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Painted trestles?
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Painted trestles?
Posted by
Ray Dunakin
on
Fri, Mar 10 2006 8:02 PM
How common is it for wooden trestles to be painted? The railroad I'm most familiar with, San Diego and Arizona RR, has many large trestles in the desert areas. Most of these trestles were painted a dull brownish red color. Was this done on other railroads too?
Why would they paint instead of using creosote-treated lumber? If I remember correctly, the smaller trestles I've seen were creosoted, not painted. Perhaps size was a factor?
BTW, the SD&A's wooden tunnel portals were also painted. On the interior, only the bottom foot or two of each timber was painted.
Visit www.raydunakin.com to see pics of the rugged and rocky In-ko-pah Railroad!
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Posted by
CSSHEGEWISCH
on
Sat, Mar 11 2006 10:22 AM
Anybody who remembers wooden back porches knows how often they needed to be repainted. Consequently, I would think that painted trestles would be quite rare since the extra maintenance expense would quickly eat up the initial cost difference compared to treated lumber.
The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by
Kevin C. Smith
on
Wed, Mar 15 2006 3:42 AM
After viewing the "OOPS" picture thread it struck me-that may not have been paint. It could have been some form of fire retardant. Except for the brown-red color I might have said whitewash but it could've been something similar.
"Look at those high cars roll-finest sight in the world."
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Posted by
ndbprr
on
Wed, Mar 15 2006 12:05 PM
I believe most trestles and wooden structures would have been creosoted to prevent insect attack PARTICULARLY termites. I suspect based on the railroad name it could just be covered with dust from the desert that tends toward a red color. Also dependent on the age of the photo early color films are known to have a color shift with time toward the reds so the real color may be misrepresented.
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Painted trestles?