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Opinion/Question: Do we need more mainline steam restorations?

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Posted by kgbw49 on Saturday, May 25, 2019 12:49 AM

Patrick, Pere Marquette 2-8-4 1225 in Owosso MI gets out on occasion on tracks of a friendly regional railroad.

Several other large engines that were restored in the 1980s and operated for some tone and were fabulous see, but retired (in excellent condition) with no place to run include Cotton Belt 4-8-4 819 in Arkansas, Frisco 4-8-2 1522 in Missouri, and SP 4-6-2 2472 in California (this is a really big Pacific).

Locomotives stored outdoors in droer locales such as the desert or indoors at facilities such as the Illinois Railroad Museum would typically be the best candidates for restoration, but anything can be restored with enough money!

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Posted by SPSOT fan on Saturday, May 25, 2019 2:54 AM

Personally I would like to see more small stuff restored. We already have a a bunch of big stuff running and I think some more publicized smaller stuff would be nice!

Near were I am from, in Toppenish Wa,at the NP railroad museum they are currently working in restoring an NP 4-6-0. Now personnally I am looking forward to that more than the Big Boy. It’s something different!

I think the focus of restorations should be to preserve the more unique examples of steamers. I’d say ideally if we came up with a list of all the restored steamer we should see a variety of road names with a variety of wheel arrangements and types.

Also I think we should run the stuff we restore! What’s the point of putting so much money into getting a steamer running if it doesn’t run!

Big Smile Just my opinions! 

Regards, Isaac

I model my railroad and you model yours! I model my way and you model yours!

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Posted by zugmann on Saturday, May 25, 2019 3:06 AM

Flintlock76
It's no wonder that an operation like the East Broad Top is just about inactive, if it's not in the middle of nowhere it might as well be.

Not that far off the turnpike, down the road from Raystown Lake.  Not that far in the middle of nowhere, it's just that EBT management was stuck in the 1950s and had absolutely no clue how to market itself. Part of it was also refusing to do any special events to draw more people (even though the spectactulars in the fall were well-patronized).  They did let one group take over operatons for a year, and that group actually did stuff like Thomas and Christmas trains (and provided some narration!), but they then didn't use them after that year.   Some people are just beyond help, I'm afraid. 

  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Saturday, May 25, 2019 8:34 AM

Thanks for that update Zug!  Good to hear from someone in the area "on the ground" with better information that the rest of us.

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Posted by xboxtravis7992 on Saturday, May 25, 2019 10:00 AM

zugmann

 

 
Flintlock76
It's no wonder that an operation like the East Broad Top is just about inactive, if it's not in the middle of nowhere it might as well be.

 

Not that far off the turnpike, down the road from Raystown Lake.  Not that far in the middle of nowhere, it's just that EBT management was stuck in the 1950s and had absolutely no clue how to market itself. Part of it was also refusing to do any special events to draw more people (even though the spectactulars in the fall were well-patronized).  They did let one group take over operatons for a year, and that group actually did stuff like Thomas and Christmas trains (and provided some narration!), but they then didn't use them after that year.   Some people are just beyond help, I'm afraid. 

 

 

As the meme says...

Although seriously the EBT's troubles being blamed to location is strange in my opinion compared to the collection of succesful tourist railroads out west or further in the back country that would kill to be as close to a city as the EBT was. The Nevada Northern has somehow managed to run two steam engines, a running steam crane, a small fleet of diesels, start restoration on a third steam engine, grow their audience and reach out to people across the world via their viral "cat marketing" with Dirt; yet somehow they do it with only 14,000 people to visit in a good year. It goes to show that via outreach to a world stage even the people who can't visit will still contribute via online donations, fundraising or even buying a coffee mug with Dirt on it to have shipped to their home. 

I guess the secret EBT needs then is a new owner with a shop cat they can spam online. Or sponsor part of Jim Wrinn's Big Boy chase vest IDK Stick out tongue

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Posted by Overmod on Saturday, May 25, 2019 1:39 PM

It might also help if EBT wasn't owned by a scrapper intent on getting high value out of the assets ultimately, but unwilling to tie up even low-hanging OPM, let alone his own, to get back to operation.

Major trolley museum almost right across the street, too.

I think at least part of the 'big problem' is that to get to those attractions from any major road, (1) the route from the highways is poorly marked or indicated, and (2) goes over a considerable hill on a two-lane road going and coming.  You could go by way of Mount Union and fan the ex-PRR on the way, but much of that lies in the fan-shaped arcs of valley in that part of the mountains and 'drives a lot slower than the crow-flies distances on a non-topo map indicate.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Saturday, May 25, 2019 10:02 PM

As far as isolated tourist rail lines, let's not forget the White Pass & Yukon.  As I recall it's the No. 1 in ticket sales.  Of course it helps that a few thousand cruise ship passengers decend on the port each day in season.

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Posted by Backshop on Sunday, May 26, 2019 7:03 AM

I've been on the WP&Y...it's a beautiful ride.  The thing that it, the Grand Canyon Ry and a few others have in their favor is the scenery.  They have a lot of business from people who don't care about the ride, just the scenery and destination.  It's hard to make it work when the train itself is the main attraction.

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Posted by georgeh on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 11:24 AM

I would love to see the big SP cab forward currently in the Sacramento museum to be brought back to life.

George Halstead ghalstead@surewest.net
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Posted by 400Route on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 11:25 AM

Travis, just wanted to make you aware of the Pere Marquette 1225 which is in Michigan and the project to rebuild the PRR T-1 #5550 Trust.  Based on the worldwide interest in large American steam demonstrated by the Big Boy run out to Utah and back, I don't think it has peaked yet.

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 9:53 PM

georgeh

I would love to see the big SP cab forward currently in the Sacramento museum to be brought back to life.

 

You know, there was a time in the '90s when some thought that might happen.

Phillip Anschutz, then CEO of the Southern Pacific was visiting the museum and looking at that SP cab-forward, rubbing his chin,  seemingly deep in thought.  The rumor mill kicked into overdrive that maybe, just maybe...

But of course, nothing happened.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 10:17 PM

Flintlock76
 
georgeh

I would love to see the big SP cab forward currently in the Sacramento museum to be brought back to life. 

You know, there was a time in the '90s when some thought that might happen.

Phillip Anschutz, then CEO of the Southern Pacific was visiting the museum and looking at that SP cab-forward, rubbing his chin,  seemingly deep in thought.  The rumor mill kicked into overdrive that maybe, just maybe...

But of course, nothing happened.

Rubbing one's chin - deep in thought and digging deep into one's finances to restore something such as a Cab-Forward are entirely separate activities.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 7:06 AM

Part of the problem here seems to be that most of the steam locomotives being discussed for restoration could be part of the subject matter in "The BIG Engines" in June 1968 TRAINS.  They are almost too big to be practical excursion locomotives.  Perhaps something along the lines of SR 4501 or a light Pacific would be more representative of everyday steam power and wouldn't be as expensive to restore or operate.

The T1 Trust might have had a better chance of completing a new locomotive if they considered a K4 or even an M1 rather than the expensive engineering experiment that they are currently contemplating.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 9:54 AM

CSSHEGEWISCH
They are almost too big to be practical excursion locomotives.

You have evidently never looked at the cost of running steam excursions.

Famously the actual operating cost of 'large' locomotives only amounts to about 5% to 10% of the overall expenses, with insurance being just about as large for the big engines as for anything capable of pulling any practical number of cars people would actually be interested in riding in.  So the longer the train you can pull, up to the limit of interested people riding it, the better your potential return will be.  I think the (many!) discussions of this over the years on RyPN have something like 18 cars being about the minimum that pays for itself -- and you won't get this easily out of some piddling little Mikado or Pacific.

There is a secondary issue, which is the ability to keep the train out of "traffic's way" on a modern railroad.  That implies, at least to me, that a 'vanity cushion' of available horsepower (or measured a different way, torque at speed) can be highly useful both in operating and in convincing people in authority at various railroads that you should be allowed to operate in the first place.

The T1 Trust might have had a better chance of completing a new locomotive if they considered a K4 or even an M1 rather than the expensive engineering experiment that they are currently contemplating.

Perhaps, but there is no point.  The Trust isn't building a locomotive to run fantrips. 

There's a perfectly good M1 waiting for anyone who thinks it's a 'better alternative', and at least one K4 that is closer to operation than most people probably think.  It's relatively easier to be able to 'mega-price' seats behind the K4, which is still one of the famous locomotives of the world, than it would be for a restored -- let alone a replica that would have to justify its existence solely as a 'paying proposition', unlike the situation with the Trust -- locomotive like an M1, or one of the G5s being at least theoretically restored in the relatively near future.  (Don't you just love those Carterian weasel words?)

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Posted by Backshop on Thursday, May 30, 2019 10:22 AM

I think some here are talking past each other.  The size locomotive needed for a once-a-year mainline steam excursion on a Class 1 and that needed for a 20-30 mile shortline that runs every weekend during toursit season are two entirely different things.  For the first, you need at least a Mountain or Northern.  For the second, a large 10-Wheeler or Consolidation or small Pacific is fine.

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, May 30, 2019 11:08 AM

Backshop
The size locomotive needed for a once-a-year mainline steam excursion on a Class 1 and that needed for a 20-30 mile shortline that runs every weekend during tourist season are two entirely different things.  For the first, you need at least a Mountain or Northern.  For the second, a large 10-Wheeler or Consolidation or small Pacific is fine.

Remember this carefully in all discussions of the general subject.

I don't consider out-and-back scheduled trips on 'captive' tracks to be "excursions" in the usual (or Amtrak's) sense.  But that is really more a nitpick than a meaningful argument here.  If we look at the recent discussion of suitable 'tank engines' (for replica construction to serve on small tourist-style lines) we can easily appreciate that even middle-sized Pacifics may be too big for 'requirements' or even for some of the physical plants involved.  

Roger Waller very famously concentrated on the small end of the market, actually coordinating some high-tech developments for the rack-railway market.  One of the original premises in this thread -- at least I think it was this one -- involves the potential market for "new" smaller power when the existing locomotives begin to wear to the point either significant 'non-historic' (to use a dangerous euphemism) modifications are required to keep running economically or there is risk of economically-irreplaceable damage to the 'historic fabric'.  One of the great premises of the 5AT project was to fill this particular niche effectively for many British heritage railways; North America doesn't have nearly the prospective demand (or potential profitability) but there's still adequate potential for, say, a good modernized 2-8-0, based on an S160 perhaps, with all the operating mod cons built in for easy operation and maintenance -- that does not imply all roller bearings, but does imply good and consistent mechanical bearing lubrication... you get the idea.  As with the USRA, having a standard locomotive with standardizable parts makes both cost and maintenance procedures better.  The question then becomes: what can be the analogue to GM financing of dieselization from the '40s on that would make new steam practical for tourist railroads interested in it?

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, May 30, 2019 11:10 AM

Backshop
The size locomotive needed for a once-a-year mainline steam excursion on a Class 1 and that needed for a 20-30 mile shortline that runs every weekend during tourist season are two entirely different things.  For the first, you need at least a Mountain or Northern.  For the second, a large 10-Wheeler or Consolidation or small Pacific is fine.

Remember this carefully in all discussions of the general subject.

I don't consider out-and-back scheduled trips on 'captive' tracks to be "excursions" in the usual (or Amtrak's) sense.  But that is really more a nitpick than a meaningful argument here.  If we look at the recent discussion of suitable 'tank engines' (for replica construction to serve on small tourist-style lines) we can easily appreciate that even middle-sized Pacifics may be too big for 'requirements' or even for some of the physical plants involved.  (That's really just another nitpick, too.)  The key is to appreciate the very different need of tourist railways from touring excursions, even ones like those of the recent 611 program where trips are scheduled nearly every weekend in the season.

Roger Waller very famously concentrated on the small end of the market, actually coordinating some high-tech developments for the rack-railway market.  One of the original premises in this thread -- at least I think it was this one -- involves the potential market for "new" smaller power when the existing locomotives begin to wear to the point either significant 'non-historic' (to use a dangerous euphemism) modifications are required to keep running economically or there is risk of economically-irreplaceable damage to the 'historic fabric'.  One of the great premises of the 5AT project was to fill this particular niche effectively for many British heritage railways; North America doesn't have nearly the prospective demand (or potential profitability) but there's still adequate potential for, say, a good modernized 2-8-0, based on an S160 perhaps, with all the operating mod cons built in for easy operation and maintenance -- that does not imply all roller bearings, but does imply good and consistent mechanical bearing lubrication... you get the idea.  As with the USRA, having a standard locomotive with standardizable parts makes both cost and maintenance procedures better.  The question then becomes: what can be the analogue to GM financing of dieselization from the '40s on that would make new steam practical for tourist railroads interested in it?

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