Picture7Remember the Chevy Vega?  This is how they were shipped. Until the early 1960s, automobiles moved by rail were carried in boxcars. These were 50 feet long with double-wide doors.  Inside was room for four full-sized sedans on a two-tier rack – two raised up off the floor on a steel rack and two others tucked in underneath them.  This protected the cars during transport but wasnt very efficient, as the weight of four vehicles was far less than the maximum weight a boxcar that size could carry.  When 85-foot and 89-foot flatcars came into service, it was possible to pack a total of fifteen automobiles in one car on tri-level auto racks. But it still didn’t approach the maximum allowable weight for each flatcar.

When Chevrolet started designing Vega during the late 1960s, one of the main objectives was to keep the cost of the car down around $2,000 in circa-1970 dollars.  At the time, the freight charge for moving a loaded railroad car from the Lordstown, OH assembly plant to the Pacific coast – the longest distance cars produced at Lordstown would need to travel – was around $4,800.  Since the Vega was a subcompact, it was possible to squeeze three more cars on a railroad car for a total of eighteen, instead of the usual fifteen.  But that still worked out to around $300 per car a substantial surcharge for a $2000 car. If only Chevrolet could get more Vegas on a railroad car, the cost per unit of hauling them would go down.

Picture8The engineers at GM and Southern Pacific Railroad came up with a clever solution.  Instead of loading the cars horizontally, the Vegas were to be placed vertically on a specially designed auto-rack called the Vert-A-Pac.  Within the same volume of an 89-foot flatcar, the Vert-A-Pac system could hold as many as 30 automobiles instead of 18.

Chevrolet’s goal was to deliver Vegas topped with fluids and ready to drive to the dealership.  In order to be able to travel nose-down without leaking fluids all over the railroad, Vega engineers had to design a special engine oil baffle to prevent oil from entering the No. 1 cylinder.  Batteries had filler caps located high up on the rear edge of the case to prevent acid spilling, the carburetor float bowl had a special tube that drained gasoline into the vapor canister during shipment, and the windshield washer bottle stood at a 45 degree angle.  Plastic spacers were wedged in beside the power train to prevent damage to engine and transmission mounts.  The wedges were removed when cars were unloaded.

Picture6The Vega was hugely popular when it was introduced in 1970, however it quickly earned a reputation for unreliability, rust and terrible engine durability.  When the Vega was discontinued in 1977, the Vert-A-Pac cars had to be retired as they were too specialized to be used with anything else.  The Vert-A-Pac racks were scrapped, and the underlying flatcars went on to other uses.

 

Title BNSF’s Arizona Divide
Producer Railway Productions
Format Wide Screen
Playing Time 1 hr 10  min
Purchased From Trainvideodepot.com
Date Purchased 5/30/2013
Price Paid $23.95

This video takes us east from Kingman, AZ, to Flagstaff, AZ, on a portion of what was once the Santa Fe’s main line across Arizona.  We are on the Seligman Sub which stretches from Needles, CA, to Winslow, AZ.  The area covered in this video is also known as the “Arizona Divide.”

The video quality is excellent and it is presented in wide screen format.  This combination of great image quality and wide screen format makes  the desert scenes come alive.  This DVD is very near 7idea quality and that says a lot.  A shortcoming must also be pointed out, however.  There needs to be a more detailed map than the one presented at the start of the video and it should be referred to as we progress along the sub.  It is impossible to visualize where we are as the scenes unfold.

The first geographic feature we are shown is Kingman Canyon where the double tracks are at different elevations; one set of tracks is located along the bottom of the canyon and one set of tracks is located part of the way up the canyon wall.  We see two trains running in opposite directions in the canyon, one on the lower track and one on the upper track.   We see another train meet a little further east in Crozier Canyon but the tracks there are side by side and at the same level.

As we make our eastward progress we gain elevation and eventually leave the desert behind us in favor of pine forests.  When we reach Williams, we are at 6700 feet in elevation, a gain of in elevation of 3200 feet above our starting point at Kingman.  The narrator informs us that this is the only alpine region along the entire Santa Fe main line from Chicago to LA and we continue our eastward journey until we reach Flagstaff.

This one gets a B.  It seemed that the further into it I got, the less impressed I was.  It was worth the price but could have been better.

 

Picture5Take a look at this old RR luggage tag.  L&N RR and SF&W Ry P2172 via P&A RR.  After some Googling, I have L&N RR and South Florida and Western (absorbed by L&N) then the ID number, then via Pensacola & Atlantic RR.  Does anyone have more knowledge of these pieces?  Best I can tell it is brass. Some were pewter.  My neighbor found it in 8 inches of soil just off the old track at Browning Springs Middle School, Madisonville, Ky.  Lucky me! – Bill Thomas

Title Arizona’s Shortline Railroads
Producer Pentrex
Format DVD full screen
Playing Time 1 hr 40 min
Purchased From Trainvideodepot.com
Date Purchased 4/26/2013
Price Paid $24.95

This video shows short line railroad operations in Arizona, with the action taking place in the early 1990s.  Several different shortlines are visited and we begin with the Copper Basin Railway which runs 54 miles from Magma Junction, where it interchanges with the old SP line, to Hayden and serves the huge open pit Ray copper mine.  This territory is southeast of Phoenix.

We are treated to some panoramic views of the Arizona desert and the enormous open pit Ray mine as we watch the railroad action.  We see some switching action involving rare locomotive types.  Two of the locomotives we see in action are four-axle GP-39s of which only 23 were ever built.  We then see three six-axle SD-39’s of which only 54 were ever built.  The GP-39s bring the ore cars up from the mine to Ray Junction and then power is switched to the SD-39s for the trip to the smelter in Hayden.  While still on the Copper Basin Railway we are shown some beautiful desert flowers, the iconic saguaro cactus that we all associate with the Arizona desert, an up close and personal look at a four and a half foot long diamondback rattlesnake, and yet another symbol of the Arizona desert, a  road runner.

Next up is the San Manuel Arizona Railroad which connects with the Copper Basin Railway at Hayden and runs south for 30 miles to San Manuel.  It is owned by the Magma Copper Company and serves their mine at Hayden.  We see two GP 38-2’s in action on this railroad.  A little later we see a pair of Alco RS 3’s belch their signature billows of black smoke as they begin to move.  We see the loading operation at the Magma copper mine, which is both an open pit and an underground mine.  Large buckets of ore are elevated from the mine by a huge hoist and the ore is dumped into a silo for loading onto the ore cars.

The Magma Arizona is owned by the same copper company that owns the San Manuel Arizona Railroad.  The Magma has on its roster three Baldwin locomotives, an S 8, an S 12, and a six axle DRS 66-1500 that had not been used in years when this video was shot.  This railroad operates on 28 miles of track from Magma Junction, where it interchanged with the SP, to Superior.

Next up is the Arizona Eastern which runs 134 miles NW from its connection with the SP at Bowie, AZ, to Miami, AZ, where is serves a smelter owned by Cypress Corporation.  We watch a train pulled by three GP 20s run down one of the main streets of Globe, AZ.

We visit the Arizona & California next, which is actually a regional railroad rather than a short line, and then we see the final railroad, the Apache.  The Apache rosters all Alco locomotives.

I give this video a good solid “B.”  It was worth the purchase price but it would have been so much more impressive if it had been shot in wide screen.

 

Amtrak unveiled its new “City Sprinter” locomotive for NE Corridor service.  Steve Gentry emailed the link to this photo and a nice article on the specifics of the locomotive.  Go to http://news.yahoo.com/amtrak-unveils-locomotives-replace-aging-174941862.html.  I will email the chapter the same link so you can simply click there without all the typing.
Amtrak unveiled its new “City Sprinter” locomotive for NE Corridor service. Steve Gentry emailed the link to this photo and a nice article on the specifics of the locomotive. Go to http://news.yahoo.com/amtrak-unveils-locomotives-replace-aging-174941862.html. I will email the chapter the same link so you can simply click there without all the typing.

FutrellI chased this train up and down the Columbia Gorge, the dates were June 6 and 7, 1997.  But my trusty Yashica had finally given up the ghost. My developed Ektachrome slides were all out of focus.

If it hadn’t been for photo stops and preventive stops to check for hot bearings, I would have only seen this train once in each direction.  These two days the former ESPEE 4449 was running excursions between  Portland, Oregon and Wishram, Washington.  The Burlington Northern graciously hosted these runs, and the BNSF continues the practice.  The train is traveling on the former Spokane, Portland & Seattle (SP&S) Railway on the Washington side of the Columbia River.   Great scenery, good safe access for railfans,  Beacon Rock,  the Bonneville Dam tunnel,  other rock lined tunnels and miles of track parallel to Hwy 14 only a few yards off the fog line.   It doesn’t get much better than that, unless all your own slides had developed nicely too. Duh.!

The tunnel here is the result of moving the line further away from the river and dam when the “dam” people built the second powerhouse and bigger & better fish ladder at Bonneville.  Lessons learned: a. Not a great idea to chase trains in a motor home, and b. Always have a backup camera.  Credit to Gary Ostlund, submitted by James Futrell.