Dedicated to all the hard-working railroaders who have ever hogged an engine, thrown a switch, walked a train, welded a rail, pulled a tie, fixed a circuit, replaced a knuckle, poured fuel or sand, repaired, hostled, cleaned or cursed at a locomotive or a car in the dead of night, in the rain, in the snow, in the glazing heat. You keep America moving, now more than ever.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Westbound Double Stack Through Colfax
Whilst, any more, double-stack traffic over Donner is not quite the stunning rage it was since November of 2009 -- there were two unique aspects of this train worthy of documentation.
To begin, these were the very first photos taken with my new Nikon Coolpix P100. Therefore, antsy to use the camera, I rushed to photograph the first train I found. And this was it. [More about this and other cameras I utilize in a later post.]
Second, I noticed one of the trailing DPUs was occupied. Look at photo # 7, the close-up of UP 7894, and you can see someone sitting in the conductor's position. I have, to this point, never seen an occupied helper/pusher/DPU set in close to ten years. [Click on each photo to enlarge.]
It's also interesting to note that this train had only one unit on point. UP 8421, an EMD SD70ACe with 4,300 hp, powered by Electro Motive Diesel's 16-710G3C-T2 engine. That engine designation indicates 16-cylinders, with each cylinder displacing 710 cubic inches.
Finally, as you can see, there were two DPUs at the end, UP 7894 (GE ES44AC) and UP 6053 (GE C44ACCTE).
Coming soon: notes about cameras, digital photography and shooting philosophies.
MP154
Great optical illusion in first photo. Helper rider - hobo?
ReplyDeleteWSF: it was in the low 90s that day, and with the extreme 26X zoom of the camera, the heat lines start to take over at max zoom (678mm in 35mm equivalent).
ReplyDeleteMP154
Very nice blog thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete