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Anyone ever do this?  I'm definitely interested:

http://nnry.com/pages/engineer...BZWJVCC8caApT88P8HAQ

Sign on as a Nevada Northern Railway engineer for a day.  You (and a friend, if you like) will climb on board and experience what railroading was like in the last century - at the throttle of one of the original Nevada Northern STEAM locomotives.  Diesel experiences are also available.  Click here for details.

What to Expect

Begin your engineer experience by studying the safety training materials that our regular and volunteer crews learn from (download here).  There will be a test on the basics, but we are there to help you all the way through.  It is then time to head down to the century old Enginehouse and help prepare your locomotive for the day. Climb into the cab, and learn how to operate the iron horse. Your mentor engineer will show you the ropes as we move the locomotive out of the engine house and onto the original NNRY mainline.

It's then your turn!  Climb up into the engineer's seat and receive personal instructions from your mentor engineer on controlling the throttle and brake.  Once the basics are under your belt, the moment comes for you to sound the whistle, have your hand on the throttle, and head up the mainline toward the mines.  You will be going through two tunnels and climb over 2.5% grades.  Up toward the end of the line there is a wye.  We will turn the locomotive and head back down to Ely, gaining hands-on experience with controlling a locomotive on a mountain grade.  This is real standard-gauge main-line mountain railroading on America's best-preserved railroad.  You are at the throttle.  You are the engineer.  You are running a locomotive.

Options

There are several options available.  You can take control of one of the vintage steam locomotives, or one of the vintage diesel locomotives, or operate both.  Most people come and take the locomotive out without a train attached.   It is an easier way to start, and requires less training.   Taking the locomotive out with a complete train adds the additional skill of controlling a train on our mountain grades.  You may find that it is easier to get the train up a grade than to bring it safely back down.  Early in your trip you will begin to appreciate the genius of the Westinghouse Air Brake system, its complexities and limitations for mountain grades - especially on steam locomotives since they do not have dynamic brakes.   You will also learn the "technical" term for using up all of your braking capacity by applying and releasing your train brakes too often coming down the mountain grade.    

 

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Back in the 90s, a friend of a friend had bought through a tax auction a commercial warehouse that was off a railroad (now abandoned and ripped up, but intact at the time) and had a few spur tracks. The property included a 20-tonner or that size of locomotive and some hoppers and gons that were RIP-track worthy but would roll. He got that loco running and ran it back and forth on his own private "module" on the property. Hardly anyone knew it was even there due to how remote it was. So, he'd invite a few people over every 3rd or 4th weekend and we'd run trains until we got sick of it. He had just enough track to get the loco running at full throttle until you had to slow down.

I had my fill of running that over those great weekends. Most people liked riding in the hack he'd bought and had moved to the property instead of being in that tiny little cab. Not me, I loved the throttle, so it worked out well.

I passed through the area in October and saw the place had been torn down. I wonder whatever happened with that...

As for steam, I won't name when/where, but I was at a RR museum once and was apparently mistaken for some longtime employee who I guess had moved a way some time previously? Anyway, I was invited up to the cab to run a large steam locomotive in some short switching moves. Thankfully, I've had plenty of cab rides over the years and read through a lot of manuals so I had a general idea how not to wreck a train. The reverser had just been set and the engine had just moved seconds before, so I didn't have to ask about that or venting the cylinders. I moved the entire train back a few car lengths, stopped as directed, then said I needed to go (which was correct as I had a long drive ahead of me).

If the movie "Ghostbusters" taught me anything, it's that if someone asks you if you're a God, you say YES. In other words, if they think you're a big cheese, don't disagree with them.

I didn't question how this had happened until I was stepping down and they used the wrong name for me. That's when I put 2 and 2 together that they'd thought I was someone else. Beats me what happened when whoever they thought I was finally came back there. Imagine the confusion trying to figure that out among them!

Number 90 posted:

Yeah, that "technical term" is a bit vulgar, but it aptly describes the shortcoming.

I would recommend the Nevada Northern engineer for a day to anyone.  They actually do allow the engineer for a day to run a train and not just move the engine around slowly.

Evidently, the NNRY has changed quite a bit since I did their Engineer for a day program, in 2007. Back then, light engine was the ONLY option, and it sounds like more track is now in service than then. In 2007, it was forward one direction with a reverse move to return to the starting point. IIRC, the Steam portion of my double option went South( I ran the 4-6-0 #40) and the Diesel(I ran the SD-9 #204) went North out of East Ely.

 In 2008, I went to the Sumpter Valley RY, and ran their 3 foot Narrow Gauge 2-8-2 #19. The SVRY was another forward out reverse move back, but you did have a full/ short train, which did add to the experience, I am Glad to hear that the NNRY has added the option of a full train, as well as light engine.

 I have to give the SVRY, a BIG Thank You, as the day that I was able to reserve there was by chance, one of my Nephew's  4th Birthday, he is still a big train nut, the SVRY let my Sister, Brother in Law, Nephews, my Mom and Step-Dad ride in the caboose, at no extra charge even.

 I had planned on going back to the SVRY in 2009, to run their Heisler, but I went and did a Silly thing and got Married in May of '09, and other priorities have kept pushing that trip back.

 It may not be cheap, but an engineer for a day program is something that you will never forget, I am glad that I have gotten to do it, and Hope to again in the future. If you have the chance, DO IT!!

Doug

 

 

 

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