Rather than having the computer hate me I think it is an operator err:Fat Finger Syndrome
Flintlock76Computers aren't smart, computers aren't dumb, computers are MEAN!
You can make computers of sufficient complexity act more intelligently... as long as you remember that the FSM hardware that they use is very fast, very dumb, and very literal.
Thanks
CSSHEGEWISCHComputers do not like me.
Computers aren't smart, computers aren't dumb, computers are MEAN!
Depending on their mood of course.
ccltrains Computers do not like me. The post dealing with Loewy and the original GG1 was mine. Somehow it was appended to csshegwisch's post. Hope I did not insult csshegwisch by having my comment appended to his post.
Computers do not like me. The post dealing with Loewy and the original GG1 was mine. Somehow it was appended to csshegwisch's post. Hope I did not insult csshegwisch by having my comment appended to his post.
I travelled from Italy to Germany by train in the 1970s several times and I saw Crocodiles on active service in Switzerland. They weren't the only side-rod electrics that I saw but the Crocodiles were the most common. Another thing about Switzerland, every rural station had a spur track with a boxcar or two sitting there and they all had a covered platform at one end. Another memory was crossing the Brenner Pass in 1978 where there was a steam locomotive switching freight cars in the yard at the Brenner station- I wasn't able to get a photo, damn it!
54light15How about a Swiss GG1? Or three? Awesome, I say!
Those Crocodiles are just plain cool, and I see they can still get up and GO!
But something's wrong, where's the Maerklin labels?
SD70DudeYou can tell the designers were thinking with a steam locomotive mindset: 4-6-6-4 wheel arrangement...
Later electric designs with this underframe construction (e.g. the big GN electrics of the late '40s and the original N&W turboelectric design) would in fact try motoring the lead trucks. PRR famously tested this on one of the P5s and rapidly determined it wasn't worth it.
...Spoked wheels with tires and large drivers (by diesel standards)
No dynamic or regenerative braking. - Even heavier than today's heavy AC's, yet less than 2/3 of that weight is on the drivers
[quote] Large yet cramped cabs with poor forward visibility (ok, ok, I know the centre cab was a feature to protect against crossing accidents)[/auote]No one was ever killed in a GG1 accident, even when dumped on its side at 80mph, even when running through equipment producing a cloud of flaming diesel fuel. Dohner's solution to boxcab CEM worked, and worked brilliantly, as intended.
Most of the early first-generation diesel 'experience' with hoods, on many roads, put the long hood and engine ahead of the running cab; I suspect with Union agreement.
They are streamlined electric Challengers
and just like their UP steam counterparts, they gave excellent service for many years.
ccltrains CSSHEGEWISCH If it wasn't for Raymond Loewy's styling, all of the GG1's would have looked like PRR 4800.
CSSHEGEWISCH If it wasn't for Raymond Loewy's styling, all of the GG1's would have looked like PRR 4800.
If it wasn't for Raymond Loewy's styling, all of the GG1's would have looked like PRR 4800.
The same basic form - just with riveted panels not welded panels.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
CSSHEGEWISCHIf it wasn't for Raymond Loewy's styling, all of the GG1's would have looked like PRR 4800.
That would have been cool.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
CSSHEGEWISCH If it wasn't for Raymond Loewy's styling, all of the GG1's would have looked like PRR 4800. It is reported when Loewy saw the first GG1 with its riveted body he asked what are all those bumps. All future GG1 were welded smooth bodies. The riveted GG1 is in the Pennsylvania museum at Strasburg. Unfortunally it is stored outside ans is in poor condition.
Engineers in my greater family who operated GG1's always complained about how noisy they were. I was in them several times but not while operating. The change over at Harrisburg from steam then later diesel to GG1's [and the reverse] were one of my favorite things to watch as a young boy.
How about a Swiss GG1? Or three? Awesome, I say!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubAEfdpCtys
I was in a GG1 once. I was amazed how cramped it was. Like a WW1 submarine.
Still in training.
They were cold in the winter, hot in the summer, forward visibility was limited, they were dirty drafty and had lousy seating but boy oh boy were they strong and durable. This is me in 1970 at New Haven station on train #141.
https://imgur.com/i5BK09U
https://i.imgur.com/i5BK09U.jpg
<a href="https://imgur.com/i5BK09U"><img src="https://i.imgur.com/i5BK09U.jpg" title="source: imgur.com" /></a>
daveklepper The 4-6-6-4 wheel arrangement came from their testing New Haven's EP-3s, whose 4-6-6-4 arrangement predated any steam 4-6-6-4s. Their DD-1's did show steam influence, however, but they were much earlier.
The 4-6-6-4 wheel arrangement came from their testing New Haven's EP-3s, whose 4-6-6-4 arrangement predated any steam 4-6-6-4s.
Their DD-1's did show steam influence, however, but they were much earlier.
And the NH wheel arrangement came from the earlier CUT/NYC P-motors (although they were DC).
SD70Dude Large yet cramped cabs with poor forward visibility (ok, ok, I know the centre cab was a feature to protect against crossing accidents).
Reminds me of a story about a GG1 engineer who was asked if the poor forward visibility was a problem.
He said "Naw, it's no big deal. You can't stop on a dime anyway!"
Flintlock76 Thanks for those shots Balt, they kind of reenforce what I've read about GG1's, that is, as zoomy-looking and futuristic they were on the outside they were kind of primitive on the inside, at least by present-day standards.
Thanks for those shots Balt, they kind of reenforce what I've read about GG1's, that is, as zoomy-looking and futuristic they were on the outside they were kind of primitive on the inside, at least by present-day standards.
You can tell the designers were thinking with a steam locomotive mindset.
- 4-6-6-4 wheel arrangement.
- Cast, articulated frames.
- Spoked wheels with tires and large drivers (by diesel standards).
- No dynamic or regenerative braking.
- Even heavier than today's heavy AC's, yet less than 2/3 of that weight is on the drivers.
- Large yet cramped cabs with poor forward visibility (ok, ok, I know the centre cab was a feature to protect against crossing accidents).
They are streamlined electric Challengers. And just like their UP steam counterparts they gave excellent service for many years.
Greetings from Alberta
-an Articulate Malcontent
(The obvious age on the interiors pictured notwithstanding.)
BEAUSABREThe GG1 had one of those horrible "BLAT" sounding one note horns. Shoulda copied the New Haven and had a Hancock Air Whistle (I want to find a digital rendering of the whistle so I can subsitute it on my PRR motors. I don't care about real life, in my universe, they got whistles)
We had a Hancock on one of our locos for use in the more populated areas in Lake Placid and Saranac Lake (track now gone). The FRA made us take it off because it wasn't loud enough, although that was really why we used it.
Some local residents didn't appreciate the change.
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...
Images courtsey of the NHRS Convention thread.
BEAUSABREThe GG1 had one of those horrible "BLAT" sounding one note horns. Shoulda copied the New Haven and had a Hancock Air Whistle (I want to find a digital rendering of the whistle so I can substitute it on my PRR motors. I don't care about real life, in my universe, they got whistles)
The cabs are cramped not just because of the transformer but the heavy truss structure in the cab framing. For real cramped quarters, though, go to the toilet...
What I remember of my first trip behind a GG1 was the kick in the seat of the pants when they accelerated a train. It was noticeably greater than the diesels that had led the train into Harrisburg. Similar to that of trolley buses I rode.
Can't be much worse than a camelback (Mother Hubbard).
The story I heard is that whereas the GG1 from the outside looks enormous, the two cabs and the walkway between them are rather cramped because a large transformer is located between them?
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
ccltrainsasked my father what happened to the whistle
The GG1 had one of those horrible "BLAT" sounding one note horns. Shoulda copied the New Haven and had a Hancock Air Whistle (I want to find a digital rendering of the whistle so I can subsitute it on my PRR motors. I don't care about real life, in my universe, they got whistles)
Side note, the GG1 was my dad's favorite motive power. He came from a railroading family (granddad was a railroad machinist) and worked as a steam fireman for three years after high school to earn money for college. This was 1936-39 and the Depression was still in force. I think the GG1 became a symbol of a brighter future, both for railroads and the nation. On business trips to Philadelphia, Baltimore and Boston, he would board the Pennsy at Elizabeth, NJ and it was an awesome experience to be on the platform as the GG1 thundered in, making the ground shake. I think dad had a bit of a grin as he boarded a train pulled by his favorite. He loved the GG1 so much that I got a GG1 hauled Congressional for my Lionel layout (and I KNEW it was Dad's engine)
I recall GG1s in Brunswick Green in the Sunnyside yards on Long Island when taking the train into Penn in the 1960s. In the 1970s I caught a ride with a guy on my ship and we travelled from Norfolk to New Brunswick, New Jersey where I would take the train the rest of the way. Waiting on the platform for the next Northbound train, a long train, maybe 22 coaches roared South being pulled by 2 black painted,lettered for Amtrak GG1s at a very high rate of speed. The ozone they gave off made my military haircut stand on end. I could really feel it, like being in the biggest lightning storm I've ever experienced.
I got a job as a boiler inspector with Hartford Steam Boiler in October of 1991. Their office was in Basking Ridge, New Jersey. I had to get down there to pick up the company car so I figured out how to do it by train. Taking NJT out of the Hoboken Terminal, I saw a Tuscan red GG1 sitting in the outer approach to the station. I wonder if it's still there?
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