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N&W 611 Re-Restoration?

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Posted by friend611 on Thursday, September 26, 2013 3:01 PM
See my 611 update post for information I received from the museum.
lois
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, September 22, 2013 2:35 PM

sometimes good things happen very quitly but with a very good senario?Cool

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Posted by selector on Sunday, September 22, 2013 1:03 PM

The 'stand her up' website has not been updated in quite some time.  If the news were rather promising, you'd think it would be emblazoned all over the front page so that others would feel the urge to donate as well to keep momentum.

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Posted by thomas81z on Sunday, September 22, 2013 12:26 PM
so whats the update with the funding? ?
do they have a timetable as when she will steam?
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Posted by K4sPRR on Tuesday, July 2, 2013 8:18 AM

Firelock76

In my mind it really doesn't matter just when the term "Art Deco" was coined.  What they called it in the 20's or 30's is kind of immatierial now.  As long as everyone's on the same page when we use the term "Art Deco" that's all that matters.

A bit of a corollary:  If you walked into a general store in the mid-19th Century and asked for a can of black powder the shopkeeper would have given you a blank stare.  If you asked for gunpowder he would have known just what you needed.  It didn't begin to be called black powder until smokeless powders were invented in the 1880's.  So black powder is what modern day shooters call the old  potassium nitrate-sulfer-charcoal stuff.  See where I'm going?

So if we keep it simple and call a Pennsy S1 an Art Deco masterpiece that's good enough, in my mind anyway.

And oh yeah, I want to see that other Art Deco masterpiece 611 on the mainline again!

Agree, I don't care if its Art Deco, Art Carney, or Art Linkletter...lets get'er done!

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Posted by Firelock76 on Monday, July 1, 2013 8:47 PM

In my mind it really doesn't matter just when the term "Art Deco" was coined.  What they called it in the 20's or 30's is kind of immatierial now.  As long as everyone's on the same page when we use the term "Art Deco" that's all that matters.

A bit of a corollary:  If you walked into a general store in the mid-19th Century and asked for a can of black powder the shopkeeper would have given you a blank stare.  If you asked for gunpowder he would have known just what you needed.  It didn't begin to be called black powder until smokeless powders were invented in the 1880's.  So black powder is what modern day shooters call the old  potassium nitrate-sulfer-charcoal stuff.  See where I'm going?

So if we keep it simple and call a Pennsy S1 an Art Deco masterpiece that's good enough, in my mind anyway.

And oh yeah, I want to see that other Art Deco masterpiece 611 on the mainline again!

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Posted by samfp1943 on Monday, July 1, 2013 5:39 PM

Juniatha

On Art Deco and Art Moderne read

http://antiques.about.com/od/resourcesforbeginners/a/Defining-Art-Deco-Style012213.htm

to see where it's posted - however this does not really relate to industrial design of big objects .

= J =

From Juniatha's linked site:

FTA:"...The term Art Deco wasn’t actually coined until the 1960s, so the term Moderne was used when this French style was derived in the years leading up to the 1920s. But there is a style of furniture made in America primarily during the 1930s and ‘40s we know as Art Moderne, so yes, there is a difference although the terms can be a bit confusing until you know what to look for to distinguish them.

Art Moderne, sometimes called American Moderne, tends to be bigger and bolder in comparison to Deco pieces although they were definitely an extension of that movement in design. If they could move, they’d be deemed aerodynamic with teardrop and torpedo shapes being very popular at the time,,,":

   I have no wish to split hairs as to definitions,,,I'll let the other who fave more expertise than I make those haircuts.Whistling

The era of modern designs for equipment and other goods is both  and fascinating for me.

link to a piece on the PRR S-1

   @ http://www.dieselpunks.org/profiles/blogs/sunday-streamline-14-the-big

[A paper in college made me familiar with the work of Raymond Loewy. HIs website used to contain a very colorful description from him of the passage of th S-1 at an intermediate station between Chicago and it Crstline, Ohio home terminal. ]

  I had experienced similar feelings when  I was able to see the 4501 in operating between Memphis and Corinth, Ms. I was working in Birmingham when the 611 was undergoing some testing after her rebuild and when she was on "The Grade" on the 'W" Line in North Carolina. 

 Can't wait to see the 611 back pulling her train, as she was intended to do  on the NS.

 

 

 


 

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Posted by Juniatha on Monday, July 1, 2013 3:39 PM

On Art Deco and Art Moderne read

http://antiques.about.com/od/resourcesforbeginners/a/Defining-Art-Deco-Style012213.htm

to see where it's posted - however this does not really relate to industrial design of big objects .

= J =

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Monday, July 1, 2013 10:01 AM

Obtaining the funds to restore N&W 611 to operating condition may be possible.  It will be interesting to see if there are enough funds to cover ongoing operating and maintenance expenses.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by friend611 on Sunday, June 30, 2013 11:29 PM
Recent update: the decision has been made to restore the 611. See fireup611.org for more details, as well as how to help out in this effort.
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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Monday, March 4, 2013 10:51 AM

selector

Overmod

...I must confess that when I was younger I didn't care much for the J treatment.  Boiler too big and drivers too small to look particularly fast.  I learned different when I learned better!

RME

I had the same first impressions of the J.  It didn't appeal to me for some reason. Then, one day...

Now I have one on my layout, and expect another as soon as Broadway Limited Imports gets them in March or April.  Here's one of my favourite laout photos, if a bit fanciful.

That gal was meant to able to hike her skirts above her ankles and to do a 200 yard dash. Cool

Crandell

Crandell

 

Very nice scene, but those railfans watching the train on that passing siding could get them reported!!!

I took the picture below at Shaffers Crossing in 1956 with my dad watching a J move into the service facility while two K class locomotives are in the foreground.

We got to see them in action when the N&W was operating 100% mainline steam.  Once you see one action, you can't forgot those locomotives and that great whistle sound.

CZ

 

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Posted by Thomas 9011 on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 12:18 AM

When I was living in Norfolk I took a ride on the 611 and when it was parked in Richmond they were letting people tour the cab. The 611 has one of those air operated firebox doors that opens when you push down the button on the cab floor with you foot. I accidentally stepped on that button and the firebox doors flung open and nearly gave me a heart attack. The crew chuckled and said they could turn the valve off but it was more amusing to see the peoples faces when they stepped on that button.

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Posted by cat992c on Monday, February 25, 2013 8:10 PM

Henry Dreyfuss's most famous work is what he did with John Deere from 1937-73

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Posted by selector on Monday, February 25, 2013 11:10 AM

Overmod

...I must confess that when I was younger I didn't care much for the J treatment.  Boiler too big and drivers too small to look particularly fast.  I learned different when I learned better!

RME

I had the same first impressions of the J.  It didn't appeal to me for some reason. Then, one day...

Now I have one on my layout, and expect another as soon as Broadway Limited Imports gets them in March or April.  Here's one of my favourite laout photos, if a bit fanciful.

That gal was meant to able to hike her skirts above her ankles and to do a 200 yard dash. Cool

Crandell

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, February 24, 2013 10:34 PM

There are better influences that can be quoted for the 'streamline' part of Streamline Moderne -- take a look at Jaray's upright-streamlined car (if I remember correctly, he actually patented 'streamlining' in Switzerland in the early '30s) or that great theatrical designer, Norman Bel Geddes.

One thing that caused much 'merriment' at the time was the distinction between form and function.  "Deco" proper was chastised for being ... well, decorative.  Stuff essentially glued onto older forms, or used purely as decorative elements, rather than expressing some functionality.  This was the spirit behind the Case shroudthat was put on the Commodore Vanderbilt, or the various claddings on the German high-speed steam.  There for a purpose, not just an evocation.

That changed with people like Cret and Dreyfuss, who like Loewy were industrial designers involved with evoking an image of speed -- anyone here remember that wonderful painting "Rolling Power" that doesn't even need to show the shrouding and bullet nose of the Dreyfuss Hudson to evoke the spirit.  Otto Kuhler, of course, did the right mix of evocation to get that spirit.  Where the trouble started was when 'lesser minds' got into the idea of decorative shrouding to pretend at streamlining.  My favorit 'deco' approach was the stuff on the Lackawanna -- Otto Kuhler gave me a wonderful story about how he was looking at one of those, and pretending to peer carefully under the skirts -- when asked why, he said "I was just wondering where the mechanism is to make the wings flap".  Zing!!!

I must confess that when I was younger I didn't care much for the J treatment.  Boiler too big and drivers too small to look particularly fast.  I learned different when I learned better!

RME

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Posted by Deggesty on Sunday, February 24, 2013 9:50 PM

Yes, Kevin, thank you for the pictures. I have not seen a J since the fall of 1957; for three years I would go into Bristol after supper just to take in the sight of whichever J was waiting to take the Pelican to Roanoke or Monroe. From time to time, I would be warned about the shower of cinders that was going to come out of the smokestack when the engine started to move, once the train was ready for the N&W engine to be put on. I also saw the J's when I was leaving for Chattanooga on one or another of all three trains that came in from Washington. When I came in from Chattanooga, however, I did not wait to see the J, but went on out to my college (one night, as I was walking out after coming in on the Birmingham Special, two policemen stopped and asked why I was walking at that time of the morning; I told them that I had just come in on the train, and was going out to the college--and they gave me a ride the rest of the way).

I never made notes as to which engine I saw, but I do not doubt that, in all, I saw all fourteen J's.

Johnny

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Posted by John WR on Sunday, February 24, 2013 9:13 PM

Kevin, 

Thanks for the pictures.  They give new meaning to the idea of bullet train.  

John

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, February 24, 2013 7:40 PM

54Light, I took your suggestion and Googled  the Niagara-Mohawk building.  Oh wow.  It looks like something from Fritz Lang's  "Metropolis"  or a set from a 30's  "Flash Gordon"  or  "Buck Rogers"  serial.

By the way, according to the article in "Steam Glory 3"  when the first two Pennsy T-1's arrived on the property  Pennsy enginemen nicknamed them  the "Flash Gordon"  and the "Buck Rogers",  they were so futuristic and unlike anything the conservative PRR had ever come up with, the GG-1 notwithstanding.

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, February 24, 2013 7:28 PM

John thanks for the sentiments.  We'll be waiting with great anticipation to see what happens.

Anyone remember what was on the engineer's side of the cab during 611's last run home to Roanoke?

"I am the Thoroughbred of Steam, born to run, born to be free."    And then:

"Forgive them Lord, for they know not what they do!"

I don't know who on the engine crew thought to put the words of the dying Christ on the side of  611, but I'm not ashamed to admit I choked up and got teary eyed when I saw the photo, still do as a matter of fact.  Whoever did it has the soul of a poet.  He was probably responsible for the black flags on the front end as well.

And RF&P, that old NS engineman probably WAS a bit hard of hearing, hearing loss was an occupational hazard back in the steam era.

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Posted by John WR on Sunday, February 24, 2013 5:41 PM

PS

Wayne,  

I certainly wish you and your good lady every bit of enjoyment you can possibly get from the 611.

John

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Posted by 54light15 on Sunday, February 24, 2013 4:55 PM

Harley Earle! Now, there was a man of genius! He designed the first car to ever be designed as a whole, the 1927 LaSalle. Cars had never been styled before until he came along and the 1934 LaSalle convertible (orange with black fenders and right hand drive as it was sold new in South Africa) I saw at the Meadowbrook, Michigan classic car show is as Art Deco as it gets! For architecture, the Niagara-Mohawk power authority building in Syracuse, New York is an absolute masterpiece! Google it and prepare to be amazed!

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Posted by rfpjohn on Sunday, February 24, 2013 4:02 PM

FIRELOCK76: 611 was definately a high point in my railroad career, and yes the RF&P was a great outfit to work for. I really didn't know how great until we were swallowed up. Back to the 611, she rode like a pullman. The RF&P put a 50mph speed limit on it for the excursion, no cab signals, of course, and we had to approach all hand thrown facing point switches prepared to stop. Running south on 3 track there were only three. The one regret I have is not asking to run. I was a little intimidated by the old head N&W road foreman behind the throttle. I just stood behind him and told  him the lay of the railroad. He had to go after the air a little heavy a couple of times for restrictions (I think he may have been a little hard of hearing, or maybe he didn't feel like listening to some young kid barking out orders) Our road foreman was riding back in the train and commented to me later that things got a little rough back there!

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, February 24, 2013 2:29 PM

Overmod, I'm not going to argue with you.  Maybe the term "Art Deco"  itself wasn't invented until the '60s, maybe it was prior to, but WHAT it was certainly influenced  Dreyfuss, Harley Earle, Raymond Lowey and others back in the '30s.  The design philosophy was around and influential, we can see it from cars to  trains to airplanes to the Chrysler Building.  When the term itself was adopted is immaterial. 

And you DON'T want to argue with Lady Firestorm.  DON'T make me turn her loose! 

"Nuff said.  Departing the frequency.  Out.

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Posted by K4sPRR on Sunday, February 24, 2013 2:26 PM

The list of committe members seems to be an optimistic rail oriented group, nice to see a feasibility study being done with that attitude and not a group of politically or corporate motivated nay sayers.  Hope they get positive info for this to move forward.  I seen the 611 in action and to get her back would be awsome to say the least.

For some odd reason the NYC did not save many locomotives, unlike many other larger RR's during that time.  Not like scrap metal was going to eliminate your financial woes.

When will museums start preserving diesel locomotives, when they realize there are very few left and then start to scrape the earth to get one.  I say do it now, while there are many available and at good price, maybe even free.  

 

 

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Posted by chatanuga on Sunday, February 24, 2013 1:57 PM

Hard to believe that it's been almost 20 years now since I last saw her.

Kevin

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, February 24, 2013 1:38 PM

Firelock76
ohn I asked Lady Firestorm about this.  The Dreyfuss Hudsons and the N&W  J's are Art Deco.  The Pennsy T-1 is Art Moderne.  Lady Firestorm knows these things!

Someone was being very selective in sources for the good Lady's education.

Those locomotives were not 'Art Deco' if for no other reason that the term wasn't invented until the 1960s.  (Unless she read Corb in the original French!)

  The term derives from discussion of the style in the Exposition internationale des arts décoratifs et industriels modernes of 1925 -- and is the flowery, decorative style of architecture that was popular ... well, in the late '20s and early '30s.  (And the antithesis of the International Style, or what Corb was doing at Garches or with the sugar cubes at Pessac, etc. etc. etc.)

It is NOT 'art moderne' which is better known in this context as 'Streamline Moderne' -- I have my doubts about exactly how much of the actual T1 esthetics, at least the 'later' production ones, actually fit this style, although the original two do.  I would strongly put 611's streamlining treatment in this category, but it is clearly '40s-'50s streamline moderne if you know what to look for in the handling of the details -- notably the grille across the top front of the streamlined casing.

PLEEEEEZE don't go throwing popular terms around as if they all mean the same thing!

RME (card-carrying member of the New York Art Deco Society)

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, February 24, 2013 12:33 PM

RFP John, you are one lucky, lucky man!   I've been in 611's cab on a walk through, I would have killed to ride in it.  No, not really, but you know what I mean.

And I'll tell you, the RF&P  was a class act all around.  I would have loved to have seen it in the glory days.

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Posted by Thomas 9011 on Sunday, February 24, 2013 4:15 AM

The 611 will steam again there is little doubt about that. I am sure the money is already starting to pour in. I wouldn't be surprised to see a record for fund raising, as well as a record for getting the locomotive back into running condition. Norfolk Southern seems to be itching to get steam back on the rails. This is a win win situation all around.

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Posted by rfpjohn on Saturday, February 23, 2013 8:51 PM

Whatever you call 611's style, it is one impressive locomotive. I had the privalidge of being the pilot engineer on a ferry run down the RF&P around 1983, I think. We had 23 cars in consist. The 611 marched up Franconia hill like a champ. I don't think the Governers could have held a candle to that performance. Of course, if we were to compare them on the basis of looks, those RF&P gentlemen were a handsome lot! But they were gone before my time. Anyway, yes, please bring back the 611.

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