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Question for our northern neighbors

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Posted by davidmurray on Thursday, January 28, 2021 12:54 PM

Lastspikemike
Is there another type of hockey?

 

Field Hockey, floor hockey.

 

David Murray from Oshawa, Ontario Canada
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Posted by SD70Dude on Friday, January 15, 2021 7:06 PM

Well, it's been more than a few days, but here is a link to a scanned 1941 CPR tonnage ratings book (sent to me by a friend who is good at finding these sort of things).

https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/chung/chungtext/items/1.0356958

While CP's engines are rated in % in the book, it does not appear as though that notation was ever written on the locomotive's exterior. 

Tonnage ratings for the Kettle Valley Division are found starting on page 53 of the book, which is on page 28 of the scan.  Note that even the largest engines used there are only rated for less than 700 tons out of Pentiction, this area having grades approaching 2.5% in both directions out of the Okanagan valley. 

Being from 1941, this book is from before the CPR started purchasing diesels.  But if the % rating system saw continued use it is quite possible that a 3 or 4 unit set of diesel electrics (perhaps considered a single locomotive) would be rated in the 200 or 300% range. 

Did CP renumber any of their remaining steam locomotives to make way for the large numbers of new diesels?  Multiple other railroads (including CN) did this.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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Posted by selector on Saturday, January 2, 2021 11:23 PM

I played my last floor hockey game at 49 while peace-keeping in Bosnia-Herzegovina. This would be about May, 2001. The average age of the players was probably 29-33 as a guess.

I scored twice.  Cool

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Posted by Overmod on Saturday, January 2, 2021 1:54 PM

selector
Your range of experience is showing.  That version of hockey is very popular in the Armed Forces as a form of morning PT.

But aren't an awful lot of people on PT likely to be college-age to 20s: those are still kids to him.

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Posted by doctorwayne on Saturday, January 2, 2021 1:43 PM

Lastspikemike

doctorwayne

Lastspikemike

Is there another type of hockey?

 
 
Wayne
 
I never knew that.

 
Check Overmod's link for a more comprehensive list.
 
Wayne
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Posted by selector on Friday, January 1, 2021 10:41 PM

Lastspikemike

You guys can be so funny at times.

Floot hockey is for kids.

...

 

Your range of experience is showing.  That version of hockey is very popular in the Armed Forces as a form of morning PT.

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, January 1, 2021 8:07 PM

doctorwayne
must be dozens more, too.

http://hockeygods.com/hockeys

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, January 1, 2021 7:42 PM

Horse hockey!  (Also known as 'puckey' which may have some tie-in with more familiar hockey...)

In the 1970s, field hockey was THE pre-eminent girl's varsity sport at the la-di-dah schools I attended.  If it was a boy's sport somewhere, we certainly didn't hear of it.

A parody song about the club next to Cottage, which had a 'certain type' of sportswomen in it, sung to the tune of Billy Joel's "Still Rock and Roll to Me", contained the memorable lyric "too stocky, no knockies, field hockey, real cocky, still Cap and Gown to me" -- there, too, it was decidedly NOT a male sport.

On the other hand, it was not a prim and proper Miss Florence's Dancing School sort of gameplay, either.  No Highlanders going into battle kilted were more aggressive than our high-school girls in skirts.  You would never guess from their normal deportment what warrior spirit lurked within.

We called the other kind of hockey "street hockey" and it was the proletarian version of a beastly game played by gentlemen.  I would have had no place in a typical street hockey game in any of the communities in the northern New Jersey area.  Strangely, in the days before inline skates became common, I do not remember whether the games were played skated or on foot.

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Thursday, December 31, 2020 10:57 AM

SD70Dude
The only thing I remember about field hockey (we played it for one day in high school phys-ed)

I also have only played one game of field hockey, also in a High School PE class.

The kids that moved down from up North had their day. Good for them.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by SD70Dude on Thursday, December 31, 2020 10:53 AM

The only thing I remember about field hockey (we played it for one day in high school phys-ed) is that all the sticks are right-handed.  I shoot left, so it was no fun for me.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 10:13 PM

doctorwayne
must be dozens more, too.

BEER HOCKEY!

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by doctorwayne on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 9:44 PM

Lastspikemike

 Is there another type of hockey?

 
Road hockey, field hockey, table hockey, rock 'em sock 'em hockey, must be dozens more, too.
 
Wayne
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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 8:01 PM

Lastspikemike
Still leaves the question unanswered, on both sides of the border. 

Could it be Magne-TractionTMWhistling

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Posted by gmpullman on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 6:38 PM

 

Lastspikemike
That's nothing compared to a 4-4-0 with a 70% number.

 

It would seem the Haulage Rating for a 4-4-0 would be 14,000 lbs.

 CNR_b-11-a by Edmund, on Flickr

Warm Regards, Ed

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Posted by cv_acr on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 3:57 PM

Lastspikemike
Speaking of imponderable acronyms (who was?) I wonder what the second "I" in IIHF stands for?

International Ice Hockey Federation

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Posted by selector on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 12:51 PM

Lastspikemike

...

http://www.trainweb.org/oldtimetrains/photos/cnr_steam2/three.htm

Scroll down to the photo of the CV Texas T-3-a underneath which there is a reference to t.e. 77%.

Not an original source but likely a reliable secondary source (although this webpage claims a t.e. for this locomotive of 82,620 a pretty stunning number all things considered. Maybe if you turned up the heat.....?)

...

The Texas type, 2-10-4, were large and heavy steamers, many of which produced TE much higher than 82K. The earlier Pennsy I1sa 2-10-0, an older design, produced more tractive effort than a Union Pacific Challenger, and considerably more than any Texas type, except that 2-10-4's like the PRR's J1 had boosters for lifting heavy tonnages.

So, the TE for the Texas & Pacific 'Texas type' was on the low side for that configuration when you consider that the 5011 series ATSF version had well over 100K of tractive effort, and the highest piston thrust of any 2 cylinder steam locomotive on record (219+K lbs. if I recall correctly).

[Edited to correct last figure]

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 11:04 AM

Lastspikemike
... and come up with a simalcrum of statistical proof of this association.

This is nice.  I'm waiting expectantly to see how you Canadians built a Pacific with 210,000 lb. tractive effort.  That would be a Canadian thing even better than the CF-105...

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Posted by gmpullman on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 10:22 AM

Lastspikemike
Wonder when these graphics were added

It goes back to at least 1935, the date of this photograph:

 CNR_6029_crop by Edmund, on Flickr

Lastspikemike
and by whom?

Going out on a limb here, but the guy with the brush looks guilty:

 CNR_3552_crop by Edmund, on Flickr

Apparently CNR used a method called "Power Class" or "Haulage Rating" to indicate tractive effort using the % symbol for recognition. You can see it on any of their classification book details.

http://www.trainweb.org/j.dimech/roster/rosnotes.html Scroll down to calculation of Haulage Rating.

Good Luck, Ed

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Posted by cv_acr on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 10:02 AM

wjstix

I know several used a fraction as part of it (like "24/32"), and a fraction is another way of expressing a percentage, so could be another way of saying the same thing? 

Except if you've read through this thread at all, it's NOT a percentage of anything. The "%" symbol in CN's usage is a placeholder for 000 lbs tractive effort.

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Posted by cv_acr on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 10:01 AM

Lastspikemike

The OP questioned whether this was a Canadian practice.

Actually he just said he was watching a "Canadian" video and noticed the markings, and wondered what they meant.

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Posted by wjstix on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 9:44 AM

wjstix

That wasn't a Canadian-only thing; some US railroads (U.P. for one IIRC) did it too.

 
Just to clarify, my main point here was that many railroads in the steam era had a string of small numbers and letters under the engine's number on the side of the cab. Great Northern, Southern Pacific, and Union Pacific for example. Right now, I don't which if any of them specifically used "%" as part of it. I know several used a fraction as part of it (like "24/32"), and a fraction is another way of expressing a percentage, so could be another way of saying the same thing?
Stix
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Posted by cv_acr on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 3:27 PM

Overmod

Now the thing to do is review pictures of Grand Trunk Western steam on the Internet and in books and see if they carried these numbers ... or if GTW engines acquired them if renumbered for a Canadian system.

GTW was a subsidiary of CN and generally followed a lot of CN practices, and also fit into CN's locomotive numbering system.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 2:53 PM

Now the thing to do is review pictures of Grand Trunk Western steam on the Internet and in books and see if they carried these numbers ... or if GTW engines acquired them if renumbered for a Canadian system.

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Posted by snjroy on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 10:41 AM

I checked my Morning Sun books of CP and CN, which contain pictures taken mostly in the late 50s. The vast majority of CN engines had these markings on their cabs, below the number. CPR did not seem to have these markings, at least not on the cab.

Simon

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Posted by cv_acr on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 9:45 AM

Lastspikemike

As far as the graphics on 4070 I noticed there were no such graphics on any of the photos available on the Internet. For me this begs the question: who added them and when. The why has been asked and it is suggested it originated in Canada. If so, it would be some time after the renumbering in 1957 (or whenever) and the graphics were not common practice up here judging by the complete absence of photos of same on any CPR locomotive, for example. 

It is intriguing that such numbers exist. For what purpose they would be lettered on the cab is interesting.   

You keep talking about CPR when it was CNR that did this as a regular practice.

And yeah as said by several above, the "%" marking is x1000lbs tractive effort, not "percentage" of anything.

The "S-3-g" is CN's locomotive class.

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, December 28, 2020 4:52 PM

Lastspikemike

In the Kettle Valley Railway book, pages 30-31, in the locomotive roster there's a column headed up "Cap." "%" with numbers varying from a low of 27 for a 4-4-4 to a high of 210 for a 4-6-2.

None of the photos in any of the CPR related books I have show the % number on the cab.

Which book?

Greetings from Alberta

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Posted by Overmod on Monday, December 28, 2020 3:14 PM

selector
Apparently, for CNR at least, each 1k of TE was designated as a percentage.  So, maybe in the case above, 55% = Total TE for the locomotive.

In other words, analogous to the current 'axles of power' rating for different units (as I recall, Conrail rated the SD80s as eight axles when introduced, either for the AC traction or enhanced dynamic braking...)?   EDIT -- I am advised that the 'percent sign' is just a placeholder for the '1,000 lb TE' that selector mentioned, and it doesn't mean a "percent" of some other number.  We are getting definitive confirmation in a few days.

I am told we will have expert confirmation of details of the CP system on the Kettle Valley in a few days also, from a pretty definitive source.

I was beginning to think 'percentage of weight on drivers' but that 210% threw that idea out the window.

Stix -- see what you can find for 'them other railroads'.  Perhaps one of them uses the percent sign a different way, or lists locomotive performance more directly as it would affect determining consist for a given train factor.

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Posted by gmpullman on Monday, December 28, 2020 3:02 PM

Lastspikemike
Wonder when these graphics were added and by whom?

What, exactly, are you trying to say?

 6218_Chatham-cab by Edmund, on Flickr

 

Lastspikemike
The internet says 4070 was assigned to this CN Mikado

The 4070 was the former 3734 and, as I mentioned in my first reply, was a Grand Trunk western locomotive.

Cheers, Ed

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Posted by wjstix on Monday, December 28, 2020 1:59 PM

Overmod
Stix, what UP classes did that?

I was just saying that I've seen several railroads that put a lot of "fine print" on the engine cab, often with a "%" in there representing...something. Maybe I'm thinking of one of the other "Pacifics" (Northern, Southern)?

Stix

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