Skip to main content

Dennis - great thread!!  Thanks for posting!  I've enjoyed the photos and commentary everyone has posted.  

Regarding the beautiful GG-1, I read an at length article in Trains Magazine within the last decade, which unveiled a discovery stating that it was not Raymond Lowey who designed the GG - 1....  It was designed by a Westinghouse design engineer whose last name was Domer or perhaps spelled Dommer.  The article went into convincing detail as to how this discovery was made, however I don't recall all of the details. I believe something to the effect that his granddaughter found the plans and wooden moch ups of the GG1 in Domer's belongings many years after his death.    Did anyone here on the OGR Forum happened to read this article?  I wish I'd have saved that article now.  

According to the article Lowey's sole contribution, after viewing  number 4800 ( now nicknamed Old Rivets ) was to change the body to welded sheets as opposed to riveted bolt sheets. It was Loweys opinion that  welded sheets give the GG1 smoother optics.  Somehow Lowey was given full credit  for the total design of the GG1 when in fact ( according to the article ) it was one of Westinghouse's work a day designers who came up with the design concept.   Lowey was brought in to give  his input only after the first GG1 was already designed and built.

Meanwhile here are some shots of my Williams scale GG1s. IMG_0283IMG_0285IMG_0288IMG_0269

Attachments

Images (4)
  • IMG_0283
  • IMG_0285
  • IMG_0288
  • IMG_0269
Last edited by trumpettrain
trumptrain posted:

Dennis - great thread!!  Thanks for posting!  I've enjoyed the photos and commentary everyone has posted.  

Regarding the beautiful GG-1, I read an at length article in Trains Magazine within the last decade, which unveiled a discovery stating that it was not Raymond Lowey who designed the GG - 1....  It was designed by a Westinghouse design engineer whose last name was Domer or perhaps spelled Dommer.  The article went into convincing detail as to how this discovery was made, however I don't recall all of the details. I believe something to the effect that his granddaughter found the plans and wooden moch ups of the GG1 in Domer's belongings many years after his death.    Did anyone here on the OGR Forum happened to read this article?  I wish I'd have saved that article now.  

According to the article Lowey's sole contribution, after viewing  number 4800 ( now nicknamed Old Rivets ) was to change the body to welded sheets as opposed to riveted bolt sheets. It was Loweys opinion that  welded sheets give the GG1 smoother optics.  Somehow Lowey was given full credit  for the total design of the GG1 when in fact ( according to the article ) it was one of Westinghouse's work a day designers who came up with the design concept.   Lowey was brought in to give  his input only after the first GG1 was already designed and built.

Meanwhile here are some shots of my Williams scale GG1s. IMG_0283IMG_0285IMG_0288IMG_0269

I read that or a similar article, also.  Besides eliminating the rivets, Lowey also changed details on the locomotive such as the marker lights, headlight surround, shape of the windows and others I cannot name at the moment.

To me it's a no-brainer, the GG1 hands down.  There is one version with Sans serif lettering that would be my pick of the best. As Lowey stated it's looks are pure power with elegance.

I do admire all electrics however.  The EP-5s come in second, although not as close as some think.  Milwaukee Road's electrics, while not particularly eye candy still have an azure to them.   

trumptrain posted:

Dennis - great thread!!  Thanks for posting!  I've enjoyed the photos and commentary everyone has posted.  

Regarding the beautiful GG-1, I read an at length article in Trains Magazine within the last decade, which unveiled a discovery stating that it was not Raymond Lowey who designed the GG - 1....  It was designed by a Westinghouse design engineer whose last name was Domer or perhaps spelled Dommer.  The article went into convincing detail as to how this discovery was made, however I don't recall all of the details. I believe something to the effect that his granddaughter found the plans and wooden moch ups of the GG1 in Domer's belongings many years after his death.    Did anyone here on the OGR Forum happened to read this article?  I wish I'd have saved that article now.  

According to the article Lowey's sole contribution, after viewing  number 4800 ( now nicknamed Old Rivets ) was to change the body to welded sheets as opposed to riveted bolt sheets. It was Loweys opinion that  welded sheets give the GG1 smoother optics.  Somehow Lowey was given full credit  for the total design of the GG1 when in fact ( according to the article ) it was one of Westinghouse's work a day designers who came up with the design concept.   Lowey was brought in to give  his input only after the first GG1 was already designed and built.

Meanwhile here are some shots of my Williams scale GG1s. IMG_0283IMG_0285IMG_0288IMG_0269

The article was in the Summer, 2009 issue of Classic Trains and had a title like
"Donald Dohner, The Man Who Designed 'Rivets'"

BD7C4FB1-DC07-4877-9DD8-41C2BDAEDFDDYouse guys is ALL WRONG (so far). The most beautiful electrics that have ever been or ever will be are the Chicago South Shore & South Bend Little Joes. Below is #803 in its MTH PS3 version; above is the prototype as preserved at the Illinois Railway Museum. Plus some gritty in service scenes; I particularly like the last one with a rickety old South Shore interurban in the background (although that’s old 802 in the front):

C3663533-CB0D-4AC5-AAEF-EE91B3247993

4624E183-E3B2-42A6-A68C-F77A396E8FB51C09E1EA-0BE8-4FBF-A2B4-0860547A7A67E6ED9471-56C0-44B0-9BFF-C521D35E0CCD

Attachments

Images (6)
  • C3663533-CB0D-4AC5-AAEF-EE91B3247993
  • BB034958-4060-4D8B-A4A9-BE53CF32F946
  • 4624E183-E3B2-42A6-A68C-F77A396E8FB5
  • 1C09E1EA-0BE8-4FBF-A2B4-0860547A7A67
  • E6ED9471-56C0-44B0-9BFF-C521D35E0CCD
  • BD7C4FB1-DC07-4877-9DD8-41C2BDAEDFDD

Add Reply

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