Skip to main content

@Apples55 posted:

... Never knew the New Haven had a line up to Poughkeepsie in NY...

The New Haven Railroad's Maybrook Line was its primary route for shipment of freight into and out of New England. Trains departed westbound along the main line from New Haven and diverged to the north at Devon Junction, about 11 miles west of New Haven and 14 miles west of its large yard at Cedar Hill. The route ran through Derby, Newtown and Danbury, Connecticut and crossed 212 feet above the Hudson River on the Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge at Poughkeepsie. It terminated at the Maybrook Yard near Campbell Hall, New York. There was no interchange with the New York Central Railroad at Poughkeepsie due to the elevation of the gauntlet track as it crossed the bridge, on which the speed limit was 12 miles per hour.

MELGAR

@CarGuyZM10 posted:

I'm not a big New Haven fan (don't shoot me!), but I did just rescue these (along with 14 other lanterns) from an estate. To think, I was told that if they weren't bought by Thursday, they were going in the dumpster!



Mike, you can relax. We don’t shoot heretics... we burn them at the stake

So glad you could save those pieces of history from the scrap heap. They look to be in excellent condition. I particularly love that the glass appears to be original with the embossed RR name. Enjoy your haul!!!

@MELGAR posted:

The New Haven Railroad's Maybrook Line was its primary route for shipment of freight into and out of New England. Trains departed westbound along the main line from New Haven and diverged to the north at Devon Junction, about 11 miles west of New Haven and 14 miles west of its large yard at Cedar Hill. The route ran through Derby, Newtown and Danbury, Connecticut and crossed 212 feet above the Hudson River on the Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge at Poughkeepsie. It terminated at the Maybrook Yard near Campbell Hall, New York. There was no interchange with the New York Central Railroad at Poughkeepsie due to the elevation of the gauntlet track as it crossed the bridge, on which the speed limit was 12 miles per hour.

MELGAR

Thanks for the history, Mel. I have heard of the Maybrook Line, just never associated it with Poughkeepsie. A couple of years ago, I went with a group of friends to the Culinary Institute in Hyde Park for lunch - we had to drive through Poughkeepsie, and we drove right under that bridge - it is quite high (I believe you can now walk over it)!!!

@Apples55 posted:

Thanks for the history, Mel. I have heard of the Maybrook Line, just never associated it with Poughkeepsie. A couple of years ago, I went with a group of friends to the Culinary Institute in Hyde Park for lunch - we had to drive through Poughkeepsie, and we drove right under that bridge - it is quite high (I believe you can now walk over it)!!!

You are correct Paul. It's a river walk now. And yes, it is VERY high. I'm sure there were a few white knuckles on the engineer's as they went over.

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn%3AANd9GcR3UlYhOPSB3SrVaaDBjqgGmMh3ph8fehoSqw&usqp=CAU

And some Black and Orange for a gloomy Wednesday

2020-10-25 20.01.112020-10-25 20.23.19

Attachments

Images (2)
  • 2020-10-25 20.01.11
  • 2020-10-25 20.23.19

Glad this thread made an appearance again - nice save Michael, and nice models everyone. I just finished adding ERR command control and painting this Williams 44 Tonner. 0813 Completed 1

Also weathered this Lionel boxcar to reperesent how it would have appeared in the late 60's early 70s - rust streaks, grunge, scratch marks from the doors, ACI tag, and (my favorite) the roof sections where the paint has peeled off exposing the underlying metal.

40510 Weathered ACI Tag

~C. Vigs

Attachments

Images (2)
  • 0813 Completed 1
  • 40510 Weathered ACI Tag
Last edited by C.Vigs

Before the pandemic I used to ride throughout Connecticut on the former New Haven Railroad (Metro-North) almost every day. Now it’s been eight months since I’ve been able to do that. I’ve posted images of this train and its EP-5 electric motor #371 before. It’s an MTH Premier model with PS1 and a BCR that I’ve been running for twenty years. My PS1 engines have given outstanding service. This engine doesn’t have speed control but runs at steadier speed than one of my recent brand-new acquisitions from another manufacturer. The first video shows it at 35 miles-per-hour on my 12’-by-8’ layout. The second video is at 50 miles-per-hour.

MELGAR

MELGAR_2020_1029_01_NH_EP5_371_12X8

Attachments

Images (1)
  • MELGAR_2020_1029_01_NH_EP5_371_12X8
Videos (2)
MELGAR_2020_1029_03V_NH_EP5_371_35_MPH_12X8
MELGAR_2020_1029_02V_NH_EP5_371_50_MPH_12X8

Finished GA-2 gondola number three, in the script herald scheme. This scheme was applied to gondolas and hoppers in the early 50s, just prior to the takeouver by the McGinnis administation and their flashy paint schemes. The script herald is a little small, but I have too many of them from in white from Microcale decal sets to not use them. I've also lightly weathered this one - heavier weathering will be added if I can find an appropraite prototype photo to work from. I decided that I am going to make at least two more, both in the McGinnis scheme. This one and a McGinnis scheme one will be semi-permanetly assigned to a work train.

Gondola 3 Completed 1

Gondola 3 Completed 2

Gondola 3 Completed 3

I also needed a solution to Lionel's semi-fragile switch stands - I designed and had these New Haven style switch stands 3D printed. It is a two piece assembly - a gear and shaft as a single piece extends above the top of the black stand support, and the upper shaft and indicatiors are a single seperate piece. As per New Haven prototype, the through route is indicated by a green disc with white trim, while the diverging route is a red arrow pointing at the divergence.

Switch_Stand_Unpainted

Switch_Stand_Painted_1

Switch_Stand_Painted_2

~C.Vigs

Attachments

Images (6)
  • Gondola 3 Completed 1
  • Gondola 3 Completed 2
  • Gondola 3 Completed 3
  • Switch_Stand_Unpainted
  • Switch_Stand_Painted_1
  • Switch_Stand_Painted_2

I just finished this model of one of the New Haven's 40600 series boxcars. This was a series of 6 50' PS-1 Hydroframe boxcars purchased to capture traffic from the Continental Can Company, between Long Island and Malden, Massachusetts.  The New Haven Railroad Historical and Technical Association has a short article in their publication The Shoreliner, Volume 32 Issue 2, that details correspondence among management and the railroad's bankruptcy trustees regarding the purchase of these cars. As the railroad was in bankruptcy, these ended up being the last boxcars purchased, arriving in January 1965.

I started with an Atlas 50' plug door PS-1 boxcar, and after stripping removed all the door detail except for the doors rollers and vertical posts. I rebuilt all the door detail with styrene strips. The orange body color is Scalecoat CN Orange-Red, which I found decently close to the New Haven's #409 Red-Orange. It was a little too bright, but that was toned down significantly with the weathering. As these cars were only with the New Haven for four years, weathering was light. I used chalks - some black on the roof, and the sides toned down with a dirty brown. Decals are from Highball Graphics.

Finished 1Finished 2Finished 3



Other side from the above photos:

Finished 4

~C.Vigs

Attachments

Images (4)
  • Finished 1
  • Finished 2
  • Finished 3
  • Finished 4
Last edited by C.Vigs
@biscuitag97 posted:

A New Haven R1 Mountain rolls to a stop pulling Osgood Bradley Coaches. I have seen that the 21’ lionel catalog includes the NYC L2a in a New Haven scheme. My understanding is that the NYC L2a and NH R2a were very similar with the exception of the cab.72EEC07E-92E7-4B77-92A8-6ABB5609E526

The New Haven R-2as are almost identical to the Central's L-2a mohawks. Here are two photos and compare them side by side these two locomotives are almost copies of one another (with the acception of a few road name specific modifications). I give props to Lionel for doing this, very excited about the new R-2a. Its never been made in any scale not even in brass so this is a first for the model train world. I'll be ordering it for sure!

Attachments

Images (2)
  • New Haven R-2a
  • nyc2758_schlachter
@Peter B posted:

The New Haven R-2as are almost identical to the Central's L-2a mohawks. Here are two photos and compare them side by side these two locomotives are almost copies of one another (with the acception of a few road name specific modifications). I give props to Lionel for doing this, very excited about the new R-2a. Its never been made in any scale not even in brass so this is a first for the model train world. I'll be ordering it for sure!

Do you think the New Haven would be nice with a Vanderbilt tender?

@DMASSO posted:

I discussed a Vandy tender with Steve at McMuffins.  He said, if he can get a special order AFTER, the current production, it may be possible. I believe he would need 25 orders. This would be a long way off so we will see.

Don;

Are you talking a whole new engine/tender combination or just an add-on Vandy tender??? I like the look of the Vandy tenders, but I don’t think I’d want to take the chance of waiting till after the current offering is done (and bought up) and then hope for putting together 25 folks who would like the variation. Now an add-on Vandy tender - that might garner enough interest to be viable (I’d be definitely in for one!!!).

@Apples55 posted:

Don;

Are you talking a whole new engine/tender combination or just an add-on Vandy tender??? I like the look of the Vandy tenders, but I don’t think I’d want to take the chance of waiting till after the current offering is done (and bought up) and then hope for putting together 25 folks who would like the variation. Now an add-on Vandy tender - that might garner enough interest to be viable (I’d be definitely in for one!!!).

@DMASSO posted:

I discussed a Vandy tender with Steve at McMuffins.  He said, if he can get a special order AFTER, the current production, it may be possible. I believe he would need 25 orders. This would be a long way off so we will see.

I doubt Lionel will offer a separate sale Vanderbilt tender so it would be a new engine/tender combination should the idea turn into reality whether someone dose a special run or Lionel offers it down the road. We shall see what the future holds and I would definetley be in for one.

@Peter B posted:

I doubt Lionel will offer a separate sale Vanderbilt tender so it would be a new engine/tender combination should the idea turn into reality whether someone dose a special run or Lionel offers it down the road. We shall see what the future holds and I would definetley be in for one.

I’m afraid you’re right, Peter. I’m thinking back to the Century Club II where they offered a separate sale PT tender for (if I remember correctly) the NYC 20th Century Limited engine. I’m sure Lionel has tooling for a Vandy tender, and the board should be basically the same as for the tender in the current offering (excluding and coal loading sequence if it has one). One can hope!!!

I just finished two more models - have to keep sane somehow.

First is New Haven company service tank car K-7. Acquired secondhand with 9 others to be used as water tenders to cut down on stops between New Haven and Boston, they were never used for this purpose and were instead pressed into oil service during WW2. After the war, they were repurposed to move company diesel fuel from tidewater in New Haven to outlying terminals, and renumbered in the "K" series. This information comes from a great Shoreliner article (the quarterly publication of the New Haven Railroad Technical and Historical Association). I didn't have a photo of K-7, so I based it off of a composite of photos of K-3 and K-6 that appeared in the article. I started with an Atlas O 8000 gallon tank car, sanded off the top row of rivets, and added 4 columns of Archer rivet decals to back date the tank to a 1916 design appearance. I also removed the corner steps and added ladders just off center from the truck bolsters, again to backdate the design. Decals are a combination of NH gondola decals, generic roman letters, and generic boxcar data sheets from K4 Decals.

NH K-7 2

NH K-7 3

Close up of some of the lettering, rivet strips, and car number on the underframe.

NH K-7 4

Second model is Pere Marquette auto box car 90826. What does this have to do with the New Haven? I have a piece of paperwork showing this boxcar being interchanged from the Erie to the New Haven at Maybrook, NY, on August 30th 1948. It was destined for the Southeast Motor Company at Brewster, NY, with a load of new Buicks. Decals are again from K4 decals.

NH K-7 5

~C. Vigs

Attachments

Images (4)
  • NH K-7 2
  • NH K-7 3
  • NH K-7 4
  • NH K-7 5
@biscuitag97 posted:

A newly delivered rebuilt P40DC for CDOT, #6711 sits at the north end of Cedar Hill Yard. (Lunch time adventure) Hoping somebody will make these in O-Scale with MTH tooling.E6157B40-6648-42B3-AA9A-9C9B8AAA7768

This thing should be repainted into NH McGinnis colors.  In my opinion, it would look a lot better.

I know that CT dropped the NH livery a couple of years ago in favor of a new look but this just doesn't appeal to me.  NH Joe  

New Haven Joe...I haven't heard the name McGinnis associated with the NH in decades...I have a picture somewhere in the archives of my grandfather being handed his "40" year service pin with the NYNH&H by McGinnis at grand dads retirement gathering in 1954.  He was 65 years of age at retirement with 40 years at NH and 10 prior years with either the C & O or B & O...I can't recall.

Last edited by Capetrainman

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×