Showing posts with label Signals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Signals. Show all posts

Sunday, August 26, 2012

North Platte or Bust: Part 2, Marion, Bellevue & Fostoria

Marion Union Station
AUGUST  6, 2012:

This day began with us buying ear plugs at CVS and settling down to watch the action at Marion Union Station.  CSX and NS gave us something to watch on all lines and boy were those diamonds loud.  With daylight and an a few short lulls I also roamed around to see what historical artifacts I could photograph.  A few are mixed in. 

Marion Union Station
Marion Union Station
Right next to the station and across the former Hocking Valley line I ran into these items related to the Marion Steam Shovel Company.  Apparently its plant was across the tracks at one time.  I hadn't even given it a thought though I knew of it.  The sign was quite informative but I included a link.  Panama Canal and NASA among its work.


Northbound N&W signals
Southbound N&W signals.
Next I wandered to the 3 lines to shoot the signals.  They all had signals from previous owners dating back 50+ years and all appeared to be ready for replacement.  In fact, most had new signals installed already. 

The old N&W position signals were the most curious so I got to them first.  As CSX provided the northbound on the Hocking Valley, I got one going through the old C&O "traffic light" signals.  You can see that their days are numbered. New signals are already in place all around.



Northbound on the old C&O
Southbound local on ex-N&W
Perhaps the signals just look better when something is going by them.  Here is a sampling of trains going by the old signals.  These shots cover all three lines, though not every signal.  I already have too many pictures here.








Westbound off the Big Four.
Westbound off the Big Four.




Former E-L Caboose

Once I had my fill of the trains going by all the signals I finished getting some shots of the tower and caboose.  The tower used to be higher and on the other side of the tracks to the north.  There's an old Conrail rust cabin there now. 



I found the design of the station and the surrounding artifacts to be somewhat fascinating.  I have an N scale model of the caboose with a different paint scheme.  The tower is useful for elevated photography.  Charles did put a second video camera on the steps.  Even the brick walkways were unique.  One of the locals told us the elaborately fired bricks came from the basement floor. 




Relocated tower

Marion Union Station











 
Attica Jct., OH
Eventually we hit a lull around 11:30 am that just seemed to beckon us to move north to Bellevue.  We followed the NS line the whole way and encountered 5 trains, including an Exhibition Car train.  However, whenever we stopped to get pictures, nothing moved.  To be fair, there seemed to be a maintenance blitz going on, so the trains we saw were working around this.  Attica Jct. below just seemed to typify our plight on this route.  At this spot the CSX (where I'm standing) crosses the NS in the distance.  Trains stopped for MOW gangs as soon as we approached.  Or, they moved in the distance when we couldn't reach them.



Mad River and Nickle Plate Museum, 
Our luck changed a bit when we reached Bellevue.   MOW still had stuff stopped and much moved in the distance, but we were surrounded by museum pieces to look at while we waited.







 Bellevue, OH
Both the CN and CP provided something to watch too.  I believe the CN runs come from IC origins.






Bellevue, OH
Although a tower is in the way,  you get the idea.  CP may be here because of MILW/SOO.  The museum's just acquired railfan platform is located to the left of the tower.
NS MOW work, Bellevue, OH






The museum itself offered a huge variety of well maintained equipment and some very interesting displays of photos, papers, artifacts and misc. from all over.  Before we set out for Fostoria, we made sure we saw everything the museum had to offer.  We even drove over to a new "platform" that the museum has just acquired over nearer the tower.  It was just a concrete foundation from an old building but it would be a great legal vantage point for future visits.  By then a roof or a bench might be included.  We never found good access to the yard but the highway overpass was pretty cool to drive over.  Photos were possible but not ideal.  The sun was getting to us by this time.




Replica of Ohio's first

NKP china collection

Inside the first ever dome car.


SD-9

A quarry critter

CNW Alco

A very specialized shop motor

B&O Alco switcher

NKP cabooses

Who doesn't like that herald?

A fully equipped RPO car.

At the helm of an RSD.

NKP fans delight.

Fairbank Morse

GP30!

Dynomometer Car

Plymouth of Ohio

Mad River and Nickle Plate Museum, Bellevue, OH






























































Mad River and Nickle Plate Museum, Bellevue, OH






















Before we left the MOW parade moved west and all of the waiting trains moved into the yard.  This line is the old Nickle Plate and is being upgraded significantly.
Mad River and Nickle Plate Museum, Bellevue, OH

Mad River and Nickle Plate Museum, Bellevue, OH














Fostoria Railroad Park
We pretty much drove straight from Bellevue to Fostoria.  We
Fostoria Railroad Park
passed large industrial complexes that included Whirlpool and its large distribution facilities.  We saw plenty but really very little to photograph well.  As it turned out, we got to Fostoria with no concrete idea where to go.  I did have clues but no location.



Fostoria Railroad Park
The new railroad park in Fostoria is as new as they get.  The "groundbreaking" was last September.  Apparently all that could be done was to level off a gravel parking spot, put out a picnic table and place an outhouse.   Apparently a long-term plan does exist and it includes the entire triangle between the three sets of diamonds.  Also, a building was recently removed which opens up the view.  But, we found it nearly by accident.  We knew only that a park existed so we looked for the tell-tale signs near one of the diamonds.



Fostoria Railroad Park
Fostoria Railroad Park
We actually missed the park as we drove into town.  We were getting pretty disgusted when the "short range sensors" showed a promising combination of tracks and roads in the north-east corner of the triangle.  Sure enough, we had gone down the wrong street on the way in and missed the tiny detail of an outhouse and picnic table.  This we soon found on our last pass.  As it turned out, this was probably the best corner to be in.  We could see all three lines fairly clearly.  In fact the tracks of two lines touched the gravel patch we parked on.


Fostoria Railroad Park
Fostoria Railroad Park
Our first trains were NS.  A westbound was going by when we arrived and a switcher in the form of a high hood SD40-2 was playing on the other track.   Not long afterwards a westbound with a UP leader went by.  This was followed by a high hood pulling a local westward.   Somewhere in this process a local woman railfan dropped by and informed us that her husband saw that an NS heritage unit (Virginian?) might be coming through from Bellevue.  His best guess was 7pm for it to show up.  Well, that got our interest.  We were thinking of leaving.  Now we knew where we'd be when the light died.  Another railfan joined us too.  He was a regular visitor to Fostoria and camped in his van.  The usual trading of info and war stories ensued.  The same woman had informed him too. 

Fostoria Railroad Park
Fostoria Railroad Park
CSX was not idle.  Their east-west line was pretty busy.  I took plenty of cluttered pictures of trains going by the tower.  Two trains slowed to make a turn north, right in front of us.  At least one train came north and turned west.  Before the light completely died, a southbound CSX came through.  This one allowed me to get my first good shot of the latest logo, which I hadn't noticed before this stop. 

When the light died, no heritage unit had been by yet.  I recall that it was through in the wee hours according to reports.  By then we were snoozing away in Lima, miles away, preparing for the next leg of our trip.

BC






Saturday, June 2, 2012

April in Altoona - Again!

 Here is a trip I've been trying to write up for weeks.  I'll put the pictures in place and then add the writing as time allows.  The new Blogger software for uploading photos is a pain in the butt in some ways and a joy in others.  It will be a long string of photos with the writing in draft form for a while...

I started out for this particular "April Vacation" adventure on a Wednesday afternoon, intending to stop in Rutland,  VT on the way to Altoona.  I thought I'd check out the Connecticut River valley to see what had changed since my last visit in the 1990's. 

A stop in St. Johnsbury reveals a new paint job on the yard office since the CP Rail days.  Cleaner track too.

The scene looking north hasn't changed much in decades.  Of course it's nice that the trackwork has been cleaned up considerably.  
 The trip south along Rt. 5 yielded a southbound Washington County train of considerable size.  This was after about 4:30pm on a Thursday in case it's a normal time.  I caught a chirp of the F.R.E.D. well south of the Passumpsic RR in Barnet. 

I finally got ahead of the train at South Bradford.  Open places along the track are few along the river so I got quite far ahead of the slow train.  

I was quite pleased with the results of the long wait.  The train was led by a Clarendon and Pittsford unit.  That made it my first shot of anything from that end of the system.  A WACR unit would have been better but this was a good second place catch for me.  The last time I saw the trailing unit was many years ago headed for Bennington and it was pure gray primer then. 

Thursday morning started with a quick recon of the Rutland area and then I was off to do the same thing in Whitehall and Saratoga.  Nothing of note to place here but I did see a lot of fossils.  The first train I was able to stop and photograph was near Sayre, PA.  A local was sitting behind an Italian restaurant done up in a depot motif.  Several cars and cabooses decorated the place.  

I took Rt. 220 south to Tyrone.  I followed some tracks here and there and found the end of the shortline south of Corning.  But again nothing of note.  The same was true for Williamsport and Lock Haven.  Lots of tracks around but I wouldn't know where to start looking for trains.  I made my phone calls when I arrived at Tyrone.  I was in a lull of course but I did hear that something was near.  I got this Maersk shot before the light gave out.  

On Friday morning I was enjoying the usual Tunnel Inn hospitality on the deck when I made the snap decision to photograph a helper going by.  The "throw down" camera took too long to focus but I got a shot of my lonely car sitting in the Inn parking lot next to the bridge.  I was the only one home too.  I needed to meet "The Guide" and "The Fidder" in Altoona, so I couldn't hang around to do better.

We got a little surprise when we got to the station.  We would have gone over there anyway but a 'heads up' from the Fiddler gave it some urgency.  I'd seen on Facebook that the last UP genset to be built at Juniata was ready.  I'd also seen that the PRR heritage unit was ready too.  Imagine our surprise when we saw both sitting ready to depart at the head end of 11A.  We were able to take our time with photos and then head up the line to Brickyard crossing for a few more.  Of course these things don't stay very quiet so there were plenty of other fans around for this occasion.  Brickyard proved to be well lit at this early hour and the train was full of unusual cars.


 We the 25Z as we arrived but as you can see, shiny new units got all of the attention. 


With that excitement behind us we skipped ahead to Cresson and over to Lilly.  We weren't going to see heritage units again but we caught other things.   We caught a helper set heading west before this Baltimore bound 13M "bare tables" train rounded the bend.  They looked good under the old signals on the west end of Lilly.  The second unit is one of a group of former UP SD60's which will be rebuilt and used by NS.  You can see that it's already received an NS "patch" on the cab.


Our next stop was CP W near South Fork.  This is where there used to be a "fly over" for trains to enter and depart the South Fork Secondary.  Now it's just the end of a siding.  We saw helper sets pass and 10G came into the great light.  We also caught 22W down the road at South Fork itself.  From there "the Guide" surmised that we could catch west bound 65D "oil train" at the Jamestown bridge.  This train usually had BNSF power and this guy didn't disappoint.  We actually packed up to leave and along came an empty PPLX Shamokin coal train 641.  At this point on the line you can see a spur heading off to the right.  We could hear activity which turned out to be machinery near a coal loadout.  It also turned out that there were some SD80MAC's loading a string of cars at Sonman's Tipple, but they weren't what we heard at the bridge.  They weren't very accessible for photos but we could see them.


As usual a stop at Cassandra at the right time of day can be very busy.  We saw 12 trains in 2 hours and several were meets.  I think the two trains in the left photo are 26T and empty 861.

Here we see 947 "Roving Track Gang" with it's flat cars of equipment. Among the others we have eb ethanol 66Q.



We eventually found a break in the action so we could head east toward Altoona.  We stopped for some wb's at the Rt. 53 bridge.  21M came by quickly and I later took the opportunity to try working with the old signal bridge for 23M.   

We decided to catch Amtrak someplace unusual so we headed to Gallitzin for a tunnel shot.  It also gave me a chance to drop by my room for a minute.  We pretty much headed to Altoona after this shot.  A swing by Slope and Brickyard gave us a chance to see 64J and 13G.  We had dinner at a good Italian restaurant down by the Juniata shops and called it a night.  "The Fiddler" had to return home at this point.
A P&W auto rack sneaks by.
Saturday was overcast but not bad until later in the day.  We started out by going right to Carney's Crossing west of Cresson.  Unfortunately, I don't know what happened to my carefully typed up train log for the day. (Argh!)
I recall that we caught this first westbound and then stayed around for Amtrak.  While we waited we had another pair of westbound trains.  An intermodal on the middle track overtook the freight on track 3.


All this while we were waiting on the nearby Amtrak.  Luckily they cleared the scene first.  I had time to switch to the other side of the tracks to catch it on the curve.  We would have seen Amtrak on track one but it would have been pretty crowded. 



Our next stop was Portage.  We pulled down in front of a small factory and waited for this eastbound ethanol train.  We set up in front of the signals just as it started to rain.  I managed to catch a decent shot of the helpers from the many poor ones I took.



Back at South Fork, a few trains were sneaking through.  I wanted to try this angle from in town behind the convenience store.  We headed to Summerhill after this.  The rain was playing with us so we decided to sit under the bridge for westbounds.  Naturally the first thing we get is a pair of eastbounds, but the rain had some mercy on us.  We thought we had a eastbound near with time enough to head to the stone arch bridge.  It turned out to be helpers but they were on the bridge.  Thank heavens the leaves were not full yet.

Back to Summerhill for a variety of trains and helpers.






I found this grain train to be fairly photogenic.







Back to South Fork too for some rainy action.








Welcome to HAPT's Railfan Adventures


The Hebron Any Power Team is actually just a bunch of fun-loving rail enthusiasts who enjoy photographing and chasing all things railroad with friends. This bunch of guys cover a lot of ground for a group based way up "nawth" in Maine. We also have friends scattered around the country who contribute well to our hobby. In fact, our name is derived from our actual friends in the Worcester Foreign Power Team, except that Hebron hasn't seen a train since the 1950's so we'll settle for "any power".

Welcome and enjoy the eclectic collections of the contributors. Maine idealizes "life in the slow lane" so we present this blog as an effort to share our less time sensitive findings and to add to our hobby.