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RR To Alaska

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Posted by ccltrains on Friday, August 27, 2010 5:52 AM

During WW2 the government had to build the Alaska quickly due to the fear of the Japanese  targeting our coastal shipping to Alaska which would crimp our effort in the north.  A railroad can haul more than a highway, however time was the factor.  Once the road was graded trucks could immediately begin traveling the road.  If we built a railroad significant additional time would be required to lay the tracks, ballast, level, etc not to mention the additional steel that would be required which was in short supply at the time.  Also the roadway would require more earthen work (and critical time) as trains cannot climb steep grades like trucks can.

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Thursday, August 26, 2010 5:37 PM

Now for the next materials questions? Since this would have been a very military strategic RR 

1. How many 200 - 300 ton Steam Locomotives? Both line, Helpers, and  then smaller switchers?? Maybe s)ome from north western RRs built for severe winter? From what I have heard even though Steam was worked very hard during the war useage was less than 50%???

2. If not steam would all Diesels built during WW2 and maybe some diesels already working various RRs have been appropriated from lower 48 RR.to be been assigned to this RR?.

3. If steam--Water towers, water spouts including some way to insulate from severe winters, Roundhouses every 100? miles to service broken down locos. Major repair shop about half way?

4. Cooper wire for telephone & telegraph communication dispatch? A very robust wire system for reliability and protection from snow and avalanches?

5. Passenger equipment for troup movements. 1000 miles probably 24 hr trip time??

6. Maybe once RR completed need for transport and escort ships reduced?? 

7. Would be interesting if some WW2 historian could give us a figure for tonage shipped from west coast (would include Victoria,Vancouver, Prince Rupert, and Skagway) to/from Alaska and all these points over some time frame??   

8. Might have required heavier rail than 100# due to heavy military equipment???

9. Either large number of coal cars for steam or diesel fuel cars (maybe both?). Was tumbler coal deposits yet in service during this time? Also Alaska's coal??  

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Posted by samfp1943 on Thursday, August 26, 2010 1:09 PM

54light15

As far as the materials used in either a road or a railroad to Alaska is concerned, at the time the road was built it could not have cost much as it wasn't paved. It was supposed to be "cheap and cheerful" and really only intended to last the duration. I think it was finally paved in the 1970s or 80s, but I'm not sure. It was built as a gravel road by the US Army and there were some sovereignity issues regarding having American soldiers on Canadian soil.

54light15:

You might enjoy this linked pdf of the Construction of the ALCAN HWY 1942 If is fairly brief but chock full of photos and specific facts on the Construction of the Hwy.

http://web.mst.edu/~rogersda/umrcourses/ge342/Alcan%20Highway-revised.pdf

And additionally you are correct. The Canadian Army did participate and then took over the Canadian portion for Maintainence ( in Canada it is the Northwest Hwy System.

Linked here to some resources for information:  http://www.yukongenealogy.com/content/archives_database_sources.htm

FTL: "...17 Works COY Royal Canadian Engineers, who provided and maintained accommodation for the headquarters, the maintenance teams on the road and the supporting service units of the Northwest Highway System over an eighteen year period. Chapters 2 and 5 list seventy military personnel, commanding officers and civilian employees associated with 17 Works COY during this time period..."

FTL: "...The 340 th Regiment consisted of 45 officers and 1241 enlisted men who were responsible for constructing the Lower Post road in 1942. In 1943 the Regiment constructed bridges at Liard River , Nisutlin bay and Tagish Crossing and building rest camps at Rancheria River , Swift River , Morley River , and Brook's Brook.

Maintenance and construction on the Alaska Highway, 1946-1964 . 2 nd ed. [S.l.: Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers, 1964].

Location: 358.22 CAF

This history of the Royal Canadian Engineers' involvement with the construction and maintenance of the Alcan Highway highlights 1946 to 1964. The annexes list over 200 individuals involved including commanders, chief engineers, area superintendents, maintenance camp foremen, Royal Canadian Engineer officers and long service civilian employees

Me and Company ā€œCā€, by Robert P. Boyd. [ United States ]: R. P. Boyd, 1992

{The above two snippets are from the link listed above,FYI]

 

 

 


 

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Posted by Deggesty on Thursday, August 26, 2010 12:58 PM

Dakguy201
That left me confused.  Does not the weight of the displaced water exactly equal the weight of the ship? 

No, whether or not an object floats depends upon its specific gravity (by definition, that of water = 1.000); most woods have a sp. g. of less than 1, so they float naturally. The sp. g. of metals is greater than 1, so they sink, unless they are so shaped (as ship hulls are shaped) to displace a mass of water greater than the mass of the metal. However, if you add too much mass to the ship so that the total mass is greater than that of the water that the hull displaces, the ship sinks. Paul North may be able to state this more concisely than I, since he has kept up with his physics more than I have kept up with mine in the past 50+ years.

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Posted by 54light15 on Thursday, August 26, 2010 12:14 PM

As far as the materials used in either a road or a railroad to Alaska is concerned, at the time the road was built it could not have cost much as it wasn't paved. It was supposed to be "cheap and cheerful" and really only intended to last the duration. I think it was finally paved in the 1970s or 80s, but I'm not sure. It was built as a gravel road by the US Army and there were some sovereignity issues regarding having American soldiers on Canadian soil.

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Posted by carnej1 on Thursday, August 26, 2010 11:31 AM

Boyd

 How about a flying train? Now that would solve all of our problems.

 Back in the 1970's Boeing pitched the Canadian Government a proposal for a fleet of very large cargo aircraft (much larger than a C-5 Galaxy or the Russian AN-224) for use as LNG tankers transporting Natural Gas from the Northwest territories back down to civilization...

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Posted by Dakguy201 on Thursday, August 26, 2010 3:45 AM

Deggesty

Paul, this is displacement weight--how much water the ship displaces when it is empty. As it is loaded, it sinks down and displaces more water. If the weight of the water displaced is more than the weight of the vessel, the vessel floats; if the weight of the water displaced is less than that of the vessel, the vessel sinks (but you knew thatSmile) So, this does not tell you the actual weight of the vessel.

That left me confused.  Does not the weight of the displaced water exactly equal the weight of the ship? 

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Posted by Deggesty on Wednesday, August 25, 2010 10:40 PM

Paul_D_North_Jr

A typical EC-2 Class Liberty Ship weighed about 3,380 tons empty (not sure which 'type' of tons, though) - see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_John_W._Brown 

Paul, this is displacement weight--how much water the ship displaces when it is empty. As it is loaded, it sinks down and displaces more water. If the weight of the water displaced is more than the weight of the vessel, the vessel floats; if the weight of the water displaced is less than that of the vessel, the vessel sinks (but you knew thatSmile) So, this does not tell you the actual weight of the vessel.

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Wednesday, August 25, 2010 7:25 PM

blue streak 1

CSSHEGEWISCH
  Time was a major factor and priorities for strategic materials may have been another. 

Had not thought of the materials. That much steel for rails would have built a bunch (?) of liberty ships. Also the wood for all those cross ties may have not been easily harvested? 

Well, the ties could have come from all the old-growth trees in the virgin forest that would have to have been cleared for the grading and roadbed - which would also go for lumber for lineside structures, etc.

Steel for the rails ?  Well, let's see - assume 100 lb./ yd. rails - pretty good for the day, but not the PRR's 152 PS mainline stuff.  So each mile of track would need about 176 tons of rail, 30 tons of tie plates, 13 tons of joint bars, 4.5 tons of spikes, plus some bolts and misc. items such as rail anchors, etc. = 223.5 tons, so say about 250 tons of steel per mile of track, which is 25,000 tons per 100 miles of track or 250,000 tons for 1,000 track-miles, allowing for some circuitry, sidings, yards, spurs, bridges, etc.

A typical EC-2 Class Liberty Ship weighed about 3,380 tons empty (not sure which 'type' of tons, though) - see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_John_W._Brown 

So each Liberty Ship equaled about 13.5 miles of track, and 100 miles of track would have equalled 7.4 Liberty Ships, and the 1,000 miles of track would have been 74 Liberty Ships - yep, that seems like a "bunch" to me, too.  There were 2,710 Liberty Ships completed - see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty_ship - so that would have used up about 2.73% of the Liberty Ship fleet. 

Would the nation have gotten the same benefit from using the steel that way instead, then or now ?  Decide for yourself.

- Paul North. 

 

 

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Wednesday, August 25, 2010 6:52 PM

Thanks for the correction, clarification, and context.  Thumbs Up  I knew I was close, but not quite right.  It's too good a quote not to drag out from time to time, esp, when it might apply as here.  - PDN.

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Posted by ccltrains on Wednesday, August 25, 2010 4:48 PM

Paul-  The statement was "Either we have built the railroad 300 miles too long or 300 years too soon".  It was the answer to the question by William Sharon who asked Darius Ogden Mills what he thought of the Carson and Colorado railroad after an investor's inspection ride in 1881.

See the Carson and Colorado chapter beginning on page 71 of Beebe and Clegg's "Steam Cars to the Comstock".

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Posted by samfp1943 on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 4:03 PM

nanaimo73

ccltrains

The British Canadian government, which owned BC Rail prior to selling to CN was using the rail line as a development tool for BC.  They had graded the line to Dease Lake but a change in government and the down turn of the economy caused the rail line to be dropped before rail was laid.  It would not be a major project to lay the rail on the graded ROW.  By highway it is about 600 miles from the Canadian border to Dease Lake.  The highway is a more circutious route and the rail alignment could possibly be shortened to about 500 miles.

Make that British Columbian government. Ottawa was subsidizing construction of the line, and they are the ones who pulled the plug. The Dease Lake line was in sevice as far as the Minaret logging camp, but the loggers and the Pine Beetles have taken care of the trees, and it will be some time before they grow back. If a line was built through Canada to Alaska it would be from Fort Nelson, through Watson Lake, and would pass by Whitehorse well to the north. That would put it within range of the Selwyn lead zinc deposit.

http://www.selwynresources.com/en/selwyn_overview.cfm

http://www.photosbystevenjbrown.com/bcrail/northwoods/utv.html

Dale:  Thanks for sharing those links. Both are very interesting and particularly the part about the Howard Pass Project: http://www.selwynresources.com/en/selwyn_howards_pass.cfm  ( link from the selwyn linked article). 

   In another thread we had a pretty involved discussion about the potential for exploration in the B.C. and NWT areas. RWM made the statement that "minerals wanted to get to the sea". It would seem that the closest Ports would be in Canada and potentially a longer run to Alaska.  Very little has been mentioned referencing the various distances involved.

   The link about the former BCR line  to Minaret being approx 300 miles and another 300(?), [yet to be laid] up to Deese Lake. would surely put an Alaska Connection closer than it ever has been before. The distances mentioned by ccltrains  helps to visualize the distances, and with the start of the ARRC line to Delta Jct puts the link another eighty miles further to a possibility.

    Zinc and Lead also have been found with quantities of gold and silver within the same deposits. That coupled with coal deposits could concieveably kick off a railroad building efffort and help populate some of that vast area. CN's Yard and terminal at Fort Nelson would also seem to add abother option to the equation..  Makes for interesting speculation.

 

 

 


 

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 2:13 PM

CSSHEGEWISCH

Time was a major factor and priorities for strategic materials may have been another.

Had not thought of the materials. That much steel for rails would have built a bunch (?) of liberty ships. Also the wood for all those cross ties may have not been easily harvested?

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Posted by spikejones52002 on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 1:29 PM

 I would think it would take just as much time  and money to lay a roadbed as it would blacktop.

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Posted by Deggesty on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 12:43 PM

erikem

Having slogged through the 1940's issues of PSM (Popular Science Monthly) on Google Books, I can recall one article on flying cars appearing ca 1950. There were several articles predicting a large postwar surge in general aviation.

- Erik

Thanks for finding the right decade, Erik. Right after WWII, there were many predictions of wonderful changes in our lives--some of which materialized, and many that are still only dreams.

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 11:32 AM

. . . Kinda reminds me of what some notable said about a line in Nevada - I believe it was the Eureka & Palisade, or similar:

"Thsi railroad was built either 300 miles too long - or 300 years too soon !Laugh

 - Paul North. 

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Posted by nanaimo73 on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 10:15 AM

ccltrains

The British Canadian government, which owned BC Rail prior to selling to CN was using the rail line as a development tool for BC.  They had graded the line to Dease Lake but a change in government and the down turn of the economy caused the rail line to be dropped before rail was laid.  It would not be a major project to lay the rail on the graded ROW.  By highway it is about 600 miles from the Canadian border to Dease Lake.  The highway is a more circutious route and the rail alignment could possibly be shortened to about 500 miles.

Make that British Columbian government. Ottawa was subsidizing construction of the line, and they are the ones who pulled the plug. The Dease Lake line was in sevice as far as the Minaret logging camp, but the loggers and the Pine Beetles have taken care of the trees, and it will be some time before they grow back. If a line was built through Canada to Alaska it would be from Fort Nelson, through Watson Lake, and would pass by Whitehorse well to the north. That would put it within range of the Selwyn lead zinc deposit.

http://www.selwynresources.com/en/selwyn_overview.cfm

http://www.photosbystevenjbrown.com/bcrail/northwoods/utv.html

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Posted by ccltrains on Tuesday, August 24, 2010 7:33 AM

 We should keep our discussions to basic railroad facts.  Not the dribble about airplanes in the garage, tunnel to Russia, etc.  Otherwise this forum becomes a piece of junk and no body will use it.

With that off my chest lets start serious discussion on the railroad to Alaska.  The Alaska Railroad is going to build an approximate 80 mile extension from North Pole Alaska ( the city, not the top of the world) to Delta.  Their web page shows topo maps with proposed routes.  They just let the contract for the first section which includes the Tanana river bridge. I was recently in Delta and cannot see much to justify a rail line to there other than potential mining which can be a big load factor.  Hopefully they are thinking ahead to the Canadian connection.  From Delta to the Canadian border is about 200 miles.

The British Canadian government, which owned BC Rail prior to selling to CN was using the rail line as a development tool for BC.  They had graded the line to Dease Lake but a change in government and the down turn of the economy caused the rail line to be dropped before rail was laid.  It would not be a major project to lay the rail on the graded ROW.  By highway it is about 600 miles from the Canadian border to Dease Lake.  The highway is a more circutious route and the rail alignment could possibly be shortened to about 500 miles.

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Posted by erikem on Monday, August 23, 2010 11:51 PM

Deggesty

It seems to me that such was promised back in the late forties (when we still subscribed to Popular Science).

 

Having slogged through the 1940's issues of PSM (Popular Science Monthly) on Google Books, I can recall one article on flying cars appearing ca 1950. There were several articles predicting a large postwar surge in general aviation.

- Erik

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Posted by Sawtooth500 on Monday, August 23, 2010 10:52 PM
Boyd

 How about a flying train? Now that would solve all of our problems.

Invent an engine that will lift that much weight and you'll be a very very rich man :)
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Posted by Boyd on Monday, August 23, 2010 10:45 PM

 How about a flying train? Now that would solve all of our problems.

Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.

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Posted by Victrola1 on Monday, August 23, 2010 6:30 PM

The justification apparently is to reach a distant destination. Little has been said about what is between someplace and the destination.  Are there other resources along the way that could be developed to make it pay? Homesteading muskeg does not appear an option. 

 

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Monday, August 23, 2010 5:14 PM

spikejones52002

I was always wondering why they did not build the ALCAN RR instead of the ALCAN highway.

Time was a major factor and priorities for strategic materials may have been another.

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 spikejones52002 on Monday, August 23, 2010 3:35 PM

I was always wondering why they did not build the ALCAN RR instead of the ALCAN highway.

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Posted by 54light15 on Sunday, August 22, 2010 7:19 PM

There were several flying cars over the years. In the thirties was the Waterman Arrowbile, in the fifities there was a flying car maybe called the Aerocar. There was a fifties-vintage flying car at the Meadowbrook classic car show last August; I don't recall the make but it might have been an Aerocar.  I was told that it did fly and was first owned by Bob Cummings. In the seventies there was a flying Ford Pinto that used the wings of a Cessna Skymaster and its rear-mounted engine. This flew on a test flight that actually was successful until the pilot tried to fly directly to China (or Diego Garcia.) They were going to give him an award for his achievment once they scraped him off the runway.  

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Sunday, August 22, 2010 6:16 PM

tatans

RR to Alaska? and where would this railway come from? if it was to come from the United States,, it seems there is the 2nd largest country in the world between the U.S. and Alaska, called Canada. What would  be the benefit of allowing a railway to cross it's country, Canada has no truck with Alaska and is trying to establish relations with Asia. Maybe you mean a railway to Alaska across the Bering Strait from Russia?

To run a RR from the US thru Canada thru Alaska to under the Bearing Straights thru Russia to connect with the Trans Siberian RR and China's rail system would take how much capital? (maybe over $100B?). How could that much capital invested ever make a return on investment? For example to carrry the present (2010) container traffic would take at least a double track facility (even with DP probably controlled by a hard wiring vs radio) the whole way with triple track in locations that have a ruling grade over a certain amount (1-1/2%?). I ask that question because UP & BNSF transcons each already need a double track main.

Then connections would have to be improved in SE Asia for all those locations that now uses ships.  Now would it take less fuel (if diesel locomotivess used) by ship or train? 

The FRA would have to change crew rest rules in Alaska (maybe have crews on a crew car like Australia?) because the establishment of villages and crew rest locations is problematic. In fact construction towns and maintenance bases in Alaska????

 

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Posted by Deggesty on Sunday, August 22, 2010 5:25 PM

Norm48327

54light15

 Speaking of which, where the hell is the helicopter I could keep in my garage? Wasn't I promised one back in 1960? Well?

 

"Aerocar" was the word of the day back then. It was designed to fly and use the highways. Unfortunately, it never did either.

It seems to me that such was promised back in the late forties (when we still subscribed to Popular Science).

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Posted by tatans on Sunday, August 22, 2010 5:11 PM

RR to Alaska? and where would this railway come from? if it was to come from the United States,, it seems there is the 2nd largest country in the world between the U.S. and Alaska, called Canada. What would  be the benefit of allowing a railway to cross it's country, Canada has no truck with Alaska and is trying to establish relations with Asia. Maybe you mean a railway to Alaska across the Bering Strait from Russia?

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Posted by carnej1 on Sunday, August 22, 2010 9:23 AM

Paul_D_North_Jr

jeaton

Paul_D_North_Jr
Back in the late 1960's/ early 1970's when the 800-mile long Alyeska oil pipeline was being considered from the North Slope to Valdez, John Kneiling advocated hauling the oil instead by special purpose integral tank trains that would have been around 10 miles loing each. [ snip] 

1

10 Mile long trains?  I assume John had a design for high-strength drawbars.  Kneiling had many interesting concepts.  Problem was that few of the assertions that the economics were there held up to real world cost analysis. [snip]

John was an early advocate of what we now call "distributed power" to overcome that limitation, same as is done now.  Only he would have used blocks of cars, each with its own set of locomotives and fuel tenders, as well as a version of a "slug" - powered motor trucks under the next car or two - adjacent to the locomotives.  Control would have been by a train wire, instead of analog radio - the Locotrol of the day.  You could look it up . . . Whistling

I didn't know about the A. T. Kearney proposal, but it all seems plausible except for the carousel loading part.  Further, if that proposal had workable economics, then John's scheme might have had merit, too.

But all this was not only before DPUs, it was before the Tank Train, the "oil cans", ethanol unit trains, the Staggers Act, and many other game-changers and multiple actual demonstrations and performance of what railroad technology can do to haul petroleum products in large quantties for long distances.  At that time, it was just speculation, and the railroads really weren't that credible, either technologically or from a management or business perspective, so I agree with your last sentence, too.

- Paul North.

Distributed power systems did exist in an early form during the during the time frame when Kneiling was formulating his integral train concept. He references the L&Ns experimental system (which utilized a sensor attached to the front coupler of the lead mid-train unit to control the DP consists throttle settings, rather than radio remote control) in both his book and some of his articles in TRAINS. Southern and N&W were also using early Locotrol systems in the mid-1960's in revenue service..

 He makes reference to the technology in his book when he discusses how the first generation integral train would operate using existing locomotives and cars and DPU systems. It's interesting that that form of unit train has, in fact, become the industry standard ,so he was prophetic..

There is an good article in the September issue of TRAINS recounting the early employment of DPU..

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