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It's #SwitcherSaturday time!!!!

Lots of us out there love switchers (shifters, docksiders, yard goats, critters, etc.), so lets keep #SwitcherSaturday (a.k.a. SWSAT) rolling!

If you missed last week's SWSAT you should really go take a look, it was a ton of fun!
https://ogrforum.com/...aturday-2017-sept-23

 

This week at the Murnane house...
PRR #8977 (Lionel 6-18000 0-6-0 B6 Scale Steam Switcher circa ~1998) is on switching duty on itsy-bitsy-small my tabletop layout!

IMG_2494swsat

If you like this engine, I've got two pages of pictures of it at the following link, it's probably my most photographed switcher!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/...ms/72157671480142865


I hope everyone has a nice weekend and if you get a chance - please post some switcher stuff here!

All the best...Rich Murnane

p.s. Miss the post on Saturday? NO BIG DEAL, just keep posting pictures of your favorites until the next #SwitcherSaturday

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MNCW posted:

Andy/SILVERLAKE,

  What a beautiful, cool little loco. I'm guessing it could be narrow gauge, too. Do you have any info whether 2ft, 3ft, etc? 

 Tom 

Actually Tom. The Oregon Pony was wide gauge 5 ft. and it dates from 1861. It was the first steam engine in the Pacific Northwest and was built in San Francisco by Vulcan Iron Works for the Oregon Steam Navigation company. The engine is restored and still exists in a museum in Oregon. 

Andy/SILVERLAKE, That's funny to me. I believe it is pretty well accepted that a narrow gauge railroad is much less expensive to construct. A logging railroad seems like it would constantly need to be relocating its tracks, seems like even more of a reason to have a smaller/cheaper/easier to undo and rebuild right-of-way. Glad to hear the locomotive was saved. I think it would make a nice model if someone decided to build it. 

Tom 

Last edited by PRR8976

My first steam switcher Indiana Harbor Belt 0-4-0.  The cab number 8635 gives it away as a mid 80s LTI AT&SF 0-4-0 with smoke and no sound but it does have directional lighting.  Used an electric draftsman's eraser to remove the AT&SF from the tender and added the IHB decals and some capacity details.  I want to add a handrail to the slope back tender as evidence by the third picture I've got to lengthen the tether so the tender's front truck stays on the rails.IMG_0910IMG_0911IMG_0913Tonight it's handling a cut of Lionel billboard beer reefers.  Sorry for the quality of the video.

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Great week this week guys, I hope you all had a great Switcher Saturday - my kids kept me busy with soccer and other stuff.

Last Sunday evening we stopped by a local "antique mall" and I saw the following PRR Hot Stick - anyone know anything about these?  I'd say it was overall about 20" long (my daughter's foot in flip flops in the picture!), the head looked like brass or bronze, and clearly the seller thought it was from PRR (though I didn't see any markings).  I figured something like this might have something to do with "yard work" - so still meets the "switcher" criteria I'd say!

Best to all, enjoy your Sunday...Rich

IMG_2473IMG_2472

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coach joe posted:

My first steam switcher Indiana Harbor Belt 0-4-0.  The cab number 8635 gives it away as a mid 80s LTI AT&SF 0-4-0 with smoke and no sound but it does have directional lighting.  Used an electric draftsman's eraser to remove the AT&SF from the tender and added the IHB decals and some capacity details.  I want to add a handrail to the slope back tender as evidence by the third picture I've got to lengthen the tether so the tender's front truck stays on the rails.IMG_0910Tonight it's handling a cut of Lionel billboard beer reefers.  Sorry for the quality of the video.

I've got the same one Joe in PRR. Nice little engines. I re-wired mine so the tender light works in reverse only.

Bob

2017-03-18 07.44.482017-03-18 07.52.05

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Murnane posted:

Great week this week guys, I hope you all had a great Switcher Saturday - my kids kept me busy with soccer and other stuff.

Last Sunday evening we stopped by a local "antique mall" and I saw the following PRR Hot Stick - anyone know anything about these?  I'd say it was overall about 20" long (my daughter's foot in flip flops in the picture!), the head looked like brass or bronze, and clearly the seller thought it was from PRR (though I didn't see any markings).  I figured something like this might have something to do with "yard work" - so still meets the "switcher" criteria I'd say!

Best to all, enjoy your Sunday...Rich

IMG_2473IMG_2472

Rich- looks similar to what linemen use to open and close switches on overhead transformers and switches. If I'm right then it was probably much longer originally. I don't think anyone would open a 13,000 volt switch from 2' away.

The modern ones are made of fiberglass but are still called hot sticks.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/dc/Country_Energy_linesmen_closing_the_circuit.jpg/1200px-Country_Energy_linesmen_closing_the_circuit.jpg

http://lghttp.17652.nexcesscdn.net/808B15/magento/media/catalog/product/cache/8/image/ae8e27adf667b20d5f3db4b7e3a38cc2/4/0/4059_1.jpg

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