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Old Passenger Car Repurposed as a Bridge

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  • Member since
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Old Passenger Car Repurposed as a Bridge
Posted by Fireflite on Saturday, January 9, 2016 9:23 PM

Check out this photo I happened across on the web:

http://imgur.com/gallery/2VvhGGc

Pretty clever bit of recycling, I think. No indication of the location, but based on the design of the car and the rather arid landscape I'd guess somewhere in Asia, or maybe India. 

 

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Posted by Firelock76 on Saturday, January 9, 2016 10:05 PM

Hey, waste not, want not.  Although from the look of it if they want that thing to last someone better get busy with a can of Rust-Oleum!

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Sunday, January 10, 2016 12:15 AM

Re-use of old flatcars (40 ft. +/-), some TTX (89 ft.), and even a few cut-down boxcars for this purpose have been in Trains or other publications from time to time, typically for private driveways over a creek or ravine, etc.  This is the first time I've seen a passenger car, though. 

Although it does look bad, in that dry environment it shouldn't rust too much more (pretty big river underneath, though).  And it should have plenty of strength for the foot and bicycle traffic it's limited to.  Kind of surprised they didn't open up the ends more to let larger animals and small carts, etc. use it as well.   

Note that it's being supported under the vestibule, likely by the center sill extension for the draft gear and/ or any side sills and/ or the collision post structure.  It's not supported at the truck bolsters which are the design points of support for vertical loads, and maybe 10 ft. further out from each end.

Wonder how they got it into that location and then across the stream ?  A big enough crane in that kind of country seems unlikely.  Maybe lots of guys on a rope ?

- Paul North.      

"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, January 10, 2016 10:26 AM

A lot of guys on a rope?  Possibly.  A Union Army engineer officer during the Civil War said that it was "...no mystery to me now how the Pyramids were built.  Put enough men on a rope and you can move anything!"

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Posted by tree68 on Sunday, January 10, 2016 12:09 PM

Paul_D_North_Jr
Wonder how they got it into that location and then across the stream ?  A big enough crane in that kind of country seems unlikely.  Maybe lots of guys on a rope ?

I'm guessing some sort of staging was built - possibly directly from trees - to get it across the river.  The car also may have been rolled, probably on logs, down one riverbank and up the other alongside the footings - lots of people (or livestock) pulling on ropes.

Once the car spanned the river, it could have been jacked up and slid over onto the footings.

Or not.  

LarryWhistling
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CBT
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Posted by CBT on Monday, January 11, 2016 3:07 PM

I think they still repourpose old flat cars as bridges acassionaly.

 


Modeling Conrail, May 31, 1984

Railfanning CSX, NS, and CN, 2016

 

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