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  #301  
Old Posted Nov 30, 2010, 8:31 PM
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Quote:
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Cologne:

Great shot, those padlocks look like some kind of art installation!



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  #302  
Old Posted Dec 3, 2010, 4:52 PM
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Dredging the archives again - San Francisco CalTrain station, evening commute, day after Thanksgiving 1978:

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  #303  
Old Posted Dec 3, 2010, 5:22 PM
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  #304  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2010, 6:00 AM
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Getting thrown out of railroad stations since 1979!

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  #305  
Old Posted Dec 21, 2010, 1:17 AM
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Virginia & Truckee No. 21 J.W. Bowker built 1875 in Philadelphia by Baldwin, on display at California State Railroad Museum in Old Sacramento
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  #306  
Old Posted Apr 16, 2011, 9:54 PM
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A few night shots of Paddington:





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  #307  
Old Posted Apr 16, 2011, 11:01 PM
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Paris, Gare de Lyon






TGV arriving from Lyon

Suburban train arriving from Montargis




TGV depot on Gare de Lyon track
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  #308  
Old Posted Apr 17, 2011, 2:00 AM
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Amazing, legendary station. I'm always impressed at how bright and open Europe's train sheds are; typically our major ones are underground, dark, gloomy, and grimy, and our smaller ones sometimes don't even have any shelter for passengers.
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  #309  
Old Posted Apr 19, 2011, 5:28 AM
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This is one of the shortest railroads in the US, the Dardanelle Russellville Railroad in Arkansas which is just a couple miles long. Its right down the road from me and I go down there all the time and watch the trains run. Heres the D&R 19 from a few days ago, which is being repaired right now. It was built in 1949 I believe.

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  #310  
Old Posted May 5, 2011, 6:58 AM
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Two FrontRunner commuter trains at the Inter-model Hub in Salt Lake City




The old Rio Grande Depot across the street


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  #311  
Old Posted May 5, 2011, 12:23 PM
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Originally Posted by photolitherland View Post
This is one of the shortest railroads in the US, the Dardanelle Russellville Railroad in Arkansas which is just a couple miles long. Its right down the road from me and I go down there all the time and watch the trains run. Heres the D&R 19 from a few days ago, which is being repaired right now. It was built in 1949 I believe.
Great photo. That's a characteristic shop for a lot of those operations, just enough shelter from the weather to get the job done (when it has to be done indoors). Short lines survive generally by being more customer service oriented than the Class 1 railroads, and they operate on a shoestring. Everybody does more than one job; the President/CEO may spend time at the throttle and the general manager/trainmaster might double as a signal repairman and even do track work. While everyone works harder, the policies are more relaxed on short lines and the people tend to be friendlier. Make yourself a familiar presence and get to know some of them, and you might get invited for a cab ride. That's a neat experience.
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  #312  
Old Posted May 5, 2011, 7:56 PM
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^
When I was there taking that photo, on another one of their trains they were taking a class of 5th graders or something for a ride down the line. That line today only takes goods from the Dow Plant and then a tire recycler up to a switch where it meets the main railroad line, which is 1.7 something miles away. They only run the trains about once a day, but the D and R company recently bought another small line down in southern Arkansas, so they are trying to expand their business.

On another note, these trains actually offered commuter services to Russellville down to the community of Dardanelle on the river. At one point there were little stops, like bus stations, along the line. They stopped that service I believe in the early 60s. The train stops dont exist anymore, which is a shame.




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Dredging the archives again - San Francisco CalTrain station, evening commute, day after Thanksgiving 1978:

Wow, I cant believe they were still using those old 1910 or whatever passenger cars back then. Thats incredible.
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  #313  
Old Posted May 6, 2011, 2:25 AM
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^
[ ... ]

Wow, I cant believe they were still using those old 1910 or whatever passenger cars back then. Thats incredible.
While some steel cars of similar design type were built as early as 1909, I think the ones still in use on the SP commuter trains were from a bunch bought in 1927. I read someplace that they remained in service until 1985. The bi-level gallery cars were pretty new when I took the photo, I think.

Amtrak was shedding the GE P30CH locomotives, which proved unreliable, excessively heavy, and poor-tracking and were hated by the crews. A few of them hung on for a while on some of the heaviest trains; they ran on the Auto Train, and I saw a set on the Sunset Limited in El Paso around 1986 or 1987. I saw a fire-gutted one on the dead line at Amtrak's Beech Grove shops (Indianapolis) around 1991.
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  #314  
Old Posted May 15, 2011, 3:02 AM
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  #315  
Old Posted May 15, 2011, 11:58 AM
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I went on one of these today up to Bendigo... lots of fun fangen through virgin bushland @ 160kph!

Video Link
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  #316  
Old Posted May 16, 2011, 2:37 PM
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Wow, wish we had those in the shitty US of A.
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  #317  
Old Posted May 16, 2011, 8:47 PM
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Do incline railways count?

Aaron (Glowrock)

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  #318  
Old Posted May 17, 2011, 3:25 PM
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Do incline railways count?

Aaron (Glowrock)

They do now. Pittsburgh's inclines are always busy, and the overlooks at both Duquesne and Mon
provide excellent city views. A lot of people go there at dusk to watch the light come on all over the city.

Johnstown has a great incline, capable of carrying automobiles. I saw people taking their bicycles on
board when I rode. It's billed as the world's steepest vehicular incline.









Go to Johnstown and be sure to check out the National Park Service flood memorial, at the site of the
dam that failed in 1889. See the video in the visitors' center.

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  #319  
Old Posted May 17, 2011, 3:29 PM
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Awesome photos, Robert! I've definitely gotta go check out Johnstown in the near future. I've read about the horrible flood there back in the day (1930's, I want to say?), talk about a horrible loss of life!

Again, great photos!

Aaron (Glowrock)
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  #320  
Old Posted May 17, 2011, 3:52 PM
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Thanks, Aaron. Johnstown has had many floods because of its location at the confluence of valleys that funnel heavy rains into flash flooding. The legendary flood occurred in 1889 when a dam on a large private lake upstream failed and sent a huge wall of water roaring down on the town. The downtown mostly was obliterated, and many lives were lost. My grandmother told of being sent alone to Johnstown as a 14-year-old girl on the train to help an aunt reestablish her household after the flood. I suggest reading David McCullough's The Johnstown Flood before you go, so that you'll get a fuller comprehension of what happened suddenly on a Spring day.
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