Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding (Well would you look at that! One whole paragraph, and I'm already confused![:)]). Without making me go up to the third floor of my house to look this up, which pass did the GN use to get over the mountains? Marias or Stevens pass.
QUOTE: I thought NP went through a bankruptcy early on, allowing Hill "interests'' to aquire control of the NP. How did Hill feed off the NP land grants?
QUOTE: How did GN do it without land grants?
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal But you gotta admit, the Billy Goat symbol was pretty cool!
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 Rocky it is www.gnrhs.org/logos.htm Their range includes South Dakota www.cmzoo.org/rockymountaingoat.html GN probably had some yard goats in Sioux Falls. Where is VerMontanan ?
QUOTE: Originally posted by kenneo The SPS line between Pasco and Spokane was abandoned because the BN did not want to pay for the replacement of those huge trestles along the Snake where they climed out of the Snake to the Palouse. Until they decided to abandon, it was the Eastbound main between Pasco and Spokane and the NP main was the Westbound main.
QUOTE: And speaking of grades, it has always amazed me that the BN did not purchase the MILW between Ellensburg and Tacoma, and use it as their main stem, abandon Stampede, and relegate the GN line between Spokane and Everett to secondary status. In fact, there are several places where the BN could have used the MILW and downgraded the NP line between Terry and Tacoma.
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 Where is VerMontanan ?
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal It's simple: John Stevens stumbles across Marias Pass, and suddenly James Hill is a genius. Without Marias Pass, the GN would have been BY FAR the worst of the Northern transcons in terms of profile and alignment, worse than the Northern Pacific, worse than the Milwaukee, worse than the Union Pacific.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Hill got lucky that one time, and that plus his feeding off the NP land grants over the years was enough to carry the GN over what was undoubtedly THE WORST crossing of the Cascades via Stevens Pass. (Well, would you look at that! The whole history of the GN summed up in one consise paragraph. Betcha ya'll can't do that!)
Mark Meyer
QUOTE: Originally posted by PNWRMNM Eric, Grades count. They impact operating costs on a ton mile basis by their effect on train size holding power constant, or requiring more and more power to move a given train. As your example points out, even if power is unlimited, the strength of drawbars is not, and drawbar strength will control train size even if power does not. Mac
QUOTE: Originally posted by VerMontanan QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal It's simple: John Stevens stumbles across Marias Pass, and suddenly James Hill is a genius. Without Marias Pass, the GN would have been BY FAR the worst of the Northern transcons in terms of profile and alignment, worse than the Northern Pacific, worse than the Milwaukee, worse than the Union Pacific. Considering the source, this statement is not a surprise. "Stumble?" Marias Pass was well known by the Blackfeet Indians in the area, so the existence of Marias Pass was not much of a secret. The Rocky Mountains are an extensive chain, so it's not like the "discovery" of the pass was pure luck, he was looking in this area for a reason. And the point of such a post is ridiculous. So WHAT IF the GN had not found Marias Pass? What does that matter? The FACT is that they did, and the rest is history. But let's play "what if" just to prove Futuremodal wrong, as usual, with his statement that then "the GN would have been BY FAR the worst of the Northern transcons in terms of profile and alignment." OK....WHAT IF the GN had a crossing of the Continental Divide similar to that of the Milwaukee Road over Pipestone Pass? Assuming the remainder of the GN route to be the same (one has to have such "givens" playing "what if"), GN trains west from Minneapolis would (as now) only confronting a maximum grade of .65 percent. West of Havre to whatever-crossing-this-woud-be-that-would-be-as-steep-as-Pipestone-Pass, the grade have sections of 1 percent. Meanwhile, on the the Milwaukee east of the Divide, their first 1 percent grade would be way back in South Dakota at Summit, and west of Harlowton, the 1.4 percent "doubling" grade at Loweth. Eastbound from the Divide, the GN route would not have a grade (as it is now) over .8 percent, where the MILW had a very long climb at 1 percent through Sixteen Mile Canyon. West of the Divide, GN trains, west of whatever-crossing-this-woud-be-that-would-be-as-steep-as-Pipestone-Pass, would deal with no grade more than .7 percent westbound and .8 percent eastbound between there and Spokane. Meanwhile, on the MILW, trains would have to climb (in both directions) the 1.7 percent St. Paul Pass over the Bitterroots. Between the Twin Cities and Spokane, even playing "what if", the GN route wins hands down. West of Spokane (using this as a common point, for freight service, Spokane was really on a MILW branch), the MILW was better, but only nominally so. Both routes had a westbound 2.2 percent climb; eastbound the GN had a 2.2 percent climb, and the MILW two major hills at 1.74 and 1.6 percent. However, unlike the MILW, which had only one route, GN had the option of moving trains via their SP&S subsidiary between Spokane and Vancouver/Portland with grade in each direction of less than one percent. While the MILW didn't serve Portland until after the BN merger, the SP&S route for GN traffic can best be compared to MILW route for traffic to/from Longview, Washington, which was served by the MILW all along. In this case, GN would route traffic on the SP&S to Vancouver and north, while the MILW, having no alternative to its 2.2 percent climb over the Saddle Mountains, would then have to push it up 3 percent Tacoma Hill. In other words, since the GN had only one major hill on its westward route and the Milwaukee four, inserting another hill on the GN route isn't going to dethrone it from being the superior route. As ridiculous as the "what if" scenario proposed by futuremodal is with regard to a comparison between the GN and MILW, the "what if" of the GN and the UP is even more confusing because the UP crossing of the Continental Divide (in the Red Desert of Wyoming) is just about flat (it's in Oregon where the UP has most of the big hills), so it's difficult know where to begin here. As for a comparison between GN and NP routes "what if" GN didn't have Marias Pass and the GN subsequently being "far worse" than the NP alignment, I will leave to futuremodal to explain how, operationally, the GN route between the Twin Cities and Havre (.6 percent eastbound, .65 percent westbound) is inferior to the one percent grades encounted by the NP between the Twin Cities and Livingston at places like Peak, Jamestown, Fryburg, and Beaver Hill. Additionally, he could explain the benefits of 1.8 percent westbound and 1.9 percent eastbound grades over Bozeman Pass between Livingston and the Continental Divide as opposed to the GN's 1 percent westbound and .8 percent eastbound profile in the corresponding area between Havre and the "what if" pass (if it wasn't Marias). QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Hill got lucky that one time, and that plus his feeding off the NP land grants over the years was enough to carry the GN over what was undoubtedly THE WORST crossing of the Cascades via Stevens Pass. (Well, would you look at that! The whole history of the GN summed up in one consise paragraph. Betcha ya'll can't do that!) I'd be interested in documentation that GN ever (prior to the 1970 merger) benefitted speficially from the NP land grants. Such was never the case. As for the GN crossing of the Cascades being "undoubtedly" the worst, the doubts are only those among us non-conspiracy theorists who wonder: Well, then why is it still the main route across the Cascades and the only one in continuous use since it was opened?
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal That's roughly over 360 miles worth of reroutes over the years. 360 miles worth of wasted capital so far. That's an awful lot of cosmetic surgery needed to be crowned the "best" of the Northern Transcons. Phyllis Diller should have been so lucky. If the Milwaukee, NP, or UP had even a fraction of such reroutings available to them, any one of those roads could have easily put the GN to shame in terms of best route title. Only the CP with it's Rogers Pass projects even comes close to that level of cosmetic surgery.
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