Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.
herzog also has ballast cars where they can dump the ballast by remote control.
stay safe
joe
Deshler Ohio-crossroads of the B&O Matt eats your fries.YUM! Clinton st viaduct undefeated against too tall trucks!!!(voted to be called the "Clinton St. can opener").
.....Herzog....An important player in RR maintenance and ROW repair. Don't know what else they tackle.....
Quentin
Herzog has several business areas. MofW Contractor is a big one. They were also the operator of the Tri-Rail commuter operation between W.Palm Beach and Miami for a while although I think that contract has gone to another concern.
The GPS controlled Ballast trains are a boone to the carriers as it minimizes the required amount of track time necessary for this operation. Anything that minimizes track time for completing a necessary operation is beneficial to the carrier.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Boyd wrote:Saturday evening I saw a UP train of I think all "Herzog" open hopper cars loaded with rock or something. At least 50 cars loaded going east towards Hudson Wisconsin. Never heard of Herzog before.
IIRC, UP is removing jointed rail west of Menomonie, WI and replacing it with CWR.
I've often see Herzog cars on the UP in Kenosha WI - loading ballast at a nearby quarry.
Here's one of their trains
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=j0lMjQLnfA8
Corp website
http://www.herzogcompanies.com/
I think they do rail testing for the BNSF also. But I have seen a Herzog ballast train in the CPR main line. I can remember a Herzog employee coming to the depot one morning to ride down the main line with the track inspector. He was riding with him to find parts of the main line that needed rock and would input the location into his computer. Then the ballast train would go down the tracks and automaticaly dump the rock where it was needed and not even have to stop. I believe the train would travel between 10-20 MPH when dumping rock.
Thanks
In the last few weeks, there has been a Herzog ballast train in the Neenah area, it was headed to Green Bay the last time that I saw it.
Jared
Herzog is not uncommon on UP,they use them for a lot of M of W stuff in Tx.mainly their railgrinder... Loran is another contractor for such things..Herzog also cotracts to the TRE commuter rail in FT.Worth,TX. to do their loco maintance...
Here are some, loaded at Rock Springs with the Pink Lady ballast.
That is a cut of thirty, and the next thirty is about to get loaded. The train can be dumped faster than the loadout at Rock Springs can load it.
Herzog also has these available:
Mike WSOR engineer | HO scale since 1988 | Visit our club www.WCGandyDancers.com
CPRguy wrote: I think they do rail testing for the BNSF also. But I have seen a Herzog ballast train in the CPR main line. I can remember a Herzog employee coming to the depot one morning to ride down the main line with the track inspector. He was riding with him to find parts of the main line that needed rock and would input the location into his computer. Then the ballast train would go down the tracks and automaticaly dump the rock where it was needed and not even have to stop. I believe the train would travel between 10-20 MPH when dumping rock.Thanks
Of course they do most of BNSF's testing (Sperry & Dapco still get their shares as well), Herzog acquired all of ATSF's rail testing department and their proprietary ultrasonic rail testing technology (including what ATSF picked-up in the early 1970's from Illinois Central when they dumbsized. Santa Fe got most of their equipment and their operators - then merged them with theier audigage technology)
That laptop computer that the technician had has a GIS level GPS system in it (close enough for horsesoes & hand grenades, not survey grade precision).
The car is a highly modified deep well articulated gon fro doublestack service. The power unit is a highly modified EMD SW unit tith a new cowl and electrical cabinet. (the new builder's plate is funky- RLMW 1500A? - Relco's Hawkeye Facility built these rascals for Herzog at Albia, IA. the one I saw in SE Colorado, HZGX-174 was built on 12-22-2006, S/N RLA1003)
They move ties, pick-up scrap, clean ditches, etc.
A few more of the MPM.
They had some rip-rap loaded, for washouts to the west. There are rails on top of the well cars, so the excavator can move from car to car as needed.
By chance, did the ballast cars look like old coal gons? Herzog's high-speed ballast trains use steel coal gons, modified with ballast doors and slope sheets (cubic capacity reduced considerably).
The UP line from Milwaukee to the Twin Cities is getting quite a bit of necessary work. Just saw a bulletin about ties distributed along the tracks from Adams east for about 80 miles. That is now mostly 30-mph territory, but I suspect it won't be after the work's done.
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)
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.