Perhaps it's their first ...
The photo of the first electric locomotive to enter service got me intrigued. Who invented the electric locomotive?
German inventers had made battery-powered locos in the nineteenth century, but they were rejected due to very short range. And while he did not invent the electric loco, Thomas Edison ran an experimental electric locomotive about 1/3 of a mile in 1880. (Picture 1)
Encouraged by the railroads and the government, he built a bigger line and ran a larger experimental engine on it a few years later. (Picture 2)
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The first electrics are credited to Siemens and first fully electrified line was in Italy, running Ganz steeplecaps.
Yep...
Rusty
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So we're in the real trains topic and posting pictures of models to ask if we'd purchase a model of it. Something seems incongruous.
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16 - 18 inch shell with a passenger and crew. It would make a neat model.
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Guys, I think that putting photos of models in a thread about buying a model of a real piece of railroad equipment is a little silly.
Stuart
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Everybody always talks about eliminating the third rail. How about we eliminate the two outside rails?
Rusty
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No kidding? The Ma&Pa ran Sykes cars, and right past the classic store/post office/station in Muddy Creek Forks? I'd buy a three rail Sykes...New Haven, etc.,used them... and l have a three railed brass one.
Good Heavens, Byrdie, I thought you were joking, but there really is such a railcar! Over time, the ballast gets rounded, dirt and impurities trapped between the ballast cement together, and other problems reduce the effectiveness of ballast (which allows the track to flex with changing loads).
However, that's not what it is.
But for the record, here is a ballast-cleaning railcar in Israel.
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Byrdie posted:
Nope... It's a Schwellenpflug, a device used by the Germans in WWII to tear up the railroads as they retreated.
Here's another one in action:
Rusty
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Rusty, you are correct. Used by both sides in WW2, and by Russia in WW1, its use is often considered a war crime, as it destroys civilian infrastructure.
NOBODY wants one of these on their lay-out!
>>its use is often considered a war crime, as it destroys civilian infrastructure.
Not if it was used to tear up government-owned railroads!
From a purely logical standpoint, it would probably be the LAST thing I'd buy!
Vincent Massi posted:Rusty, you are correct. Used by both sides in WW2, and by Russia in WW1, its use is often considered a war crime, as it destroys civilian infrastructure.
NOBODY wants one of these on their lay-out!
War crime?
Source, please.
palallin posted:Vincent Massi posted:Rusty, you are correct. Used by both sides in WW2, and by Russia in WW1, its use is often considered a war crime, as it destroys civilian infrastructure.
NOBODY wants one of these on their lay-out!
War crime?
Source, please.
"Today, the targeted destruction of civil infrastructure is considered a war crime . " https://everipedia.org/wiki/lang_en/Railroad_plough/
UP has another commemorative locomotive. This one pays tribute to their employees. It's an SD70ACe #1111. If MTH does a model with scale wheels, I'm in. The paint seems to also imply a tribute to the steam program. I'll see if I can find more photos.
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Vincent Massi posted:palallin posted:Vincent Massi posted:Rusty, you are correct. Used by both sides in WW2, and by Russia in WW1, its use is often considered a war crime, as it destroys civilian infrastructure.
NOBODY wants one of these on their lay-out!
War crime?
Source, please.
"Today, the targeted destruction of civil infrastructure is considered a war crime . " https://everipedia.org/wiki/lang_en/Railroad_plough/
I am looking for an authoritative source, please.
Vincent Massi posted:
K-Line did one years ago. I have one. I'll have to check, but I think MTH also did one. I saw the prototype in El Monte about twenty-five years ago. The bunk area is actually a jail cell.
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poniaj posted:Rusty Traque posted:I'd not only buy one, I'm thinking of making this my next scratch building project. I've lined up some drawings and photos, along with photos I took of these units taken a year or two ago.
MTH made them, so you could just buy one of those.
palallin posted:smd4 posted:Kent Loudon posted:And of course, the Russians invented the 4-4-0.
Where did you come up with that little bit of misinformation?
It's a joke, son; it's a joke (the Russians inwented everything first--just listen to Russian history as related by Pavel Chekhov).
I heard that Lionel invented everything first. That's what I was told, anyway.
That photo of the DD-1 (and the MTH model) show the attempt the LIRR made to "modernize" the units to pull the World's Fair shuttle trains in 1939. Always though it looked better before.
RoyBoy posted:poniaj posted:Rusty Traque posted:I'd not only buy one, I'm thinking of making this my next scratch building project. I've lined up some drawings and photos, along with photos I took of these units taken a year or two ago.
MTH made them, so you could just buy one of those.
But not in S... If I REALLY wanted "easy", I'd model in HO.
S really does have more than most folks think, but not the more uncommon items.