Hi Everyone,
Perhaps some one can help me out. On my new layout that I am planning 10" X 13'6" There is a spot where I am going to have a lake seen. In it I want to have a submerged locomotive that due to the dificulties involved in retrieval, and the cost of such retrieval decision was to just leave it be and let it deteriorate to the elements. However since this fate is hardly worthy of a perfectly good 4-4-0 I was wondering if anyone might have an old Bachmann or Tyco 4-4-0 Junker they might be able to donate to the cause.
James.
James: I have an old Bachmann 4-4-0 that I can send you. Send me your mailing address at wimberly3@hotmail.com and I'll send it out as soon as I can. It has the tender with it.
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
Since I am singking the engine I will just strip them and send them to you.
James
James-Sent you an E-mail.
THANKS!
Hi Loathar,
I will get on it as soon as possible. I am moving into my new townhouse this weekend and I will get that part stripped as soon as I get my workshop set up. By the way would you be interested in the motor?
Sure. I can always use a spare.
Thanks
No but I read about them in Trains. Thats where I got the Idea for this scene.
Hi Jeff, Got the 4-4-0 on Saturday.
Loathar. I will get the drive shaft and motor in the mail as soon as I can discet the loco.
You all have a nice day.
Eriediamond wrote:Good grief, thats going to be one deep lake!!!!!
A little story, theres a steam engine in the Wabash river below the old NYC bridge in Terre Haute, IN. which they dump over the side during the hundred year flood back in the 20's or 30's, to keep the bridge from washing out. The story goes they were going to get it out when the river went down but couldn't, to full of mud, so they left it. When the river gets real low you can still see it from the bridge, with permision of course. So it doesn't have to be deep water, just not wourth the effort to do it.
Oh, it save the bridge and it's still used today by CSX
http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/4309
Master of Big Sky Blue wrote: Hi Jeff, Got the 4-4-0 on Saturday. Loathar. I will get the drive shaft and motor in the mail as soon as I can discet the loco. You all have a nice day. James
Cool! I really appreciate it.
Thanks James
inch53 wrote: Eriediamond wrote:Good grief, thats going to be one deep lake!!!!!A little story, theres a steam engine in the Wabash river below the old NYC bridge in Terre Haute, IN. which they dump over the side during the hundred year flood back in the 20's or 30's, to keep the bridge from washing out. The story goes they were going to get it out when the river went down but couldn't, to full of mud, so they left it. When the river gets real low you can still see it from the bridge, with permision of course. So it doesn't have to be deep water, just not wourth the effort to do it.Oh, it save the bridge and it's still used today by CSX
From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
R. T. POTEET wrote: inch53 wrote: Eriediamond wrote:Good grief, thats going to be one deep lake!!!!!A little story, theres a steam engine in the Wabash river below the old NYC bridge in Terre Haute, IN. which they dump over the side during the hundred year flood back in the 20's or 30's, to keep the bridge from washing out. The story goes they were going to get it out when the river went down but couldn't, to full of mud, so they left it. When the river gets real low you can still see it from the bridge, with permision of course. So it doesn't have to be deep water, just not wourth the effort to do it.Oh, it save the bridge and it's still used today by CSXI have my own little locomotive-in-the-water windy to spin. I don't know for sure just where I read this but I believe that it came from the pages of Trains magazine.It seems that somewhere around the turn of the twentieth century the CRI&P dumped an American Standard type steam locomotive off of the Cimarron River bridge in Central Oklahoma. This particular locomotive had, as I remember the story, been manufactured in the early 1870s and the Rock Island did not deem it to be of enough value to warrant the salvage cost; the locomotive was, consequently, abandoned at location. Eventually it became completely covered over with river sand and forgotten.Sometime in the '70s or '80s, I guess, a reporter wrote a short article in an Oklahoma newspaper about this incident; the article revealed that this locomtive was still there somewhere on the downstream side of the bridge. This revelation piqued the interest of a group of Rock Island railfans who immediately conjured up a scheme to get this century old American Standard out of the river and, hopefully, return it to (excursion) service. They hired an outfit to sonar the site and the wreck was soon identified there in the riverbed; it had drifted a little way downstream but was, in essence, exactly where it had lay for seven decades.Enter the Army Corps of Engineers at this point; they are the arbiter of navigable waterways which the Cimarron River is deemed to be at this location. They promptly put the kibosh on this whole thing; the locomotive had been there in the riverbed for so long that it had, by their definition, become, part and parcel, a virtual part of the riverbed. They denied their permission for the locomotive to be removed; to do so posed an imminent danger to the structural integrity of the bridge.It is, I reckon, there to this day. I do not pretend to understand the Army Corp of Engineer's reasoning in this matter; I have only related the story as I remember it!
Downstream is probably more of a problem for a bridge that upstream at least from a Hydrologist point of view.
And that's why you beg for forgivness instead of asking for permission!
Tilden
Tilden wrote: And that's why you beg for forgivness instead of asking for permission!Tilden
Master of Big Sky Blue wrote: Hi Everyone,Perhaps some one can help me out. On my new layout that I am planning 10" X 13'6" There is a spot where I am going to have a lake seen. In it I want to have a submerged locomotive that due to the dificulties involved in retrieval, and the cost of such retrieval decision was to just leave it be and let it deteriorate to the elements. However since this fate is hardly worthy of a perfectly good 4-4-0 I was wondering if anyone might have an old Bachmann or Tyco 4-4-0 Junker they might be able to donate to the cause.James.
I hope you're not planning to use real water (but that's another topic). Are you going to seal it in resin?
Nelson
Ex-Southern 385 Being Hoisted
No loco buried off a bridge in this one, but there's a local "Legend" about a Rio Grande L-131 2-8-8-2 caught and buried in the collapse of the original Tennessee Pass tunnel in Colorado just after the opening of the alternate new tunnel during WWII. Now, THAT would be a loco to dig out, don't you think?
Tom
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!
loathar wrote:Did you ever see that dive show on the History channel where they found two 2-2-2 steamers on the bottom of the Atlantic off the coast of NY? It was pretty cool. They were sitting up right on the bottom side by side. They figured they were about 120 years old.
Yep. I've seen them more than once. A ship sank that they aboard. They sit there pretty as you please, and in good shape too. At the time it sank, they really didn't have good technology that was capable of raising them (they are heavy). It was a large financial loss. ANd now later, it doesn't matter to most. Who knows, maybe the coast guard will say they need to stay put.
I wonder how many automobiles have fallen off and sunk?
-G .
Just my thoughts, ideas, opinions and experiences. Others may vary.
HO and N Scale.
After long and careful thought, they have convinced me. I have come to the conclusion that they are right. The aliens did it.
SteamFreak wrote: I hope you're not planning to use real water (but that's another topic). Are you going to seal it in resin?
Yeah the plan is to use one of many products avalable for modeling water to encase the locomotive in. (Since its going to be forever entumbed in epoxy/plastic/resin you know why I wanted a junk loco for this) I have also decided to include a couple divers diving on the engine maybe to evelauate the loco for possible retrieval. and since Jeff was so kind to donate the engine for this project I have decided to name the lake "Lake Wimberly"
Master of Big Sky Blue wrote: SteamFreak wrote: I hope you're not planning to use real water (but that's another topic). Are you going to seal it in resin?Yeah the plan is to use one of many products avalable for modeling water to encase the locomotive in. (Since its going to be forever entumbed in epoxy/plastic/resin you know why I wanted a junk loco for this) I have also decided to include a couple divers diving on the engine maybe to evelauate the loco for possible retrieval. and since Jeff was so kind to donate the engine for this project I have decided to name the lake "Lake Wimberly"
Cool idea. It will make an unusual point of interest on the layout, and it will be fun to see how many people spot it without being prompted. How deep is the resin going to be?
(I foresee some future archaeologist carefully chipping away at Lake Wimberly, trying to get at the perfectly preserved specimen trapped inside.)
SteamFreak wrote:Cool idea. It will make an unusual point of interest on the layout, and it will be fun to see how many people spot it without being prompted. How deep is the resin going to be?(I foresee some future archaeologist carefully chipping away at Lake Wimberly, trying to get at the perfectly preserved specimen trapped inside.)
I don't know how exactly deep its going to be. The plan is to cut out the ply wood table top, and drop it to the bottom of the 1X4 supports and then fill in the below surface contours add details sink loco and fill with water until loco is submerged. I will probably have the loco laying on its side so the water wont get too deep.
Master of Big Sky Blue wrote:Yeah the plan is to use one of many products avalable for modeling water to encase the locomotive in. (Since its going to be forever entumbed in epoxy/plastic/resin you know why I wanted a junk loco for this) I have also decided to include a couple divers diving on the engine maybe to evelauate the loco for possible retrieval. and since Jeff was so kind to donate the engine for this project I have decided to name the lake "Lake Wimberly"
jeffrey-wimberly wrote:My name immortalized in epoxy resin? Thank you, I feel greatly honored. I expect to see some great pics.
Make sure you get to cut the ribbon.
SteamFreak wrote: jeffrey-wimberly wrote:My name immortalized in epoxy resin? Thank you, I feel greatly honored. I expect to see some great pics.Make sure you get to cut the ribbon.
How about it Jeff, Up for a Trip to Wyoming?
Alex