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Scrap yards: Have them or stay away?

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  • Member since
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Posted by NP2626 on Thursday, January 1, 2015 7:21 AM

 

There must have been some type of "GLITCH" in the forum machinery, as this was a double post of my post on the previous page.

However, let me reiterate:  "Horay for Scrap Yards!"

 

 

NP 2626 "Northern Pacific, really terrific"

Northern Pacific Railway Historical Association:  http://www.nprha.org/

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Posted by Jetrock on Thursday, January 1, 2015 11:15 AM

A scrap yard near home was sufficient to inspire one of my first modeling projects, a 25-ton GE diesel in robin's-egg blue. I ended up modeling other areas. Built the roadbed for a very simple "Inglenook" style micro layout modeling the Simsmetal scrap operations (basically transferring loads and empties to and from the main) using the little GE diesel but never completed the layout--got too distracted by the main layout, and never could get the tiny 25 ton GE to run reliably enough to be a usable switcher.

 

Why is one obligated to build a full-sized scrapyard? Build it on a layout edge, just build the part next to the tracks and let the viewer's imagination fill in the rest. No different than most of the industries on most model railroads--they're almost all scaled down or scenically "off stage" because the focus of our mind's eye is on the trains. Modeling buildings in proportional dimensions would, very often, look "unrealistic" to a model railroader because the trains are so often dwarfed by the real-world industries they serve.

As to what to put in the junkyard, there are no rules. Bits from the scrap box, the kitchen, the backyard, the garbage can. Run steam and fill your scrap yard with bits of cut-up diesels!

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Posted by Steve_F on Thursday, January 1, 2015 7:21 PM

A good example (and how to) of a non rail seved scrap yard...

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=TLaq2ejAkqM

 

 

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Posted by Ray Dunakin on Friday, January 2, 2015 1:22 AM

Speaking of scrap yards, how about an industry that receives scrap? I've been reading about large mills (such as for a copper mine). These often took in gondolas full of scrap iron. Why? Because the ball mills (which crushed the ore) needed a constant supply of iron balls, as the old ones wore down, and the most cost-effective way to do this was to melt down scrap and cast their own.

All kinds of scrap could be used, including locomotives. Most of the steam locomotives from the Nevada Northern ended up in the mill at McGill, NV.

 

 

 

 

 

 Visit www.raydunakin.com to see pics of the rugged and rocky In-ko-pah Railroad!
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Posted by Southgate on Friday, January 2, 2015 4:28 AM

What time period do you model?

I don't know about the past, but modern "public" scrap yards and RR scrap yards are mutually exclusive. Someone mentioned already that RRs do their own scrapping. You get caught these days showing up at a commercial scrap yard with any RR related items, and they WILL  know them when they see them, you're in SERIOUS hot water. RRs protect their assets closely and will prosecute thieves, with full cooperation from scrap yards, who themselves have no pity for thieves.  

Now, whether a larger scrap company may have a contract for RR stuff, I don't know. After all, it has to change hands at some point between the railroad and the furnace.

Just a thought.

 

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Posted by jhoff310 on Friday, January 2, 2015 2:54 PM

scrapyards are great for modeling. Every scrap yard is different, so they can be modeled however you want to model them. They can be as simple as a heap of junk being loaded into semi dump trailers to go to a bigger scrapyard where the shredder is, to a complex one with a few building and conveyors.

The big scrapyard near me has a contract with Chrysler. If a brand new Chrysler product has a minor flaw ( Engine tick, small scratch in paint, etc..) they get shredded. The scrapyard across the street does alot of vehicles (beverage trucks, city busses etc..) as well as buys scrap from local peddlers. The 2nd scrapyard has made alot of their own vehicles with the materials brought in by peddlers and from parts off of vehicles.  That gives a great opportunity to show off your creative side...fabricate a "frankenvehicle" dedicated to working the scrapyard. The possibilities are endless.

Jeff

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Posted by NP2626 on Friday, January 2, 2015 3:49 PM

Southgate

What time period do you model?

I don't know about the past, but modern "public" scrap yards and RR scrap yards are mutually exclusive. Someone mentioned already that RRs do their own scrapping. You get caught these days showing up at a commercial scrap yard with any RR related items, and they WILL  know them when they see them, you're in SERIOUS hot water. RRs protect their assets closely and will prosecute thieves, with full cooperation from scrap yards, who themselves have no pity for thieves.  

Now, whether a larger scrap company may have a contract for RR stuff, I don't know. After all, it has to change hands at some point between the railroad and the furnace.

Just a thought.

 

 

Is thievery much of a problem at model railroad scrap yards?  I mean, if I decide to bring in a piece of junk I got from my railroad’s equipment and put it in my scrap yard, can I get arrested?  I guess living life is a risky business!   Indifferent

 

NP 2626 "Northern Pacific, really terrific"

Northern Pacific Railway Historical Association:  http://www.nprha.org/

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Posted by gmpullman on Friday, January 2, 2015 3:54 PM

Quite a bit of the traffic on my layout is generated by the steel industry. I have a coal mine, Hulett ore unloaders, blast furnace, rolling mill and electric furnace and, yes, a scrap yard.

This isn't a recent photo (I'll have to work on that!) I'm still working out some details here.

I have to make exception to the idea that railroads did ALL their scrapping and you would never see a steam locomotive in a scrap yard.

I have a detailed roster in front of me showing the disposition of only the Pennsylvania Railroad's J class, numbering 125 locomotives only THREE were scrapped by the PRR at Altoona. The rest went to any one of these other companies:

Summer & Co.; Southwest Steel Corp.;LaClede Steel Co.; The Deitch Co. or Luntz Iron & Steel Co.

We were exporting scrap steel to Japan up until Roosevelt slapped an embargo, effective October 16, 1940 “on all exports of scrap iron and steel to destinations other than Britain and the nations of the Western Hemisphere.”

I rember being at a Luntz scrap yard in Ashtabula, Oh. back in the 1970s and there was four tracks packed solid with P70s, MP54s and old NYCRR commuter cars and probably 2 dozen cars from PRR's Blue Ribbon Fleet.

All through the 1960s It seemed like every issue of Trains Magazine had photos of steam locomotives being cut up in different scrap yards.  

So I'd say it would be pretty safe to have a steam locomotive or two in your scrap yard. I'm looking for my copy of a Ron Zeil book that had more information about the scrapping of steam through the '50s and '60s.

Tragically, one of the most recent scrappings of a steam locomotive occurred in July of 1987 at Blue Island, Ill. The GTW 5629 is a sad story of the legal system (and others involved) gone wrong.

http://www.steamlocomotive.com/union/gtw5629-beck1.jpg

Happy Modeling, Ed

 

 

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Posted by NittanyLion on Friday, January 2, 2015 6:13 PM

http://binged.it/1rM9akM

A railcar scrapper in the Pittsburgh area.  Notice that the place is ENORMOUS.

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, January 2, 2015 6:27 PM

"All along the southbound odyssey the train pulls out at Kankakee
And rolls along past houses, farms and fields
Passin' trains that have no names and freight yards full of old black men
And the graveyards of the rusted automobiles"

That stanza of my favorite railroad song ends with my favorite line of that song.  I think of it every time I see a scrapyard of old cars and trucks.  How could I not model that?

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by rogertra on Friday, January 2, 2015 8:08 PM

Cheers

Roger T.

Home of the late Great Eastern Railway see: - http://www.greateasternrailway.com

For more photos of the late GER see: - http://s94.photobucket.com/albums/l99/rogertra/Great_Eastern/

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Posted by jsanchez on Friday, January 2, 2015 11:10 PM

One place I have seen scrap railroad equipment is Naporano Iron and Metal in Newark, New Jersey. I have seen them scrap everything from  boxcars, containers, locomotives, buses, subway cars, if it is big these folks can scap it. They ship out  and receive by rail.  They are currently served by Conrail Shared Assets.

James Sanchez

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Posted by Speaking clock on Sunday, August 30, 2015 11:19 AM

MisterBeasley

"All along the southbound odyssey the train pulls out at Kankakee
And rolls along past houses, farms and fields
Passin' trains that have no names and freight yards full of old black men
And the graveyards of the rusted automobiles"

That stanza of my favorite railroad song ends with my favorite line of that song.  I think of it every time I see a scrapyard of old cars and trucks.  How could I not model that?

 

arulo guthries city of New Orleans is a great song, true country.

 

here's an update To answer a few questions.

 

insly ships outbound loads of processed scrap to Middletown's very own AK steel (via NS), who  takes inbound loads of scrap, and ships outbound loads of finished coils. Those steel coils are shipped to the auto plant in Indiana Via the indiana and Ohio.

the scrapyard has a small security shack and a wooden fence. It has an old clawbucket crane thing (the machine that replaced steam shovels) to load the gons. there is An acess road for the trucks that send in scrap.

 

On some occasions. Something big like an old transformer is shipped in by rail on a 4 truck flatcar.

the crane thing has replaced the house engine. (Too big for a corner of a 4x8) however, The crane moves the Gons now. The plant is switched by an sw1500, or one of the Alcos, as the 1500 is used for the new largest customer, a feed mill that takes boxcars.

Oh, and an old jet fuel tank from model power holds the oils. 

insly's : logically constructed for a logical world.

 

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Posted by vsmith on Sunday, August 30, 2015 1:29 PM
Scrap yards are a great way to use left over stuff instead of throwing them out.

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by superbe on Sunday, August 30, 2015 4:44 PM

With limited space the art of compression comes into play. The idea is that you create the illiusion of what is being modeled. If you look at a scrap yard with a siding you assume it is justified or it wouldn't be there. Conversely some of the industries modeled in reality don't have enough track and we "look" the other way. Once again if it looks good to the modler then it's OK.

Just my  

Bob

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Posted by DSchmitt on Sunday, August 30, 2015 7:43 PM

There used to be a railroad car scrap yard in the southwest quadrant of the intersection of Highway 65 (Now Sheridan Lincoln Blvd, since Lincoln Bypass built to the west).  On the west side of the property was a line of old Western Pacific boxcars (5 or 6) apparently used for storage.   The east side was bounded by the railroad tracks.  There was one spur that ran parallel to the railroad into a car burner.  The car burner was a metal building which looked like it was made from scrap sheets. Non metal parts were burned off the cars in it. I saw it in operation at night once.  It was spectacular with flames shooting out from every joint.

I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.

I don't have a leg to stand on.

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Posted by farrellaa on Sunday, August 30, 2015 9:39 PM

Now this is a scene that you  won't see very often; a Big Boy going to the scrap yard. I have a small scrap yard on my layout (under construction now) but it  wouldn't handle this 'piece of junk'.

  -Bob

Life is what happens while you are making other plans!

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Posted by DSchmitt on Thursday, September 3, 2015 9:17 AM

DSchmitt

There used to be a railroad car scrap yard in the southwest quadrant of the intersection of Highway 65 (Now Sheridan Lincoln Blvd, since Lincoln Bypass built to the west).  On the west side of the property was a line of old Western Pacific boxcars (5 or 6) apparently used for storage.   The east side was bounded by the railroad tracks.  There was one spur that ran parallel to the railroad into a car burner.  The car burner was a metal building which looked like it was made from scrap sheets. Non metal parts were burned off the cars in it. I saw it in operation at night once.  It was spectacular with flames shooting out from every joint.

 

I just looked at the area on Google Earth. Was mistaken about location.  Actually one intersection north at Chamberlain Road.   The site was cleaned up before 1993.  However the remains of a siding and apparently two spurs can be seen in 2015.  It occupied an area of approximately 250' x 1000'.  There has been a landscape materials company on part of the site since 2006-07

I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.

I don't have a leg to stand on.

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