180th Street Crosstown Z approaching Third Avenue; glimps of the Elevated's yard at the righy.
A 149th Street crosseown cae crosses under the Eklevated.
I should note that Richard Allman helped with the editing process in some of these photos, although in a very few isolated instances I departed from his advice.
daveklepperBut what about the rear-door treadle? Probably missing, removed in Vienna.
But what about the rear-door treadle? Probably missing, removed in Vienna.
Restored at Branford.
All my photos can be copied and used for any constructive purpose, but I'd appreciate the credit as photographer and approimate age, plus the website credit.
The north end of the A, Westchester Avenue line, shortly before ex-Manhattan lightweights replaced the straight-side convertables, under the current "6" line at Pelham Bay Parkway.
The "A" was one of the four last Bronx lines, the otheres T Tremont Av., S Southern Boulevard, and B Boston Rd. (one of four TATS-TARS Bs), bus August 1948.
daveklepperOn Third Avenue onw-man cars, there was no close-door button. One closed both front and rear doors by depressing the foot controller. One closed the doors by depressing the foot controller. Tapping it lightly would close the doors without releasing the brakes or reducing brake ressure. One could re-open the front door by pressing the unlabeled. but unique, door-open button.
Straight-side convertable in March 1947 on 138th Street viewed from near the New York Central overpass and "The Bronx" 138th Street Station with the double-deck Third Avenue Elevated (also used by 2nd Avenue rush-hour Bronx trains up to June 1940) structure in the background.
138th Street Crosstown was the last Third Avenue trolley line to enter Manhattan, running to 135th Street and 8th Avenue. Shortly after this photo, ex-Manhattan 101-200-series and 391-400, newly equipped with poles, replaced convertables on this and other Bronx lines.
I recall the door cotrols, both when visiting Vienna in 1960 and speding time with these old friends from New York City, and in operating 629 before full restoration at Branford, winter 1967-1968.
On Third Avenue one-man cars, there was no close-door button. One closed both front and rear doors by depressing the foot controller. Tapping it lightly would close the doors without releasing the brakes or reducing brake pressure. One could re-open the front door by pressing the unlabeled. but unique, door-open button. When making a regular stop, an operator could make a smooth stop, without lifting the foot off the contoller all the way, and then open the front door with the button; but most preferred to make the smooth stop and then let the pedal rise to maximium height, opening the front door.
The rear door was opened by the tredle in the floor, interlocked; only working with the car brakes applied and the car stationary.
This applied to all one-man Third Avenue cars.
631 retains bits and pieces of its time in Vienna, including "auf" and "zu" door control buttons. I have lots of controller time on the car, but have never worked on it. Photos seem to show full width doors on all corners, though there is a jump seat.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:NY_Third_Ave_Railway_631_at_Seashore.jpg
Apparently installed in Vienna, not on 629 at Branford. Does Seashore's still have the Vienna modification, prepared-for in the original construction but not implemented at TARS-TATS, full double=width rear doors , same as front doors? I believe Crich, England. retained this change.
629 was faithfully restored to its last-days-in-The Bronx condition 1947-1948, paint slightly different than conduit-only in Manhattan, 1939-1947. This makes sence because of pole, not conduit, operation. This includes single-width, two-leaf rear doors, with the small wood seat where the second pair of door-leaves would be.
TARS 631 at Seashore has LB2As installed on its K-35 controllers. It may have acquired them in Vienna. Out of service at the moment with motor bearing issues (Seashore fund 864).
I ran the TATS cars on the B ailey Avenue line at age 15, 1947, and was a regular operator of 629 at Branford *Shore Line Trolley) 1967 - 1995. No special jiggling switch, and you can inspect the K-type controller on the 629 or its mate at Seashore. The jiggling was by foot (I always used the left foot, because the operation is the opposite from the automobile brake pedal.) The controller was left on one point of power and the foot clickrd the line-swith on-and-off. A very safe procedure, because lifting the foot off completely would stop the car immediately. I put 629 into its carhouse space at least a hundred times.
I mentioned the Times Square switch-tender with his mechanically linked lever. There may have others, possibly at 125th and Amsterdam. But lots and lots of switch control in regular operation was done with the operator leaving the car with his switch iron, conduit as well as wire territory. I often did the job on fantrips, more often than not.
But Brooklyn had hundreds of power contactors. I never got to run a Brooklyn car, except at Branford. Did use the switch-iron there too, however. No switch tenders in Brooklyn.
TARS safety cars had a GE LB2A line switch controller or "jiggler" on the main controller that could be used to draw power for a very short burst (put the controller in first point and push the handle toward the "Off" arrow on the LB2A), but the brake pedal did have to be all the way down.
Did TARS use switchtenders in conduit territory? DC Transit had some power switches in conduit areas, but some of those were controlled by towers.
I should have added that one cannot apply both power and brake at the same time n any PCC (or the 1914 West Penn interurban hand, magnetic track-brake, and regnerative braking cars). PCCs have a toggel-switch that sends the right amount of line current to ground to insure the "power-on" position of the ooperator-controlled track-switch.
But Third Avenue one-man cars lacked such a circiuit. It could have been added.
For power-off, power-on switch control. safe operation requires the abilty to apply some power and braking at the same time. Most regular one-man safety-car braking systems allow this, with the left-hand usually on the power control and the right on the brake control. But Third Avenue (and Omaha and Council Bluffs) used a combination foot brake-and-deadman's control that opened the line switch with the slightest upward motion of that pedal. This did have the advantage of allowing the operator to inch inch a car forward for maximum use of carhouse space , by leaving the power controller on one-pont of power lifting the foot slghtly for fractions of seconds
RC: You have the correct explanation. Third Avenue. as far as I remember. did not use any streetcar-operator-controlled power switches. BMT-B&QT used many. At Times Square, 42nd Street and Seventh Avenue, a switch-tender was on duty 7/24 in a small heated wood green cabin on the northeast corner with a large lever to send Bs right into 7th Avenue leading to Broadway and Xs straight ahead on 42nd Streeet to 12th Avenue and the Central's Ferry.
Third Avenue did use lots of spring-switches on trailing crossovers for both regular and emergency short-turn service.
Back to the rear of the Kingsbridge carhouse:
Dave will know for sure, but looking at the photo I would conclude that the motorman controlled the switch by getting out and moving the single point with the switch iron carried in the car. The points for each track are both on the "inside" rails. The outside rails have the "mate". The street switches pull the car with the back side of the point rather than pushing them with the gauge side, so the mate does not need a point.
On switches controlled by overhead contactors there would be an access plate for the switch machine in the street, not to mention cables in the overhead wires from the switch contactors. Most overhead contactor systems change switch positions depending on whether the car is drawing power or not.
I presume the junction is the switchpoints in the foreground. I wonder if someone on the ground is controling the switch, or do the motormen somehow control it?
East of West Farms Square, where the B Boston Road and V Williams Bridge cars go left (rigiht on the photo) and the T Tremont Avenue cars go right (left on the photo). Spring or late winter 1947 photo
Short=turn cut-back point on the Boston Road line in The Bronxm with a straight-side convertable, winter configuration:
Back, lower level, of Kingsbridge Carbarn:
Upper level had wire and conduit, lower level only wire.
Go to:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Webster+Ave+%26+E+Tremont+Ave,+The+Bronx,+NY+10457,
for today's O'Brian Oval.
A favorite The Bronx photo, year 1947, Tremont Avenue at O'Brien Square, now O'Brien Oval:
The 4-track main is the New Haven from Woodlawn and GCT
Another scene behind the Kingsbridge Barn, weth part of q cuved-side, and a straight-side, work motor:
Jack May asked about Third Avenue Transit's arrangements at 145th and Lenox, so, with important help from Gary Grahl, I drew this map. Straigh side convertables, equipped for both conduit and overhead wire,h r operated both the 149th Street Crosstown, which ran on 149th in The Bronx and 145th in Manhattan, from Broadway to Southern Boulevard, and the Broadway & 145th Street line, which ran with one car every 45 minutes from Broadway and 181st Street to 145th and Lenox, requiring use of the plow-pit just to change ends.
The 207th Street - Fordham Road Crosstown X went bus a few months before Third Avenue Transit - Surface Transit planned, because of the need to repair the 207th Street Bridge. The replacement bus temporarily had a round-about route vis 225th Street and the Kingsbridge. But a few weeks before that event I photographed welding repair being made on the Fordham Road - University Avenue crossing, with two of the straight-side convertables lasted until the end of streetcar service.
Corrected caption on previous post.
And here is a utility work mork-motor adjacent to Convertables in back of the Kingsbridge carhouse:
A "Z" "180th Street Crosstown," in summer configuration at 180th St. and Webster Avenues, erly 1947:
North end of the Boston (Post) Road line, the last to use convertables, although homebuilt lightweights from abandoned Manhattan lines closed the service in August 1948, when it was one of the last four of the specifically Bronx lines to go bus. Yonkers lines continued to reach into The Bronx into 1952.
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