Water Level RouteI am dragging today.
You are a dragon today? Be careful, I got Harry Potter with me!
ROAR
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
hon30critter Hi Mike, . . . . Certainly the smell of burning coal would interest a lot of modellers . . . . Dave
. . . . Certainly the smell of burning coal would interest a lot of modellers . . . .
Dave
Good morning, diners. Bacon, eggs, and black coffee, please.
I have an entire day with nothing scheduled. Layout time!
Kevin, hope you feel better today.
Mike, that's often the way it is -- coming back from vacation more tired than before.
Bill Mobilman44, I hope you check back into the diner more often We always like hearing about fellow modelers goings on.
Don, good luck back in the office. Hope the transition goes well.
Ed, everytime I see something in your posts about Euclid, I have to show my wife. She grew up there and her father worked for Addressograph. We are going to try to get there this summer sometime. She has not been back in 40 years.
Everyone else, I hope y'all have a good day today!
York1 John
Good morning!
Mobilman, your breakfast sounded like mine, except for the preserves, right down to the English muffin.
As for cows getting loose, my Mom always told me a story from when I was too young to remember. We had moved to a Long Island, New York, suburb called East Meadow. It was still under construction. It's one of those places where they said you never had to ask where the bathroom was, because all the houses were the same.
Anyway I was playing out in the yard when Mom looked out the window and saw a cow right next to me. It was a gentle milk cow, but, being a city girl, she ran outside and chased it away. We lived across the street from a large farm, and it must have wandered away. I'm glad we moved from there. That nice little house is now across the street from the rear loading dock of a large store, and he farm is a shopping center.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Good Morning Diners,
I think we finished the painting the"den". The room looks a lot brighter. It was the color of mud, now it is off white. New couch will be installed later this week.
My arms are tired from painting the ceiling, no flying for me, haha.
Water Level RouteWhen we were putting things away after getting home from vacation, we could find everything except a box of dryer sheets (the place we stayed had a washer & dryer). It was so strange as my wife remembered packing them, and one of my daughters remembered seeing them during our ride (we had plenty of snacks packed up in the car). Turns out my wife tucked them in with my model railroad purchases. I found them last night and now I have some great smelling model railroad supplies!
Hi Mike,
That's hilarious!
Having good smelling models is kind of counter to this month's Diner theme. I have often wondered why nobody has come up with DCC controlled smells. Certainly the smell of burning coal would interest a lot of modellers, but the true smell of a stock car would be very entertaining!
Or maybe not! If we did that then some idiot would want to simulate the smell of an open offal car on a hot sunny summer's day! Maybe just the burning coal!
Cheers!!
Hope I didn't spoil your lunch!
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
Attuvian1The upper windows, fatter fuselage, and shape of the middle vertical stabilizer seem to ID it as the initial version of the DC-4.
Uh.... I think you are right as when I went to the photo on line and enlarged it, it clearly says DC-4 on it in a couple places. Yeah... I cheated.
73
Ray Seneca Lake, Ontario, and Western R.R. (S.L.O.&W.) in HO
We'll get there sooner or later!
Ed,
All three of the Durkee's refineries I worked at had "hydrogen plants". Hydrogen (as you indicated) is meshed with vegetable oil to produce "shortning" (think Crisco). Each of the H2 plants had a unique feature, that being a very thick concrete circular enclosure around them.
I recall when I asked "why", I was told that "when that plant blows up, it will blow up and not out". Of course that quote is not really verbatim, for the true quote would get me thrown off the forum.
ENJOY !
Mobilman44
Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central
Mornin'
Sunny but cool here in NE Ohio
mobilman44I began working for Durkee Famous Foods (edible oil refinery) in Chicago and in 1968 got transferred to their Louisville refinery.
Part of my career at GE was making and shipping gaseous hydrogen. Some of our buyers were edible oil refineries. GE made the hydrogen that went into hydrogenated vegetable oil (Crisco).
One plant we served that made hydrogenated vegetable oil, I believe was owned by Union Camp Co. in Dover, Ohio, would require one trailer (120,000 cu. ft.) every eight hours for about four days straight — without fail! We had to make sure our hydrogen plant and the pumping station was up-to-par for these times.
PX_TPP_28 by Edmund, on Flickr
Cheers, Ed
First day back in the office after 2+ years.
I'll have my coffee Irish style as I get to listen to meetings.
BTW: good to see you mobileman.
Don - Specializing in layout DC->DCC conversions
Modeling C&O transition era and steel industries There's Nothing Like Big Steam!
Good Morning All (and welcome back Kevin) !
While I've been a forum regular for over 20 years, this is one of my rare visits to the diner. As my visit is "virtual", I'll have a couple of eggs easy over, a rasher of very crisp bacon, an English muffin with real butter and black raspberry preserves, and as I've already had my coffee, I'll have a large glass of very cold regular milk.
The reason for my visit is this month's subject - the Chicago Stockyards. I grew up on the northwest side of Chicago from 1944 - 1967 and was well aware of the stockyards - although I only drove by there a couple of times.
Know that the north & northwest sides of Chicago were totally different from the great South side (stockyard territory) and most folks stayed on one side or the other of the city and suburbs.
I began working for Durkee Famous Foods (edible oil refinery) in Chicago and in 1968 got transferred to their Louisville refinery. I finished my education (UofL) and got transferred to Durkee's "under construction" refinery just south of Joliet, Illinois.
The Durkee's refinery was on the west side of I-55 (at the DesPlaines river) and to me it was a very big project. But it didn't take long for me to realize that across I-55 was a truly gigantic construction site. Mobil Oil was building a petroleum oil refinery - the first "grass roots" refinery built in America in 100 years.
The construction of the Mobil Joliet refinery was not just impressive - it was awesome! What was once a large tract of land owned by the ATSF was now going to be the home of a "state of the art" refinery. Thankfully, Mobil hired me in 1973 and it felt like I "died and went to Heaven"!
Sorry for the long path to the point of the story.... After hiring on, I quickly became aware that the next door (south) neighbor was the new (1971) Joliet livestock yards. It - in a very small way - replaced the Chicago stockyards.
I worked at the refinery from '73 to '78, and every day there was truck after truck of livestock trailers - filled with cattle - heading down the frontage road to the yards. And on those occasional days when the wind was from the south, you knew they were there.
More than once, a steer would get loose on the frontage road and "cowboys" on horses would chase them down. At least three times I witnessed a stray cow that managed to get into Mobil's parking lot, and that was something to see.
There was a real plus (for us), in that the stockyards had a great restaurant that we visited a couple times a month. Of course you had to wipe your boots off before you entered, and once inside you were greeted with a large glass cage of rattlesnakes. Once past that, you got to your table and some of the best steaks I've ever had.
In closing, the yards shut down in 1987 due to lack of business. I had moved on long before then, ending up here in Houston by way of Dallas.
Geez, I gotta sign off now, my breakfast is getting cold.
Thank you for the hospitality,
Bill (Mobilman44)
Good morning all. Flo, coffee please. Large New York Central mug if you will.
Lion, those raspberries sure look good. I'll snack on some.
I am dragging today. For a variety of reasons (mostly vacation related) I haven't gotten nearly enough sleep for almost a week. Not going to bed early tonight either as my youngest has her first varsity soccer game tonight and it's going to be about 1.5 hrs from home. Maybe tomorrow.
When we were putting things away after getting home from vacation, we could find everything except a box of dryer sheets (the place we stayed had a washer & dryer). It was so strange as my wife remembered packing them, and one of my daughters remembered seeing them during our ride (we had plenty of snacks packed up in the car). Turns out my wife tucked them in with my model railroad purchases. I found them last night and now I have some great smelling model railroad supplies!
Mike
Good morning Diners. Tea and toast please, Brunhilda.
Well, my answer to the aircraft photograph proves I do not know much about them. I shall stick to cruise ships.
Not much going on here this morning. Eldest grandson is visiting after school.
Dawn is calling for me to help her, so will try and call in to the Diner later.
David
To the world you are someone. To someone you are the world
I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought
mikeGTWBear Can you name this aircraft ?
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
I enjoyed a peaceful and uneventful day. I am feeling better, but not up to 100% yet.
Time for me to hit the rack.
The World Is A Beautiful Place
-Photograph by Kevin Parson
Sleep well tonight everyone.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
Hello —
mikeGTWYou be right DC-4
Douglas DC-4E to be exact:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_DC-4E
The prototype (NX18100, s/n 1601) first flew, without incident, on June 7, 1938 from Clover Field in Santa Monica, California, piloted by Carl Cover. Testing issues, however, delayed the Approved Type Certificate until May 5, 1939. It was used by United Air Lines for in-service evaluation during 1939. On June 9, 1939, when the DC-4 was in Dayton, Ohio, along with Carl Cover, Orville Wright was a passenger on a flight over the city. Although the aircraft was relatively trouble-free, the complex systems proved to be expensive to maintain and performance was below expectations, especially with an increase in seating to 52 and gross weight to 65,000 lb (29,484 kg). The design was abandoned in favor of a marginally smaller, less-complex four-engined design, with a single vertical fin and 21 ft (6.4 m) shorter wingspan. This newer design was also designated DC-4, leading the earlier design to be redesignated DC-4E (E for "experimental"). In late 1939, the DC-4E was sold to Imperial Japanese Airways, which was buying American aircraft for evaluation and technology transfer during this period. At the behest of the Imperial Japanese Navy, it was reverse-engineered, becoming the basis for the unsuccessful Nakajima G5N bomber. To conceal its transfer to the Nakajima Aircraft Company for study, the Japanese press reported shortly after purchase that the DC-4E had crashed in Tokyo Bay.
Interesting stuff
Attuvian open the picture and zoom in look over the doorway
You be right DC-4
NorthBrit mikeGTW Bear Can you name this aircraft ? Possibly a Lockheed Constellation David
mikeGTW Bear Can you name this aircraft ?
Bear
Can you name this aircraft ?
Possibly a Lockheed Constellation
The upper windows, fatter fuselage, and shape of the middle vertical stabilizer seem to ID it as the initial version of the DC-4.
John
(Sorry for horning in, Bear. BTW, I read this morning of an old gent in NZ that was permanently dealt with by a local court for flying without a current med certification. Had put it off for decades as an incovenience. Dude has made international news for his intransigence.)
NAH... I was on the Constellation: It's an Aircraft Carrier!
We had favorite books when my daughter was young, too. I noticed how the story at bedtime practice became an important nighttime ritual. When the book was done, she drifted easily off to a good night's sleep.
We had a couple in town with two daughters. We noticed there were no books in their house. The parents also didn't celebrate Christmas in any way. The parents divorced, and at least one of the girls was a problem.
So, thanks to all you Mom's and Dads who read to your children every night.
And, in the spirit of this month's thread, one of my daughter's favorite books was Sheep Out to Eat.
Good morning, everyone.
I'm a little late today -- I took a friend out for breakfast and spent a long time talking.
When my daughters were young, this was their favorite book. Thankfully, the Bear is back in the diner, and all is well again. By the way, even though it was 40 years ago, I can still repeat this entire book's poetry -- that's how often we read it:
Welcome back, Bear!
The Omaha stockyards. There were served by Union Pacific, Burlington, Rock Island, Chicago & North Western, and Wabash. There may have been others:
This is the Livestock Exchange Building from the photo. Today, the stockyards are completely gone, but the building is now apartments:
Have a good day, everyone.
SeeYou190 I will announce that I absolutely LOVED the "Where's Kevin" thread, and was delighted by the creativity of the pictures. My spirits were very much improved by that thread. -Kevin
I will announce that I absolutely LOVED the "Where's Kevin" thread, and was delighted by the creativity of the pictures.
My spirits were very much improved by that thread.
JaBearI’m afraid that on discovering that the Where’s Kevin thread was deleted, which I had thought was a light hearted, and humorous way of keeping Kevin’s spirits up during his absence.
It was so frustrating to be able to follow the threads but not be able to participate.
Hello diners.
Bear, good to have you back. I wondered if that wasn't what was going on. An explanation would have been nice as to why that thread was vaporized.
Kevin must have caught that I was headed his way and knew I was ready to rough him up a bit if he didn't get his log-in straightened out! Good to have you back Kevin.
Family vacation went reasonably well. I even got a chance to head over to Colonial Photo & Hobby in Orlando. I hope what I saw was the result of the current supply chain problems. Lots of empty shelf space. That said, I did walk out of there with a few things, one of which I've been trying to get for about two years now. As mail order is all that is available for me at home, I've been striking out on Woodland Scenics foam putty I want to try on a project I'm working on. Every time I've had a big enough list to warrant paying the shipping charges on an order, nobody has had it in. Colonial had one can of it. Yes! On top of that, they had the one other product I needed (WS cut stone retaining walls) for this current project too that I was ready to place an order for when we got home. Winner winner chicken dinner! AND, I found a fence that will be perfect in this same scene that I didn't even know was available. I figured I would have to scratch build one. It was amazing that with what little they had in stock, they had three critical pieces I needed.
I'll try to check back later. Have a good day guys.
Good morning
Glad your back Bear.
https://youtu.be/iHTCOjneLws
https://youtu.be/nZoyE1B7HHA
TF
gmpullman Fight it off, Kevin! Stay well Maybe this will help lure the Bear back to us? Or this? Commissary Order by Edmund, on Flickr Bears can't say no to a log full of hunny... Cheers, Ed
Fight it off, Kevin! Stay well
Maybe this will help lure the Bear back to us?
Or this?
Commissary Order by Edmund, on Flickr
Bears can't say no to a log full of hunny...
Amtrak trains cannot use track 4. The lowest track they can access is track 5.
New Jersey Transit uses tracks 1-4 with push-pull or all electric mu units as these terminate against a will and cannot move east to Sunnyside Yard.
I dint noe ewe coud dew dat!
Nice to haf da bare back again.
Oh, well, this is a good place to place another LION.