QUOTE: Originally posted by cdnlococo Dear Sir, For Looks alone AND I hear they were the Pits to work on, too. The Late Forties EMD BL2. To be believed, they had to be seen.
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
Dave Howarth Jr. Livin' On Former CNW Spur From Manitowoc To Appleton In Reedsville, WI
- Formerly From The Home of Wisconsin Central's 5,000,000th Carload
- Manitowoc Cranes, Manitowoc Ice Machines, Burger Boat
Dan
TG3 LOOK ! LISTEN ! LIVE ! Remember the 3.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Train Guy 3 The ones that catch fire.
QUOTE: Originally posted by jhhtrainsplanes QUOTE: Originally posted by Train Guy 3 The ones that catch fire. That would be a "Toaster". Toaster is a slang name for GEs. GE should have stuck to making toasters for the kitchen and not toasters for the rails.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Milenkovic What is the deal with GE's? I heard that in the early 70's GE's had maybe slightly better fuel economy but that EMD's had them beat in terms of reliability, and that the only reason the railroad put up with GE is that they didn't want EMD to have a monopoly and raise prices. I also heard that GE made an effort to go to railroad shops and give better instruction on how to maintain them -- the EMD's were what people were used to and the GE's were like "foreign cars." I also understand that GE now really has EMD on the ropes, that EMD had some stinkers in the GP50/SD50 series. But I also heard that the SD40-2 is considered the gold standard and as far as GE's of the same vintage, no one wants to talk about them. And then Amtrak retires all of their F40's and buys all GE. While I am told the GE's are easier on fuel, what was wrong with the F40's? I live in a town served by Northwest Airlines, famous for their Twin Cities Scandinavean-heritage frugality, and they are still flying 60's vintage DC-9's over my head. Sure an Airbus is lower maintenance and a lot less fuel (and they have some of those), but the DC-9's are already paid for. What wears out on a locomotive that can't be replaced, especially when new locomotives are in the multiple-million dollar sticker price?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Milenkovic I guess what I meant by my question is that GE's originally had a reputation for being unreliable and unrebuildable and that railroad only bought GE's to have a "second source" for locomotives. Lately, however, GE's seem to own the new locomotive market and Amtrak has gone from all EMD to all GE. Have GE's suddenly gotten better or does Amtrak have a lot of money to throw away?
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!!
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
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