Being Crazy,keeps you from going "INSANE" !! "The light at the end of the tunnel,has been turned off due to budget cuts" NOT AFRAID A Vet., and PROUD OF IT!!
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
QUOTE: Originally posted by jchnhtfd I seem to recall reading a comment from an EMD official that the BL2 was supposed to be ugly. If true, they succeeded! But you have to admit that it has it's own unique charm...
QUOTE: Originally posted by Noah Hofrichter The two in Green Bay that eolafan mentions are the former Private locomotives that were owned by Glen Monhart(I might have spelled that wrong). He also owned the Janesville and Southeastern F unit set also at the museum up there. Both the BL2s and the F's were stored in Janesville WI, on the Wisconsin and Calumet and the Wisconsin and Southern for a while before going to Green Bay. Noah
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mark_W._Hemphill QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH QUOTE: Originally posted by jchnhtfd I seem to recall reading a comment from an EMD official that the BL2 was supposed to be ugly. If true, they succeeded! But you have to admit that it has it's own unique charm... The comment in question was made by *** Dilworth and he was referring to the GP7, in which he wanted a locomotive that would be so ugly that it would be kept out on the lines away from headquarters, where it could do real work. Dilworth's comment about "ugly GP7s" strikes me as way too clever to be taken at face value. Recall that the GP7 didn't appear until several years after Alco had begun marketing a roadswitcher. The roadswitcher in all respects was a more functional design than the carbody diesel: easier to maintain, easier to switch with, more versatile, easier to climb on and off. This was obvious. Also obvious was that EMD could have built a GP3 if it wanted, but it didn't, even though the engineering changes from the F3 were not complicated or difficult. So why not? I think it had to do with EMD wanting to protect its high profit margins, and if one looks at the corporate history, one sees that GM management wanted to reap a lot of rewards after patiently spending a very large sum over 15 years to develop and perfect its diesel-electric locomotive. GM management replaced the innovators that had built EMD with production men, which speaks volumes about what it wanted EMD to do: stop developing new products and run a factory that made lots of money. Any time one sees a big, powerful, cash-rich company decline to field a head-to-head competitor against a small, weak, impecunious competitor, one immediately suspects that the big company wants to protect the profit margin on its existing products. Moreover, EMD felt that its product was so superior to the Alco in terms of availability and operating costs (for every cent the New York Central spent to maintain an EMD, it spent 1.5 cents to maintain an Alco in equivalent service) that it didn't have to come up with a roadswitcher. And, if one is instructed by management to run a factory at maximum efficiency, the last thing a factory manager would want to do is split the production lines from one model to two different models that while mechanically and electrically identical had very different assembly steps. So one can see some irony in Dilworth's statement, as if management had instructed him, "***, gin up a roadswitcher so that Alco can't have that market to itself. We'll tell the salesmen to offer the GP7 to them at first, and then try to upgrade them to the F7. Would you help out our salesmen by making it ugly, ***?"
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH QUOTE: Originally posted by jchnhtfd I seem to recall reading a comment from an EMD official that the BL2 was supposed to be ugly. If true, they succeeded! But you have to admit that it has it's own unique charm... The comment in question was made by *** Dilworth and he was referring to the GP7, in which he wanted a locomotive that would be so ugly that it would be kept out on the lines away from headquarters, where it could do real work.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mark_W._Hemphill Looks? Operating costs? I'm not sure what you're asking.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mark_W._Hemphill You're sure it has?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Sterling1If that's true in EMD vs. Alco, then where does GE come in?
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom Didn't Mr. Monhart own an E-unit painted in ACL's gag-a-maggot purple? Does anyone know what happened to that locomotive?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Gluefinger QUOTE: Originally posted by Sterling1If that's true in EMD vs. Alco, then where does GE come in? GE wasn't a thread until 1959 or so with the U25B
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