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Unknown New Haven EMUs

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Unknown New Haven EMUs
Posted by THEKINGOFDISTRUCTION on Wednesday, February 1, 2012 5:49 PM

I found these EMUs and I snooped around other websites to see if I could find any info on these EMUs, but all found was this picture and nothing more. Anyone here have any info on these EMUs?

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Posted by MidlandMike on Wednesday, February 1, 2012 9:09 PM

According to W.D.Middleton's When the Steam Railroads Electrified (1974) p.82 they were the original MUs acquired starting in 1909 from the Standard Steel Car Company and were distinguished from subsequent car orders by the open platforms.  Edit: p79 adds that there were both motor cars and trailer cars.  Motor cars had 4 Westinghouse 175 HP ac/dc motors and were geared for 55 mph.  They were 72' long, weighed 84 to 88 tons, and seated 76 to 84 passengers.

In the book The New Haven Railroad along the Shore Line (Kalmbach, 1999)  p.21 shows a railfan excursion still using the open-ended cars in 1948.

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Posted by THEKINGOFDISTRUCTION on Wednesday, February 1, 2012 10:26 PM

That's very interesting stuff. This is like the only picture I found of these cars. How long did they last in service? And were any preserved or were all of them scrapped?

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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, February 2, 2012 4:00 AM

They lasted through WWII, and I recall seeing a train of them in Grand Central Terminal as late as 1949 on a rush hour Stamford local.  In addition to motors and trailers, there were also two combines with baggage sections.  The most frequent use of them in their last days was on the New Canaan - Stamford shuttle and the occasional E. Norwalk - Danburry shuttle.   On occasion they did mu with vestibuled cars, and I saw a photo of one with one vestibuled car on the New Canaan shutttle, usually a two-car train.   The first vestibulted emu's of the New Haven were bought in 1912 or 1914.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Friday, February 3, 2012 1:07 PM

Looking thru Middleton's book, it appears that out of the dozen Class 1 RRs that had EMUs, NH was the only one with steel open-ended cars.  There were some wooden open-ended cars built in 1903 for the predecessor of the NWP in the north Bay area, but at the time it was something more of a shortline interurban.  Even into the early SP/ATSF era they bought more wooden MUs.  When SP acquired full control, they bought steel/aluminum vestibuled MUs.

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Posted by THEKINGOFDISTRUCTION on Friday, February 3, 2012 3:13 PM

Open platformed cars especially steel ones were kind of rare by that point in time. It's good to know they still built some made of steel instead of wood. I can safely assume none of the New Haven cars were preserved in any shape or form. I hope I'm wrong.

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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, February 9, 2012 4:20 AM

None were preserved as far as I know.   The D&H had some steel, roller-bearing open-platform coaches used in Scranton - Carbondale, PA local service, steam-hauled.

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Posted by henry6 on Sunday, February 12, 2012 3:47 PM

The Lackawanna had open vestibule steel cars used in NJ commuter service on the Boonton Line to Dover, Washington and Branchville; could also be found on the morning Paper Train from Hoboken to Branchville and the evening milk train from Branchville to Hoboken bot via the Morristown line.  The cars lasted well into the EL era and can be found today on may tourist railroads all across the country.  Some ot the steel trailer cars of the MU fleet were built early in the 20th Centruy with open vestibules modified when the power was turned on.

Lackawanna timetables in mid Century showed service for "Electrified Lines and Boonton Steam Trains".  Later that was changed to "Diesel Electric" instead of steam.

In subway or rapid transit service, I remember the Myrtle Aveune El in Brooklyn with open side cars along with open vestibules into the very late 40's.

 

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Posted by DMUinCT on Monday, February 13, 2012 10:15 AM

Photos of New Haven Equipment, select "Steam and Electric Locomotives"  and Search!

http://images.lib.uconn.edu

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 3:59 AM

The open-platform trail commuter cars on the DL&W were not comletely open platform.   They did have steel members on each side of what would be the train door (with or without diaphragm) from floor to roof, giving better crash protection than other open-platform cars, including the New Haven's steel mu's, and the D&H mine worker commuter cars.   In addition to roller bearings, the D&H cars had "Harriman" arch roofs!

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Posted by henry6 on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 7:45 AM

Right, Dave, the cars designed to be closed in for MU were a little less open than the other open vestibule cars used in commuter service.  I think several museums might be surprised that  they can easily remove the steel sheeting on some of the MU trailers they got and have an open vestibule car!.

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 10:04 AM

The two posts on each end may be structural.   I would not remove them because they are a safety feature, and don't disturb the "openness" of the open platform to a significant degree.

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Posted by henry6 on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 12:32 PM

OK...but I stand corrected.  According to Taber the DL&W purchased 25 coaches which could be converted to MU trailers when needed....they were just like any DL&W MU trailer without the appliances and were not open vestibule like the Boonton Line/Steam Train suburban cars.  The Boonton cars had two posts, however, abreast the coupler and walkway to the next car...no vestibule and no diaphram but  I remember there were steel plates across the coupler and chains from car to car similar to subway cars of the time.  Pictures and details in Tabers' books.

 

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Posted by MidlandMike on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 1:00 PM

henry6

Right, Dave, the cars designed to be closed in for MU were a little less open than the other open vestibule cars used in commuter service.  I think several museums might be surprised that  they can easily remove the steel sheeting on some of the MU trailers they got and have an open vestibule car!.

Middleton's book has a picture of a DL&W train with a trailer in the lead equipped with the engineer's stand in what looks like a completely enclosed vestibule.  Were there any control trailers equipped with partly open vestibules?

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Posted by henry6 on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 4:25 PM

Yes, the vestibule rather than a cab was the control point for the engineer or motorman (depending on road).   Trailers were always on the west, our outbound, end of the train and motors or motor cars (with pans) was on the east or inbound end.  And they were paired back to back and I think needed one and one to operate.  DL&W did not have single car ability.  However, they did have odd numbers of cars per train from 3 to 13 with an extra motor car. As for vestibules, because they were vestibules, the controls were in public view when in mid train or when used for entraining or detraining (usually at Hoboken and mostly detraiing to the left platform inbound, but could be used for boarding westbound from either side.  I believe most MU's of the era were that way but modern times brought about cabs or closets inside the passeanger compartment with no vestibule thus no entry or exit. just like subway cars.  Now, new MU's and subway cars are vestibuled for motorman safety.  Push pull control cars are the same today.

 

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Posted by MidlandMike on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 7:09 PM

As a kid I used to ride the NYC and LI, and I remember with the door swung open it covered the engineers controls, although you could see them thru the window.  I don't doubt they were in public view between stops, however, I did not want to incur the wrath of the conductor by hanging out in the vestibule.

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Posted by henry6 on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 7:17 PM

Yeah, the doors opened at that vestibule to cover the controls...remember, too, the engineer carried his own reverser lever and air brake handle, so they were never "complete" controls without those two pieces in place.  And, unless the car was out of service, not in use, the doors and traps were closed in the vestibules, too, but open with traps up holding the door open in place making drafty, noisey, and narrow passage to the footplate to next car.

 

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 10:01 AM

The arrangement of the control cab depends a lot on the location of the doors.  South Shore's Insull-era MU cars had a cab with controls in the vestibule, with a door that in one position closed off the controls and allowed the side door and trap to be opened for passengers and in the other position became a wall for an operating cab.  IC's 1926 MU cars and the 1972 Highliner MU cars had a similar arrangement.  LIRR's M-1 cars and Metro-North's M-1a cars have quarter-point doors and a dedicated cab, similar to most rapid transit equipment.

Metra's bi-level coach cabs and the new bi-level electric MU cars have a dedicated cab on the upper level with wide center doors for the passengers.

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 MidlandMike on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 1:08 PM

All this has me wondering what the engineers stand was like in the open-ended NH MUs.  Obviously he was not standing on the open platform, and would have been inside the car.  Was he in his own compartment, or out in the open at the front of the car?

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 1:57 PM

I'm not sure how it was on steam roads, but the open-platform wood cars of the predecessors of Chicago Rapid Transit Co. had the motorman's cab inside the carbody.

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 daveklepper on Tuesday, February 21, 2012 4:31 AM

Also true of Manhattan and Brooklyn elevateds and the New Haven open-platform mu's.

When the IRT rebuilt some "gate-cars" into closed platform cars with mu door control, the cabs were left in place, so the motorman looked through two windows/   The BMT rebuilds (C-types and Q-types) were far more heavily rebuilt with quarter-pont doors and essentiallyi zero platform and with a new corner operator's cab.

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Posted by bigduke76 on Wednesday, February 22, 2012 4:32 AM

the myrtle av. open-platform, convertible-side el cars lasted until 1956; when part of the route was rebuilt as part of the rockaway route conversion of the old LIRR trakage.    the sides were only open in the summer;  a quite breezy ride.   and yes, i did ride the first subway train to far rockaway.

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Posted by henry6 on Saturday, February 25, 2012 11:46 AM

bigduke76

the myrtle av. open-platform, convertible-side el cars lasted until 1956; when part of the route was rebuilt as part of the rockaway route conversion of the old LIRR trakage.    the sides were only open in the summer;  a quite breezy ride.   and yes, i did ride the first subway train to far rockaway.

1956!  I wondered why I remembered seeing them, even riding them, so well.  They left later than I thought.

 

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Posted by DMUinCT on Saturday, February 25, 2012 1:44 PM

MidlandMike

All this has me wondering what the engineers stand was like in the open-ended NH MUs.  Obviously he was not standing on the open platform, and would have been inside the car.  Was he in his own compartment, or out in the open at the front of the car?

In a story published by the "New Haven Railroad Historical & Technical Association" in "The Shoreliner"  1989 issue 2, the electrification of the Stamford to New Canaan branch was covered. The line was converted  from 600 volt DC to 11,000 volt AC in 1908.  It was served by two, 2 car sets, WOOD CONSTRUCTION, open platform, MU trains.  Each power car was a Combine with one  numbered 4010 and the second power car numbered 4011.   Each had a converted coach as a trailer.   A three man crew of Engineer, Conductor, and Baggage Man ran the shuttle.   The Engineer sat inside with a large window in front of him and a side window that he could open like a steam train cab.   It does state the "wood cars" were bumped to the Danbury Shuttle with the comming of the Standard Steel Open Platform MU Cars.   The Open Platform steel cars remained in service until 1954.

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, February 27, 2012 3:51 AM

I suspect any wood construction motor car of the New Haven's in 1908 was rebuit from an existing open=platofrm steam-hauled car.   Shrotly after they wnet to Danbury, they were replaced there also.

The Myrtle Avenue el convertable gate car end of operation (the 1300's), had nothing to do with the converstion of the outer part of the Fulton Stret elevated for A-train subway operaton and connection to the old LIRR over-the-bay line to the Rockaways.   1300's stopped operating on the Fulton Line when the Lexington Avenue Elevated was abandoned much earlier.   C-type converted gate cars to quarter point doors mu doors continued on Fulton until the conversion to subway operation, but not 1300's.

 

The last Gate cars were taken out of service after the Manhattan portion of the IRT 3rd Avenue el was abandoned and only the Bronx section, 149th Street to Gunn Hill Road, remained.   This meant that the BMT "Q' cars that had been used in 3rd Avenue Thru Express service were available.   They had their roofs lowered and were transferred to the Myrtle Avenu El replacing the last gate cars.   The Q cars were the open platform BMT el cars that had been rebuilt as closed cars with quarter point doors for the 1939 Worlds Fair, and were transferred from BMT Astoria and Flushing operation to the 3rd Avenue El when the Flushing Line became all-IRT (No. 7) and Astoria had nose strips on the station platforms removed to permit through BMT steel car service (still current).   On the 3rd Avenue El the Q's replaced the last IRT gate cars and the composites that had opened the original subway.  So the Q's were the real mop-up cars against open platform operation in NYC.

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Posted by DMUinCT on Monday, February 27, 2012 8:27 AM

Quote the caption for the published picture of the wood M.U. cars:

"Osgood/Bradley / General Electric built #4011 and 4010 in 1908.   They were the only wooden 11,000-volt M.U. cars owned by the New Haven.  The cars and their ex-steam coach trailers were used on the New Canaan Branch.  Photo by F.H.W., NHRHTA Collection"

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Posted by daveklepper on Tuesday, February 28, 2012 4:59 AM

Just because Osgood Bradley built them does not mean they did not recycle some older equipment in doing so.   I doubt that the New Haven would invest in a completely new wood passenger car in 1908.   We would have to look at the construction drawings of Osgood Bradley to settle the issue.

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Posted by DMUinCT on Wednesday, February 29, 2012 11:56 AM

Jack Swanberg's definitive 600 page book "New Haven Power" that was published by Al Staufer in1988 has a chapter on NH MU cars.    The units in question are listed as "4010-4011,  Motor Combo, Wood,  Osgood Bradley, 1908, AC only.

Quote:

"For off-peak shuttle service on the 8 mile branch, two wooden M.U. cars were built by Osgood  Bradley in 1908 and equipped with Alco trucks, and with General Electric motors and electrical equipment.  With truss rods and open platforms they looked like the road's standard steam-hauled combo's, ---------     Meanwhile 1904-built open end wooden coaches 1309 and 1414 were converted to trailers with M.U. equipment, operating cabs, headlights, etc. -----"

"However in 1910,  the 4010 burned to it's trucks at Talmadge Hill, Conn., perhaps giving the New Haven second thoughts about wooden bodies for 11,000 volt cars"   The wooden 4010 was replaced with a "Standard Steel M. U." car also numbered 4010.    It also points out that wooden 4011 and the two wooden trailers were condemned and dismantled in 1935. 

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Posted by seppburgh2 on Saturday, March 31, 2012 9:34 PM

DLW had controls on both the motor and trailer cars, as these were semi-per coupled into a single unit.   The controls were open to the public when boarding.  In fact, the Motorman would take the controller key and break handle.  But, the controller was always in plan view.  I don't know if there was an interlock preventing controller handle from moving when the key was out.  One other thing done when closing down the controller station was the sent was flipped-up against the bulkhead.  This allowed then the opening of the stairs for loading.  In Hoboken, the Motorman was out the door in under 30 seconds, quick enough to be ahead of the commuters.

In later years as issues of age caught up with the units, sometime units would not MU.  Going West upgrade into Convent Station the Conductor would engage the control in one of the non-responding units and drive it along. He was going by sound and feel to know when to cut power as radio’s were not yet in common use between crew members.  The signal whistle was still “state of the art/”

I would like to add a DLW MU vestibule story here.  I attended Rutgers in Newark NJ, for by BA degree riding from Convent Station to Newark for 5 years, 1975 to 1980.  Often I had a late class and took the 6:10 "Dover/Gladstone Express"  (that is what the platform man use to call at the Newark station, almost 35 years later I can still hear his voice calling the trains.)  Often the express was a 12-car train (6 units long) and loaded full with folks coming out of NYC.   It was a standing room only a lot of nights until after Summit when folks detrain and the train split in half (front half to Dover, rear to Gladstone.)  What I learned early on was to make my way to the Dover half of the cars, then pull down the Motorman's seat as my own.  It was cold, windy, noisy and the ride of a lifetime in that vestibule!  I had my own private seat for watching the last of the twilight through the open vestibule door across from me as life passed from city to woods.  This was heaven; being on the train I loved, with the sill plants clanging between the cars, the motors whining, and the smell of ozone and hot grease with every breath.   Normally around Maple Wood the Conductor was finally able to make his way forward for checking tickets, and one time he saw me and said "don't fall out kid!" then kept on going. 

One other note, there was a long sweeping curve in the tracks before Summit, I can’t remember where anymore, that if you knew where to look, you  would see the stainless steel corner beams of the WTC aglow with the last light of sunset while all the world was framed in deep twilight.  I will forever be glad I rode that vestibule seat.

 

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Posted by henry6 on Sunday, April 1, 2012 8:49 AM

I can remember many great head end rides between Hoboken and Denville in both directions...but what I want to comment on is your last paragraph about the view from the curve east of Summit.  I had been riding those trains since 1946 but wasn't until a lte afternoon trip to Hoboken one December that I realized the veiw of NYC that can be seen as you come down the hill.  The sun is highlighting the skyline instead of flooding it as it does midday or backlight as in the early morning.  When the leaves were off the trees I would venture a guess that those riding #6 into the City had one of the best entrance views of any rail ride!

 

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