Hello fellow switcher fans and welcome to Switcher Saturday April 13 , 2024 Edition!! It's an honor to welcome you aboard If you love those little locomotives that do big things and serve as the backbone of any railroad, then you are in the right place. Switcher Saturday welcomes all gauges/scales from N - G and 1:1 gauge/scale too.
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Please post your photos, videos, and information regarding switchers. It's always exciting to see what everyone posts each week! As always, I can't wait to see what content you all post this week too! We learn so much from one another !
This coming week is York week!! I'll be in attendance on Friday April 19 and I'm really looking forward to the show. Actually I'm more excited than usual and that's pretty darn excited!!! A new switcher coming home with me??? Perhaps!
If you are attending the show please know that our good friend, fellow forumite and fellow switcher lover Arnold Cribari will be performing his train songs at the Orange Hall !! NOT TO BE MISSED!!! Arnold is a superb ambassador of our wonderful hobby!
I hope everyone will have a terrific weekend and you get some train running time in and when you do ... may that time include running your switchers! I hope to see some of you at York this week! Green signals to all!!
Today on the Free State Junction Railway two B&O switch locomotives are featured as they go about their assignments. The GP 9, of course, is a road switcher which pulls long distance trains, both freight and passenger, and it's equally adept at performing all kinds of switching operations be it yard work or way freight service ... hence the abbreviation GP which stands for General Purpose. This locomotive musters 1,750 horsepower. The B&O owned both GP 7 ( rated at 1,500 hp ) and GP 9 locomotives and a certain portion of both models within the fleet were outfitted for dual service freight/passenger operations. As a young lad, I used to see them often in road freight, passenger, and way freight operations on the B&Os Washington Branch which is now MARC's Camden line owned by CSX. Standard running practice for all B&O hood units was long hood forward.
The SW9 is a 1,200 hp end cab switching locomotive designed for switching operations. Both the GP9 and SW9 are products of the Electromotive Division of General Motors ( EMD ). The SW9 production run was from 1950-1953. The B&O owned 6 SW9's
The U.S. production run for the GP9 was 1954 - 1959 with additional units produced in Canada until 1963 , by GM subsidiary General Motors Diesel.. In 1954 GP9 was promoted by EMD as part of the EMD "9 Line" which included other EMD models with the number 9 being introduced that year such as the SD 9, F9, and E 9 locomotives. The B&O purchased 194 GP9 locomotives in the 1950s.
On the service track the GP 9's tank is topped off with diesel fuel and the sand bins have been filled to the gills with sand. Hostler Bob McCoy has made sure of that.
By the way this is a Williams dummy GP9.
Bob's eagle eye gives the geep the once over check. If you look behind the GP9, you'll see the snout of a 0-8-0 which has had it's coal bin topped off and is ready to take on sand as soon as the GP9 moves forward.
A SW9 with cab leading pulls a transfer freight from East Yard ( my imaginative East Yard ) which is located on the other side of the tunnel. This is a MTH RailKing Proto Sound 2 model with BCR installed. I love this engine for its' reliability and looks.
On the return from West Yard ( which also exists in my imagination ) the SW9 is about to emerge from Westend Tunnel at 3 mph with bell clanging as it is about to pass by a hard working MOW crew. Safety first!
While at West Yard the SW9 acquired a friend in the form of a GP 9. Here the duo makes their way through the Brewtown section of Patsburg.
At Butler Junction track workers are doing needed track repair. The SW9 backs through the Y to get to its' train.
With its' train in tow, the locomotive is shown crossing the grade at Brewtown Avenue.