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High in the Sierra Nevada Mountains at the 4,000-foot level, less than a half mile from the original Central Pacific Railroad transcontinental tracks, I live in a two-story cabin that is now ensconced in the throes of Winter, despite all of the trials and tribulations this incurs.
There have been a few minor snowfalls, and a week of sub-zero temperatures which resulted in frozen pipes underneath the house and a nasty break. Since then, the snow has been occasional, but the rains fairly consistent. This video, recorded from a cell phone of all silly things, documents a Union Pacific manifest train rolling downhill towards milepost 152. Please click on each photograph to enlarge. These photographs are enlargements from stills of the video.
On point is UP 5488, a General Electric ES44AC, one of 141 such locomotives manufactured between 2005 and 2006 with 4,400 hp -- and labeled a C45ACCTE (the CTE for "Controlled Tractive Effort") by the Union Pacific.
Here, the video:
The YouTube link is here (3:27). And, as with the previous post, this video was captured by a device that I'd never thought would result in anything approaching the quality delivered -- a Samsung Galaxy Note II cellular telephone. As per normal, please click on the YouTube link for full expansion and listen with headphones.
As for the rest of the pig, the second locomotive was UP 7028, an elder GE C44 AC manufactured between 1995 and 1996 with 4,390 hp. Third in line was UP 5271, a GE C45ACCTE with 4,400 hp and UP 5281 followed in fourth place, another such unit, one of 301 manufactured.
The DPU (Distributed Power Unit) was UP 7448, another GE C45ACCTE, manufactured in 2009, also with 4,400 hp.
Even now, as I write this in my second floor loft office (with window cracked open), I can hear another UP train approaching -- approaching the detector at milepost 154.4.
Hence the name of the blog.
Take care, be safe, guard your family and your assets in 2013.
MP154
2 comments:
Great photos. Given the camera involved, the clarity and detail is impressive.
It still blows me away. No image stabilization that I know of, but when one might require a "grab" video the thing is always there.
I can't make phone calls on my Flip or my Nikon.
MP154
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