one form or another, all the way back to ancient Rome.  Think body armor and edged weapons.

However, steel making was a very time-consuming and labor intensive process until the Bessemer process was invented in the 19th Century.   After that there was plenty of steel to go around, and at reasonable prices too.


 

Thanks for truly ancient history of steel, nowhere in my mind yesterday if I ever learned it in school. 

Excerpt from The Creaters of the Age of Steel by W. T. Jeans (1884)

In the commercial history of the last hundred years there are three events that have had a revolutionary effect in accelerating our industrial development. The first was the construction of the steam engine by James Watt, the second was the introduction of the penny post by Sir Rowland Hill, and the third was the invention of means of producing cheap steel by Sir Henry Bessemer and Sir Wm. Siemens. It is a remarkable feature of each of these great improvements that they came perfect from the hands of their authors. Of the steam engine Sir Wm Siemens has well remarked that if any proof were wanting of the great genius of Watt it would be sufficient to observe that the steam engine of the present day is in point of principle still the same as it left his hands three-quarters of a century ago, and that our age of material progress could only affect its form. Sir William Armstrong has likewise said that by a succession of brilliant inventions, comprising, amongst others, his parallel motion and his ball governor, Watt advanced to the final conception of the double-acting rotative engine, which became applicable to every purpose requiring motive power, and continues to this day, in nearly its original form, to be the chief moving agent employed by man. The two other inventions we have named might be described in similar terms. It is well known that Sir Rowland Hill not only conceived but perfected the organization of the penny post and the first announcement of the Bessemer converter made in 1856 is still read with interest on account of its complete description of both the principle and details of that process. Each of these inventions had one other feature in common: they were brought into extensive use during the lifetime of their authors. In some respects however the Bessemer converter differed from the two other inventions. The improvement of the steam engine was the only great invention of James Watt and Sir Rowland Hill will be remembered for nothing but the penny post. Whether these inventions were accidental suggestions, happy thoughts or flashes of genius, certain it is they were the only ideas of their authors that brought forth much fruit. Pope says:

“One science only will one genius fit. So vast is art, so narrow human wit.”

But this can not be said of our inventors in the steel trade. Their minds being of a more fertile stamp have worked out many inventions while at the same time they have realized the truth of Lord Bacon's axiom that knowledge to be profitable to its cultivators must also be fruitful to mankind. More especially has this been the case with the Bessemer converter which has had the twofold effect of rewarding him who gave it and those to whom it was given. Sir Henry Bessemer was not only the architect of his own fortune but the benefactor of his race. The steam engine and the penny post have in many respects been greater blessings to mankind; yet special Acts of Parliament were required to reward their authors for their labors. James Watt wrote to the partner whose assistance saved him from ruin that “of all things in life there is nothing more foolish (unprofitable) than inventing.” Sir Rowland Hill's first substantial reward was a public subscription, for the penny post was in operation sixteen years before it paid its own expenses. Nor can their life's work be described as inventions in every sense of the word. James Watt has been correctly described by Lord Jeffrey, his panegyrist, as the great improver of the steam engine and Sir Rowland Hill's great work was rather one of organization than invention. But no such limitations have to be applied to the work of Sir Henry Bessemer. Biographers of inventors have often had great difficulty in vindicating the originality of their subjects from the claims of others to a previous knowledge or discovery of the same thing. James Watt, for instance, spent his life in improving the steam engine and conducting lawsuits to protect his patent rights; but the invention of Sir Henry Bessemer has in this country, the home of metallurgical inventions, been allowed to go unchallenged. It is related in Grecian history that after the battle of Salamis the generals, while each claiming the first honor for his own generalship, unanimously admitted that Themistocles deserved the second; and the world ever since, says Adam Smith, has accepted this as a proof that Themistocles was beyond all question the first. But no one in the steel trade has ever assigned to Sir Henry Bessemer a second place. His priority is undisputed. His inventive faculties were of such a high order that he boldly entered upon untrodden paths, and imparted features of originality to most things that engaged his attention.

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, May 18, 2015 8:15 AM

I made no bones about that on my first posting, but the political agenda for me, at least, is non-ideological and an attempt to solve problems,  including political and international problems.  You mention the UN.  Do you think the UN is doing its job?  Did the ICC do a good job for transportation in the USA?   Maybe we need a Staggers Act internationally. That is why a proposed an English-speaking confederation.  Maybe there are other ideas.   Car/truck manufacuters and railroads generally don't belong to the same trade organization. International politics is also a trade, and from that standpoint, the UN is a trade organization.  Clearly, dictatorships have different goals than democracies.

Did not Carnegie first work for the PRR before  he went into steel making?` think I recall that Scott as PRR Pres. sent him to Engnland to learn the best of their technology, and then he came back and basically adopted the process but modified it as a mass-production continuous-flow process rather than a batch process.

And the PRR needed steel, lots of it, to convert to steel rails instead of iron, steel coaches instead of wood or composite.  The PRR did build the first practical steel passenger coach, and it was a good enough design that the NYC also used it with small variations for the first steel electric mus to run into the incomplete Grand Central Terminal.

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Posted by ouibejamn on Sunday, May 17, 2015 8:35 PM

MidlandMike
This thread seems like a vehicle to get into some political agenda

Amen to that.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Sunday, May 17, 2015 8:21 PM

daveklepper

This is exactly the kind of thinking I hoped to generate.   An example of rivales sharing for the common good is of course the numerous jointly owned terminal railroads, PRSL, and now Conrail Shared Assetts.

Inermodal is of course an example of  trucking and railroads cooperating.  But that does not stop railroads from doing our best to stop increases in weight limits on highways.

Now I wish to get internationally political.  The UN was started as a reaction to WWII, and democracies were prominent.   Now we have the majority of UN members being not democracies but undemocratic Kingdoms (defining the UK as a democratic Kingdom, possibly Jordan and Morocco as well) or complete secular or religious dictatorships.   Is it time for a new international body?  Should the British Commonwealth be expanded to include all countries with either English as the major language or a major language (remember Canada is officially bilingual but certainly would be includeded -  which might open the way for Israel, which is officially trilingual, just look at the money or the recorded and signed announcement on the Jerusalem light rail, and India as well)?  It is certainly not up to us to decide, but it is an idea worth suggesting?

All these countries share a deeply ingrained democratic tradition, which may possibly be traced to the Magna Carta or even to Jeshro's advice to Moses.

 

 

International organizations existed hundreds of years before railroads.  How has the UN evolved from "lessons from railroading".  This thread seems like a vehicle to get into some political agenda.

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, May 17, 2015 4:45 PM

Actually, steel goes way back before the railroads, in one form or another, all the way back to ancient Rome.  Think body armor and edged weapons.

However, steel making was a very time-consuming and labor intensive process until the Bessemer process was invented in the 19th Century.   After that there was plenty of steel to go around, and at reasonable prices too.

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Posted by wanswheel on Sunday, May 17, 2015 12:34 PM
Railroads could use a metal better than iron, prompting the invention of steel.
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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, May 17, 2015 10:38 AM

Railroads were the first to adopt standard time.   And then it was adopted by the Government.  The building of the CP and UP to standard gauge was a Federal decision, and that pretty well created the demand for other railroads to follow suit.  In Brittain, standard gauge was required by the Government, despite the objections of the Great Western, which wished to keep its six-foot gauge.   In the USA gauge conversion was mostly voluntary, if not entirely.

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, May 17, 2015 10:36 AM

rluke

Were the railroads the 1st to use standard time zones for schedules ?

 

Yes they were, starting in 1883.  However, most of the country, including the Federal government, didn't follow suit until the time of World War One, for various  (mostly silly) reasons.

And ACY, subs came first with hybrid drives.  John Hollands' submarine of 1897 used a gasolene / electric drive system, gas on the surface running a generator and electric motor plus charging storage batteries and then electric drive only submerged.  Diesel engines were substitued later for the gas engines for safety reasons.  

Later came submarine sandwiches, but that's another story.

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Posted by rluke on Sunday, May 17, 2015 10:19 AM

Were the railroads the 1st to use standard time zones for schedules ?

Rich
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Posted by Semper Vaporo on Sunday, May 17, 2015 10:00 AM

I think I remember reading that the Bay Area Rapid Transit adopted 5-ft. gauge to prevent the tracks from being used by freight RRs.

Semper Vaporo

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Posted by ACY Tom on Sunday, May 17, 2015 9:21 AM

Didn't Russia adopt a broad gauge in order to thwart German invasion? 

Tom

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Posted by gregc on Sunday, May 17, 2015 6:28 AM

daveklepper
This is exactly the kind of thinking I hoped to generate.   An example of rivales sharing for the common good is of course the numerous jointly owned terminal railroads, PRSL, and now Conrail Shared Assetts.

I think the railroads agreeing to a standard rail gauge is a rather significant.   Not sure who forced a common coupler.

but from a telecommunications perspective, such cooperation usually requires an equal burden on all parties.   European phone systems, the phone systems in each country, were built to different standards making it difficult to have decent quality service between countries.   The solution was to adopt a new digital approach, ISDN, requiring all countries to invest in the new technology.

another somewhat counter example is the adoption of television in Europe.   In order to prevent American manufacturers from having an advantage, Europe adopted a different frame rate, 50 instead of 60 Hz.  Are there examples of particular railroads adopting different standards to prevent cooperation?

in other cases, the investments or issues are so large that larger governments agencies are required to build or force consensus.   Examples are the Federal Reserve banking system that basically took over what large banks (e.g. J.P. Morgan) were collectively doing.   The Apollo moon project organized American industries and that cooperation led to future successes.   And air traffic control and aircraft regulations handled under the FAA  Today, government is still needed for such large projects, which is in conflict with some political groups for smaller government, to help create new industries when there is a clear industrial leader or the project is simply too large.

 

greg - Philadelphia & Reading / Reading

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Posted by daveklepper on Sunday, May 17, 2015 5:03 AM

This is exactly the kind of thinking I hoped to generate.   An example of rivales sharing for the common good is of course the numerous jointly owned terminal railroads, PRSL, and now Conrail Shared Assetts.

Inermodal is of course an example of  trucking and railroads cooperating.  But that does not stop railroads from doing our best to stop increases in weight limits on highways.

Now I wish to get internationally political.  The UN was started as a reaction to WWII, and democracies were prominent.   Now we have the majority of UN members being not democracies but undemocratic Kingdoms (defining the UK as a democratic Kingdom, possibly Jordan and Morocco as well) or complete secular or religious dictatorships.   Is it time for a new international body?  Should the British Commonwealth be expanded to include all countries with either English as the major language or a major language (remember Canada is officially bilingual but certainly would be includeded -  which might open the way for Israel, which is officially trilingual, just look at the money or the recorded and signed announcement on the Jerusalem light rail, and India as well)?  It is certainly not up to us to decide, but it is an idea worth suggesting?

All these countries share a deeply ingrained democratic tradition, which may possibly be traced to the Magna Carta or even to Jeshro's advice to Moses.

 

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Posted by narig01 on Saturday, May 16, 2015 8:46 PM
PS For better or worse we now have big business.
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Posted by narig01 on Saturday, May 16, 2015 8:45 PM

Large multistate corporations. The railroads were amongst the first large civil organizations to operate in multiple states under a single management. 

     As time marched on other industries followed. Big oil, big steel, the automakers.

Rgds IGN

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Saturday, May 16, 2015 8:34 PM

Networking of local electricity generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity into a broader region was started by the PRR to serve its multi-state electrification.  The companies involved were Baltimore Gas & Electric, Pennsylvania Power & Light (the Safe Harbor hydropower plant is owned jointly by those two), Philadelphia Electric, Public Service Electric and Gas (NJ), and Consolidated Edison (NYC) (see the last couple of posts on this forum: http://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?11,2627359 ) Over the years (starting in 1927) that system morphed into today's PJM as a Regional Transmission Organization ("RTO") - see:

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PJM_Interconnection#History 

 http://www.pjm.com/about-pjm/who-we-are/pjm-history.aspx 

Notably, PJM has been mostly immune or has isolated itself from some of the large-scale blackouts in the last 50 years - the big one in 1965, the also big one in 2003, and some other smaller ones.  I believe this extraordinary record results from the 'robustness' of the system and the 'culture' of reliability inheritied from the PRR and the early electric companies.  See:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeast_blackout_of_2003#Unaffected_regions 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeast_blackout_of_1965 

- Paul North. 

"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
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Posted by ACY Tom on Saturday, May 16, 2015 6:10 PM

I'm not sure what kinds of things you're thinking about.  I immediately remembered that the diesel electric drive used in locomotives, was also used in U.S. fleet submarines in WWII.  I understand the U.S. pioneered the application of this technology to subs, with other countries eventually following suit.  My question is whether the subs came first, or the locomotives.

Tom

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LESSONS FROM RAILROADING APPLIIED TO OTHER FIELDS
Posted by daveklepper on Saturday, May 16, 2015 5:58 PM

This topic is suggested by a book review that I wrote for posting on a professional audio blog.  It compared an author who wrote similar books for two different publishers to Frank Junian Sprague, who designed competing and compatible multiple-unit control systens for Westinghouse and General Electric.  (The books do have slightly different emphais, one is more suited for designing equipment and the for applying it. but both are usable as college textbooks.)  Similarly, railroads compete, but also cooperate.  If this thread is permitted, with politics and religion not forbidden topics, we could extend similar analogies to the world's problems.  The rules would be no insults, no personal derrogatory comments, facts of wrongdoing of world leaders could be presented, but this should not result demonization of any leader , such as past USA Presidents, etc.  I think we need the comment of the moderator to know if such a thread is possible.  Otherwise, I'd be happy to enter into correspondence via internet with those interested.  daveklepper@yahoo.com

I believe I need the moderator's permission before I post the professional audio website, for those wishing to read the review.   The reivew would hint at the kind of conversion i imagine, and I have other postings on the website that also go in this direction.

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