QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod jruppert, surely you mean a Winton 201, not 501? There is one at the Museum of Transportation in St. Louis (in a NC) Surely the Flying Yankee is enough of a "Pioneer Zephyr" for you! Perfectly easy to arrange to restore the Model 40 at Travel Town in the Los Angeles area. Ask Sam Berliner about getting support to restore B&O #1 -- he likes boxcabs, and probably can gin up the necessary financial support to start the effort. Ask Randy Stahl if you can see the engine in his S6 run. It does run, Randy, right???
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Originally posted by Randy Stahl QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear QUOTE: Originally posted by Randy Stahl The Pair of Baldwin sharks that are stored in Escanaba, Mi. Randy Good call Randy. D&H colors? LC Yes, their still in the original D&H colors. They are not in bad shape!! Randy
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear QUOTE: Originally posted by Randy Stahl The Pair of Baldwin sharks that are stored in Escanaba, Mi. Randy Good call Randy. D&H colors? LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by Randy Stahl The Pair of Baldwin sharks that are stored in Escanaba, Mi. Randy
Remember: In South Carolina, North is southeast of Due West... HIOAg /Bill
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
QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod There's been some discussion about whether a "G" rebuilt to modern standards would still be a "G". My own initial historic-preservation 'foam' is that as long as the exterior resembles the classic locomotive (and, to an extent, the sounds are familiar) the 'insides' could be rebuilt as needed. After all, the 'real' locomotives would have received routine upgrading (and, if rebuilt in the '70s, would have had dramatically different systems -- anyone remember those lovely blue fluorescent digital speedometers fitted to some of the Reading steel MUs?) To a more 'sane' extent, you would retain the 22-notch controller, the paired 'legacy' traction motors, etc., and provide cosmetic 'shells' for the modern electrics -- you may confidently assume, I think, that the existing systems are not worth restoring to operable condition 'in kind.' (Personally, I see little difficulty in arranging multifrequency/multivoltage operation in such a 'restoration', as cost is the only real object...) For sheer fun, it's not difficult to make a G capable of 1.5x the horsepower of an AEM-7 with little technical difficulty, or construct different underframing systems with the same 'look' that feature more modern suspension (while the G had extremely good running gear, it suffered (imho) dramatically from a lack of effective main-axle damping -- at least some versions originally had 'snubbers' but these were of somewhat outmoded technology and were removed in the '50s) Now, such a locomotive would almost certainly have welded underframes, and you have to start asking whether it's the experience of the locomotive at speed, not the technical precision or 'concours' accuracy of the restoration, that's important... and, I suppose, whether that is important enough to "people who will pay to see it" to cover the cost of rebuilding and operation... Randy, I'm with you on the Sharks -- but I'm happy they've been preserved so far, and wouldn't want to even think about moving them until 100% sure they'd be preserved again in case of operational 'surprises' -- look what happened to the PAs! However, I'd paint them in the D&H lightning-stripe scheme that *would* have been selected if the revised model had been ready in time...
QUOTE: Originally posted by UPTRAIN Southern Pacific Rotary Snowplow 205. For locos: SD40-2 (ex-MP with nonm-dynamic brakes), and some ALCO, maybe a C424...some of those are still in service, but it would be neat to see some in service after their gone!
QUOTE: Originally posted by talbanese I would love to see a GG1 ride again.
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