Well, there's a Tweetsie. Maybe you can call your Rio Grande doubled loco a "Tootsie" because it looks like a Tootsie Roll on wheels!
Same me, different spelling!
Somebody was browsing through his copy of "Articulated Locomotives" and decided to have some fun
Thank you! As far as #483 bending around curves, if it had a felxible boiler ala the ATSF, it just might
BEAU, I did get a good chuckle out of these so it was not all for naught!
The Rio Grande 2-8-8-2 with the long small boiler looks like a centipede. I could imagine that thing bending around the curves in Animas Canyon like something out of an early Walt Disney cartoon!
One wonders, though, if there would be enough lateral clearance in Animas Canton for the N de M 2-6-6-2 to make it to Silverton and back? That would be kind of a fun ride in an alternate universe.
Man, people, please read the captions. David Moffat buying the Rio Grande ... the Denver and Salt Lake was far from being highly successful and was a marginal line that never got anywhere near Salt Lake City and, jeeze, #483 has a ludicrously large boiler for a totally inadequate firebox...Rio Grande merging with the WP to form the Denver, Rio Grande and Western Pacific... C&O having an oil fired narrow gauge division...It's possible to liquify coal (Fischer-Tropsch Process developed in the early 1900's) but totally uneconomic except in extreme circumstances like WW2 Germany. And doesn't everyone know the East Broad Top was the sole surving major ng line in the East...I thought everyone would get a good chuckle and call me out - "What have you been smoking, buddy" - I was and am surprised...
The Rio Grande #483 is a 2-8-2. It appears that it was just twinned. It has the same airtank over both sets of drivers. The second locomotive is obviously an NdeM one. You can tell by the numbering font. I think someone was having fun.
I don't think they are manipulated images, but there are artifacts that show up above the domes and in the second photo toward the left side....white squares.
I didn't photoshop either one
Are those photoshopped?
Two rare birds here. The first is Rio Grande #483 after its conversion by Alamosa Shops after David Moffat bought the D&RG and merged it with his highly successful D&SL route to Salt Lake City to form the Rio Grande, which was later merged with the WP to Oakland to form the DRG&WP The second is a shot of one of C&O's (note the trademark "flying pump front end") "Small Simon" simple 2-6-6-2's prior to the installation of an Elesco feedwater heater taken on its Little Creek Division narrow gauge in West Virginia. They burned oil produced from coal to avoid forest fires - West Virginia had a big lumber industry
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.