The best part of the wigwag at the Nevada Northern RR is that it only operates when a train approaches! Lots of other cool stuff to see while there and well worth the visit.
ORNHOO tree68 There are very few on active railroads any more, if any. A couple of years ago I rode on the Willamette Shore Trolley. They had an operating wig-wag at the crossing of (IIRC) South Riverwood Road. http://wst.oregontrolley.com/
tree68 There are very few on active railroads any more, if any.
A couple of years ago I rode on the Willamette Shore Trolley. They had an operating wig-wag at the crossing of (IIRC) South Riverwood Road.
http://wst.oregontrolley.com/
Watching a couple minutes of that video, I was getting sleepy, I was getting sleepy, sleepy
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
Wig Wag at Delhi Co, October 20, 2020 as # 3 from Chicago to LA passes.
that Google link is great that tree68 put up, I looked at it too because I did not know much about them. You can find them in various museums, I know IRM-Illinois Railway Museum in Union, IL has one by their main tracks and when excursion trains are pulling out, it is activated. I do not ever remember seeing any as a kid, and noticed a lot of museums do have them. But I know the one at IRM does work, have been there a few times and enjoy watching it wave back & forth and great for pics. And you can get up close to it too or take pics with trains passing as it waves.
Several years ago I met a guy in Tampa FL area who had collected and refurbished several antique crossing signals. He had them set up on his driveway and could be activated to respond to vehicles pulling into the driveway. Pretty cool.
I witnessed several wig-wags still in operation on the Big Trees and Roaring Camp RR out of Felton, Ca. Also on the California Western RR (Skunk Train) out of Fort Bragg, Ca. Not just props. They were protecting public roads that each railroad crossed. Also at the Orange Empire Railway Museum in Perris Ca.
TexasTrainFan Wig Wag at Delhi Co, October 20, 2020 as # 3 from Chicago to LA passes.
Shock Control Wigwag crossing signals were mentioned in another thread. Never heard of 'em. Can someone tell me where they were used? When did they go out of fashion? I used to see them near Devil's Lake in south central Wisconsin when my Dad would take us to Baraboo when I was a kid. I think they were the Northwestern tracks but I'm not sure.
Wigwag crossing signals were mentioned in another thread. Never heard of 'em.
Can someone tell me where they were used? When did they go out of fashion?
Today I found out Wig-Wags apparently were not used only by railroads:
https://jalopnik.com/holy-crap-this-studebaker-taillight-may-be-one-of-the-b-1846300362
There were some [AT&SF origin?]'operational' wig-wag signals in several locations in SouthEast Kansas until sometime around 2010(?). The last ones I recall were on the SKOL line, north Of Cherryvale,Ks. { ths line was orignally, laid down as the Leavenworth,Lawrence& Fort Gibson RR, in the 1870's.
This line now runs from about South Coffeevile,Ks to Humbolt,Ks area. It was abandoned by AT&SF in 1970 or 80's(?). The line now trunkated is operated by a WATCO property, SK&OL and services cement manufacturers at [ Humbolt and Chanute.] WATCO now has a small yard and car repair facility, North of Cherryvale, and when it was opened, all the existing wig-wags went away...
Several crossings on the MoPac to the north of downtown Wichita were still equipped into the 1980s.
By the way the wigwags in Sheboygan WI were carefully removed by the Union Pacific and donated to the Chicago & North Western Historical Society. I believe the plan is to display them in some manner when/if the long-awaited archives structure for the C&NW Historical Society gets built at the Illinois RR Museum in Union IL
Dave Nelson
Ahh yes, the good old days of the wig wags....
I remember them as a child growing up in Southern California. Both Southern Pacific, and Santa Fe had a few in the L.A. area. One that comes to mind was on a Southern Pacific branch through Hawthorne, CA. Was always neat seeing them in action.
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