Margaritaman:
Now, tell us the truth. Did you bribe some with a margarita to get into the shops?
Seriously, great job! Thanks for the photos.
K.P.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- K.P.’s absolute “theorem” from early, early childhood that he has seen over and over and over again: Those that CAUSE a problem in the first place will act the most violently if questioned or exposed.
I've had a few facility tours in my day. They ranged from organized railfan tours, open houses for the public, ask for permission to enter, and a long time ago when I was a kid I on occasion walked into the then Phildelphia Transportation Company Callowhill depot or carbarn I (I forget what the term was then, but I think SEPTA now calls them districts).
Some of the memorable ones:
Toronto, went to TTC headquarters to apply for an access pass, which apparently didn't really grant any privileges, the piece of paper just essentially said that we went to the main office, and if we didn't bother staff then the main office didn't mind if we walked around the shop.
My buddy and I visited Russel carhouse, very friendly guy named Oliver gave us a wonderful show. Either he was just showing off, or we happened to get there when he had to shuffle a lot of equipment, so we got rides around in several PCC's, and even one Peter Witt. Among the endearing things about Oliver, he said "You're from the US, eh? A lot of you think we say 'eh' alot, eh. No, we don't really, eh."
After Russel carhouse we went to St. Clair, which was kind of disputed territory. At that time, late 1970's or early 1980's, Toronto was just starting to get their new equipment CLRV's, to replace PCC's, and the Urban Transportation Development Corporation used St Clair for their CLRV demo's. So our TTC headquarters piece of paper probably mattered even less there than it had at Russel. Anyway the guy in the office did grant us permission to self tour the facility. As we left his office someone must have asked who we were, I heard him say "Oh, there just nuts, crazy people". Yep, he pegged us just right.
Philadelphia, SEPTA, has had trolley fests a few times. These are public open houses. One of them, 1992 I think, they had a couple of hundred feet of track at Elmwood depot and allowed the public to operate a Kawasaki LRV. There was a some sort of governor to keep speed down to about 15-20mph, and supervision ready to slap down on the emergency stop button. Those cars are single ended, and have backup controllers at the rear. During that same SEPTA trolley fest the Penn's Landing Trolley also gave the public operating privileges on part of their track. Do you know of any other transit agencies that have a 'you be the motorman' program? Seashore Trolley museum does, http://www.trolleymuseum.org/bam.html. I've often thought Amtrak could probably get some revenue if they sold cab rides.
Patrick Boylan
Free yacht rides, 27' sailboat, zip code 19114 Delaware River, get great Delair bridge photos from the river. Send me a private message
The Lynx facility is only a couple of years old, but they are big on cleanliness.
The building has a train wash bay. The trains are washed at the end of their shift.
Dave
Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow
Here's the Lynx shop in Charlotte.
San Dimas Southern slideshow
Great photos; I drive by the yard just about every day?
How did you rate a tour?
Martin
Altadena, CA
Had the opportunity to tour Metrolink's Los Angeles shop this past Friday. Just like many other trains, you just don't appreciate how big everything is until you're right next to it.
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