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Nearly half of the westbound trains out of Altoona have helpers on the rear (limit is 2000 to 2500 tons per group 5 or modern 6-axle unit) and some even get a set on the headend too!  Helper operations are still quite common in rail operations today; especially over the Alleghenies.

That being said, I'm pretty sure putting a helper on the rear of a loaded passenger train would be highly frowned upon.
Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by DaveSlie:

Sounds like the 765 will do all the work if the diesel is on the rear, unless you have a really long MU cable !  

You ARE aware that railroads do have radios now!

 

I was referring to the fact that there won't be an electrical connection between the 765 and the diesel this time and if there was a need for additional power the control box in the 765 wouldn't work.  The person in the diesel would have to bring the diesel online. 

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by DaveSlie:

Sounds like the 765 will do all the work if the diesel is on the rear, unless you have a really long MU cable !  

765 did all the work last time! Do you hear any diesel engine noise in this video?

 

I was referring to the fact that there won't be an electrical connection between the 765 and the diesel this time and if there was a need for additional power the control box in the 765 wouldn't work.  The person in the diesel would have to bring the diesel online.

 

Yes I also know the 765 did all the work on the curve last August and the diesel was just along for the ride. 

Hi rich,  you say the 765 will move through Greensburg, PA on the 13th?  when they depart on the 13th, about how long does it take if they leave at 9 am to get to Greensburg?  I wondered because I wanted to tell my office chums some time that we need to get near the tracks. 

 

oh, any stops in Latrobe station at all?  or any stops in Greensburg station?

 

thanks a bunch

Chris

Where do you guys get the idea that the FRA has outlawed pushers?

OF COURSE pushers are still used today! Did you read FormD's post in this thread? He said, "...Nearly half of the westbound trains out of Altoona have helpers on the rear..."

Anywhere there are steep mountain grades to be climbed, you are going to see pushers. Even in gently rolling terrain, such as the NS (ex-PRR) Fort Wayne Line between Crestline, OH and Conway, PA you may see high-speed pushers shoving trains at 50 mph in order to maintain speed over the road.

 

Chris D, the move on the 13th is a deadhead move. As I have said many times, deadhead moves do not operate on a set schedule. We move when the railroad is ready for us. I have no idea when we will be coming through Greensburg. When we do get moving, we will not be making any station stops. Why would we?

I think what Chris was asking, when you do move is there and estimated time span to get from point A (Conway) to point B (Greensburg).  My guess is that you'd still be hard pressed to get a time due to traffic and such on the line.

 

If memory serves me when the 765 left Conway, it took about 45 minutes to reach Pittsburgh's West Park.  That's just an estimated.

 

Chris just keep an eye on the GPS.  You could probably get a pretty good idea from it.

thanks marty.  that was what I was asking. I did not know how long a train would take from that point to reach here.  So, the GPS will show when it starts moving?    Can I view it on my computer and track it there? or do you have to use a tablet or smart phone only?
thanks again
 
 Originally Posted by MartyE:

I think what Chris was asking, when you do move is there and estimated time span to get from point A (Conway) to point B (Greensburg).  My guess is that you'd still be hard pressed to get a time due to traffic and such on the line.

 

If memory serves me when the 765 left Conway, it took about 45 minutes to reach Pittsburgh's West Park.  That's just an estimated.

 

Chris just keep an eye on the GPS.  You could probably get a pretty good idea from it.

 

It's not that I had an idea that pushers were outlawed,  just that I really didn't know what current regs are in regards to passenger trains. (I should have specified.) Are pushers these days manned, or r/c from the lead unit?  You'll have to excuse me, nearly everything I know of "modern" railroading comes from the collection of Trains Magazine back issues I was gifted as a kid, so from ~1988 backwards.   My teen and college years were spent on girls, guitars and sports cars, so just like I'm playing catch-up to understand command equipped toy trains, I'm equally behind on real railroading.

Wowak, I don't know the regs regarding pushers on passenger trains. I've never checked because it would be highly unusual to "push" a passenger train. I doubt that they would be allowed. The diesel that will be on the train under discussion here will not be providing any power. It will be just along for the ride going up the hill.

 

The reason you see pushers on freight trains is because the amount of tractive power required would exceed the rating of the couplers if all the power was placed on the head end. So some of the power has to be placed elsewhere in the train to distribute the pulling forces so you don't pull the train apart. In most cases this takes the form of a set of manned pushers shoving on the rear. Passenger trains are never heavy enough to present that problem, which is why you would see the "helpers" in the steam days on the front of the train, double-headed with the road power.

 

Out west, "Distributed Power" is often used to conquer the grades in the Rockies. This is a setup where a consist of mid-train, radio-controlled helpers provides the extra power. I have never run a train with DP, but Wyhog has. Perhaps he can chime in here with some additional info about DP.

Rich, my thought was more of a hypothetical one.  I agree that there would be little or no sense in putting a pusher at the tail of a passenger train.  I was thinking more in terms of the bizarre turn of events, i.e. 765 is half way up the hill, then (insert unlikely emergency here) and the foreman suddenly needs you off the hill N.O.W. *Could you* throttle up the diesel? (As in does 765 have control of it, AND would the FRA have something to say about it if you did?)  I know... it'd never happen. But I love the bizarre minutiae of rules and practices.

With the diesel on the rear it is just another car in the train. I have no control of it from the 765 and don't need any.

 

You also need to achieve a better understand the role of the FRA. They are not sinister "policemen" on the prowl looking for violations. The operating rules of the railroad dictate what we can and cannot do in any given situation, not the FRA looking over our shoulder trying to catch us doing something "wrong."

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:

With the diesel on the rear it is just another car in the train. I have no control of it from the 765 and don't need any.

 

You also need to achieve a better understand the role of the FRA. They are not sinister "policemen" on the prowl looking for violations. The operating rules of the railroad dictate what we can and cannot do in any given situation, not the FRA looking over our shoulder trying to catch us doing something "wrong."

Will you be passing by Conway Yards on the way to Gallitzin?

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:

765's entire schedule is on the OGR Forum Calendar.

 

We won't be anywhere near Conway Yard on the Altoona Employee trips. Conway is probably 100 miles west of Gallitzin.

I saw this on May 13 "DEADHEAD MOVE - Cleveland - Conway - Altoona".

 

I was just hoping to get an idea what time you would be passing conway? I live close to there and was hoping to get a glimpse

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:

As I have said here dozens of times...there is no set schedule for a deadhead move! We move when the railroad is ready for us.

 

If you want to know where we are at any given time, you'll have to buy the GPS tracking app. It will be available in the app store next week. I'll post a link here when it's available.

 

OK, will do, thanks

Originally Posted by steam fan:
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:

 

 

You also need to achieve a better understand the role of the FRA. They are not sinister "policemen" on the prowl looking for violations.


Nope. NS has plenty of Train Masters and such that do THAT job...

Please be away that Fairbanks Morris produced the "Train Master" 2400HP diesel electric locomotive. I'll bet that NS, and many other railroads, have management personal with the title Trainmaster. 

If Rich doesn't mind me plugging another forum here, another good option for monitoring the excursion train's progress is the preservation site www.rypn.org. Last year, I found it a useful tool for obtaining very timely information regarding the train's location. At times, it seemed as if the locomotive couldn't make a move without someone posting about it within minutes.

 

Bob  

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