Carl, that was a really great post about a day in your job. I particularly liked where you mentioned seeing your "Friends". After that many years of doing the job, you can no doubt simply tell by looking at a car what the reporting marks will be, and on a car with a six digit number what the first three numbers will be. Unless there are a very large number of cars in that type, then you would only be able to know the first two. When you are comparing what you are seeing to printed lists, that ability would save a lot of time. It is that kind of ability that separates the veterans from the rookies.
Did you happen to notice that our posts yesterday were made at the exact same time? If that keeps up, the webmaster is going to have to start listing times down to the hundredth of a second!
Paul_D_North_Jrwhat is the significance of / what do the ''Forties'' and ''Fifties'' mean in the list that you quote above
Paul, all boxcars are not created equal. I used that example, since in western Canada in those days you saw those three types of grain boxes everywhere. In the steel boxcar building era, pre 1960's, the CPR mostly built cars in two different lengths and in the case of forty foot cars, in two different heights. Variations did exist over the years. If you can see two forty foot cars at any distance, and one of them is a Low Forty, you know it. I love looking at old pictures of CPR trains and spotting the different types.
I was quite surprised to learn in later years from both books and the internet that those Low Forties were historically significant in the development of steel boxcar design. Here is a link:
http://www.steamfreightcars.com/gallery/boxauto/cp246134main.html
I really laughed the first time I read that historians and railfans refereed to them as "miniboxes". To railroaders, they were "Low Forties". To me, a minibox was what those little toy cars made in England came in.
Bruce
So shovel the coal, let this rattler roll.
"A Train is a Place Going Somewhere" CP Rail Public Timetable
"O. S. Irricana"
. . . __ . ______
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)
@Carl. I've just been catching up on this thread. (Computer problems for a few days). I am out of breath reading your "Day in the Life" Wish I could give you 10 stars.
Thanks
mudchicken Getting ready to vent: http://www.greeleytribune.com/ARTICLE/20100610/NEWS/100619978/1001/RSS
Getting ready to vent:
DOES NOT PASS THE SMELL TEST:
http://journalstar.com/news/state-and-regional/article_0b78c1e8-7657-11df-a752-001cc4c002e0.html
(Especially on the UP Transcon)....Key information missing.
CShaveRR That is strange. Do they know for sure that the damage was caused by contact with each other and not something, say, in between the tracks? You're right, MC--our tracks wouldn't rock the trains that seriously. [snip]
I thought it might be a shifted load - trailer or container - on one train side-swiped down the side of the other. But the linked article says the damaged/ dislodged loads included 29 containers on the EB train, and 39 trailers on the WB train, which shoots that theory - a shifted load likely would have involved only a few on its train. That's also a long extent of damage for a wind gust or something else of a temporary or transient nature. Also, that was late at night, so it likely wasn;t a 'sun kink' that brought the tracks closer together. The mains appear to be a decent distance apart - maybe this happened at an OH or UG bridge where the tracks are closer together - I've seen some in suburban Phila. that are just over 12 ft. centers, in a station area where they're 'tied into' an adjacent old deck girder bridge on stone abutments with a narrow roadway underneath . . . Will be curious and interested in what the actual cause turns out to have been.
- Paul North.
This past weekend, I played Scrabble with a sister. Late in the game she announced the score was tied. I said I was going to break the tie. I had C-R-U-M-blank-I-S on my rack. I bisected a word with an E to spell CRUMMIES for 50 point bonus for playing all my tiles. She challenged because CRUMMY is an adjective. We only use the SCRABBLE dictionary to verify. Of course I was right, but the noun "crummie" and pl "crummies" is a cow with a crooked horn. Who would have known that?
Scrabble - haven't played that in ages. When I was shipboard there was a crewmember who looked like he'd have trouble figuring out which end of a power drill to hang on to. I understand he was unbeatable in Scrabble.
As noted over at the diner, grandchild #3 arrived at 10:16 this morning, all 7 lbs, 14 oz of her. All are doing well.
Time for some rest - 2 YO is out shopping with a neighbor.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Congrats on the granddaughter Larry. Seems like I keep forgetting to come in here as often, hmm. Did you ever get that phone call you allude to earlier Carl?
Dan
CShaveRR My great-aunt was the unbeatable Scrabble player in our family. She could barely read the tiles at her age, but played up until she went into Hospice and died at 98. Now my mother's the formidable opponent.
The game around our house was crib. I would visit my mother several times a month after my father passed away and play a two out of three set. We did this up until several years ago, when issues with her hands made it too difficult for her to handle cards.
She had a frustrating style, but boy it worked. I've played a lot of hardcore players who pretty much had the same winning system, but my mother played with a happy-go-lucky style that was disturbingly successful. She won more games than she lost.
I was just over looking at the Classic Trains Photo of the Day (06-17), and I had a question for Carl or anyone else familiar with old C&NW operations. The picture is of a Chicago area commuter train and the first car is a baggage/passenger combine. Was it a case of this car being available that morning, or was there a specific reason to need a baggage compartment on a commuter train? I don't believe I've ever seen a situation like this before. I hope someone has an answer. Thanks.
AgentKidThe game around our house was crib.
Is that shorthand for cribbage? Cribbage is my favorite card game.
Brian (IA) http://blhanel.rrpicturearchives.net.
blhanelIs that shorthand for cribbage?
Yes. Maybe it is a western Canadian thing, but everybody around here always called it crib.
CShaveRR [snip] Today I had a CRO trainee for a while; he is no longer a trainee. In this particular case, that's a good thing: he's now one of us!
You're the 'final test', then, Carl ? The UP leaves it up to you to decide whether they live or die - excuse me, pass or fail ? "Satisfy him or back to your bench, unworthy apprentice !"
- Paul.
CShaveRRIf I had my way, I think CROs and Conductors would all go through a course on how to read hump sheets (there's a lot of valuable information there beyond track destination and weight!) and a basic geography lesson (why would you not send a CSX car for Cincinnati to Cumberland instead? Would a car destined for Arizona go via North Platte or Des Moines? Just where is Selkirk, or Conway, or Eagle Grove, or Adams? Which railroad handles our interchange with the SouthShore?).
Good idea, Carl! The people who study the situation before they start their work can often accomplish more than if they simply look at what comes to them when it comes.
I think I have mentioned this before, on another thread, that when I was actively engaged in the production of computer chips. another man and I more or less oversaw all the work done on our shift. Before going into the fab, we would look at where each lot of wafers in process was, and each told the other about when to expect each lot that would move from one area to the other. Thus, each section would be ready to take what came to it and begin processing it as soon as it came. We were accused of cheating because we moved more product than either of the other two shifts. I do know of at least one instance in which an operator whom I relieved recorded that she had finished the process on one lot even though one or two wafers (out of twenty-four) had not yet been processed. I rather doubt that the following was deliberate, but one day one of her blond hairs found its way into the vacuum loadlock of the machine (ion implanter) and I had to call for maintenance to remedy the situation when the load chamber could not be evacuated.
Johnny
CShaveRRBut it came from Waukegan, not out west! So I looked up the record. Sure enough, the car had been bad-ordered out west somewhere, on its way east from Wyoming. Proviso first humped it on June 6 (the last day of my vacation), and sent it west to Sterling, Illinois. Sterling, naturally, sent it back to us. The next time it was humped (I didn't note when, but it wasn't while I was working!) it was sent to Waukegan. And again today, it came back to us.
zardozIs Uncle Pete still using this tactic to generate ton-miles?
Hmmm. Don't recall seeing an "M59" on the highway yet... That's a major E-W artery where I lived. In fact, we lived on that highway (well, next to it) for several years...
Trespasser fatality back home (I'm still in MD). Three AM Sunday morning. No other details. A local forum has discussion on it, but no where near as caustic as they get here.... That, and friends and family have weighed in, too. 'Nuff said.
The little one is sleeping on Daddy's chest. I held her earlier for a while. Still sorting out her schedule.
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