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how often do track cleaning trains get sent out

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Posted by stmtrolleyguy on Monday, June 6, 2005 2:27 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by mudchicken



(still grin about an incident in Los Angeles in 1995 where the traffic reporters and the news media with "breaking news" about a train of boxcars going back and forth that were "on fire with sparks everywhere" while on the ATSF Pasadena Sub in the median of the I-210 Freeway [(-D][(-D][(-D])

[banghead][banghead][banghead]


I can so easily see that happening........................................................................
Imagine the scene it would have created at night, of it was working then during periods of low rail traffic................

With todays world, someone might wonder how they were trying to sabotage the tracks with such strange equipment..............[:p]
StmTrolleyguy
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Posted by BNSFGP38 on Monday, June 6, 2005 12:03 AM
Well, when ever we do a speeder run on the RR's north side we usally are cleaning up fallen branches and clean flange ways. During the fall we couple a few full cemet cars and ballast hoppers to get the wet leaves of the tracks if they get bad, but usally nature takes care of that.
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Posted by tatans on Sunday, June 5, 2005 9:56 PM
Check out the C.P.R. that vacuums the tracks around the Banff-Lake Louise area to remove spilled grain so bears aren't attracted to the tracks and killed, there have been few grizzly bear deaths noted this year, someone must have info on the equipment used.
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Posted by locomutt on Sunday, June 5, 2005 5:47 AM
Maybe it's a protype for model railroaders,and their track cleaning.[:D]

Mudchicken,I've had the privlege once of seeing a Kershaw machine at work.
In the late 60s,one was on the C & O main from Covington to Silver Grove(Stevens Yard) That seemed to be an awesome operation.
They lowered the track so containers,trailers could move under the highway bridges in that area. That particular town didn't have any grade crossings;all the streets
going across the railroad tracks were by bridge.
C & O SD-18 for motive power,very interesting to watch,especially for a high school kid.
(at that time.)

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!!

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 5, 2005 1:22 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by lincoln5390

Are ties and ballast considered parts of the track? What about ballast cleaning equipment:

http://www.loram.com/ballastcleaning2.html

Now remember kids, Clean ballast is healthy ballast!
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 4, 2005 11:13 PM
Are ties and ballast considered parts of the track? What about ballast cleaning equipment:

http://www.loram.com/ballastcleaning2.html
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 4, 2005 10:27 PM
Frisco and other railroads used weed spraying trains to kill the vegatation near the tracks.

They also had a railroad machine with hugh cutting disks on a boom. There were 2 disks on each side that would cut down even small trees.

Before the 80s, before that on some railroads, the railroads used old passenger equipment to house MOW workers who would work on the tracks. The MOW train would move as needed to keep up with the workers.

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Posted by mudchicken on Saturday, June 4, 2005 10:18 PM
To my knowledge, there is no such thing as a track cleaning TRAIN.

(1) The "brushes" you are looking at are screens for fire and spark suppression. The tank car is on-board water supply that is piped under pressure to the front & rear of the train. The screens also act as a buffer in case one of the grinding stones breaks and flies off.....IF THE GRINDER IS WORKING, GET THE HECK AWAY FROM IT!!!! (100 Ft + or more)...you will also see water cannons (Larry knows these well [:D]) mounted at two or three places on the grinder.

(2) Close as I think you will see to a cleaning train is a Knox-Kershaw Yard Cleaner coupled to a set of air dumps... A yard cleaner is a morphodite ballast regulator (Kershaw makes probably the best ones on the market) that can be hauled as a highway trailer, is fitted with knuckes at each end, has a conveyor belt to relay the material kicked up by the regulator brooms to an attached air dump.

(3) Only other thing that might come close is a track undercutter towing a tool car and a ballast hopper or air dump....

(still grin about an incident in Los Angeles in 1995 where the traffic reporters and the news media with "breaking news" about a train of boxcars going back and forth that were "on fire with sparks everywhere" while on the ATSF Pasadena Sub in the median of the I-210 Freeway [(-D][(-D][(-D])

[banghead][banghead][banghead]
Mudchicken Nothing is worth taking the risk of losing a life over. Come home tonight in the same condition that you left home this morning in. Safety begins with ME.... cinscocom-west
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 4, 2005 8:13 PM
I live in Easton ,Pa. When the rail grinding trains come through there is a car towards the back that has brushes on it (similar to a PS2 hopper)which sweeps the tracks for metal filings. I'm told this is so the trains coming through later do not have breaking issues.
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Posted by tree68 on Saturday, June 4, 2005 8:07 PM
I would say that you were looking at a rail grinder. Can't say that I've ever heard of a real railroad using a rail cleaner. I could be wrong.

Assuming it is a rail grinding train, it depends....

LarryWhistling
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how often do track cleaning trains get sent out
Posted by railfan619 on Saturday, June 4, 2005 6:51 PM
[swg][ [size=3]

Hi I was wondering how often do track cleaning trains get sent out Iwas wondering this because a week or two ago I got stopped by a track cleaning train down by the amtrak station here in milwaukee it had two engines one on the front and and on the rear end and in the middle it had about 10-15 mixed cars from passenger that holds the crew to couple of tank cars and even some cars that had brushes that scurbs the tracks clean. if you can answer this for me i would really like it ,

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