Replies sorted oldest to newest
Kind'a curious. Who decides to take a train through areas like depicted here?
Would the engineer do so "on his own hook?" Or are orders received from higher up to "risk it?"
Nothing new:
Plus, in May 1965 when the Mississippi River flooded, the CB&Q used Mikado 4960 to pull trains through flooded track at Savanna, Wisconsin.
Rusty
Attachments
In fact, this was the plot of one of my favorite Donald Duck comics ever. Uncle Scrooge's fancy new streamliner was stuck in a flood which shorted out the electric motors; Donald wound up pushing the train out with an old steam loco that Scrooge had decided to scrap...
Mitch
M. Mitchell Marmel posted:In fact, this was the plot of one of my favorite Donald Duck comics ever. Uncle Scrooge's fancy new streamliner was stuck in a flood which shorted out the electric motors; Donald wound up pushing the train out with an old steam loco that Scrooge had decided to scrap...
Mitch
I remember that one, too! I also remember the one in which a streamliner was caught in a blizzard, while Huey, Dewey and Louie figured out a way to retrieve it, using their toy trains as a guide!
Was Carl Barks a railfan?