I'm planning a flanger and was wondering if they 1. sometimes had a plow on the front and were pushed ahead of the loco and 2. if they doubled as cabeese in the summer? Railways on shortlines, it seemed, always find ways to save $$$ and a flanger sitting in the sun all summer seems a waste.
I didn't know whether to post my question here or on the "Trains" forum but I'll see if I get a response. (plans in 1:20.3 so will need to be enlarged 148% to get to 7/8n2 or 1:13.7 (Maine 2'))
I've not heard of a flanger being used as a caboose. Usually, there's less space inside than it may seem from the outside, due to the mechanism used for adjusting the blades. Getting thrown around in a caboose was dangerous enough, without all that miscellaneous metal to be thrown against, too.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
A flanger was exclusively a maintenance of way piece of equipment. I don't think any railroad would have risked the safety of their crewmembers by mounting a flanger onto a caboose, because flangers derailed often when they hit an obstacle or encountered more snow than they could manage.
Flangers were also used to dig drainage ditches and touch up the ballast profile, so they were not used only during winter months.
I have videos of flangers being pulled by D&RGW steam engines and pushed by SP diesel engines. The SP used them on Donnor Pass to push the snow to one side and prepare the line for the rotarys if the snow was not too deep for the flanger to manage.
Only a very few had any structures . They needed the blades raised and lowered at times and built "doghouses " for the crew . Here is one link http://www.trainweb.org/mccloudrails/Equipment/MR1773.html
Here also is a link of a caboose built and used with flanger blades under it ... so YES there were cabooses with flangers under them !
http://membrane.com/bigtoys/rail/snow/misc/lhr01.jpg
http://membrane.com/bigtoys/rail/snow/misc/sp01.jpg
cacole wrote: Flangers were also used to dig drainage ditches and touch up the ballast profile, so they were not used only during winter months.
You're thinking of Jordan spreaders, a totally differnt machine. It can be used as a flanger some times I believe. The one as shown in the illustration has a caboose- like body with a flanger blade that drops hydaulically between the rails to - get this - clear the flanges. It serves no other purpose. Early ones and many narrow gauge flangers were open bodied.
Bob Boudreau
CANADA
Visit my model railroad photography website: http://sites.google.com/site/railphotog/
Oops, sorry, folks -- I was confusing a flanger with a spreader --
The video of the D&RGW I have from way back when they were running their Mudhens over the narrow gauge Gunnison Pass line shows a flanger being used to clear snow from between the rails.
The SP used spreaders to clear the snow on Donnor Pass and organize it so the rotary snow plows could get it all in one pass.