Another one, same location, different direction, and different time of year (obviously...
)
Thank you!This unit got its chopped short nose in a rebuild. EMD started offering a low short hood with the later GP models. The factory hoods sloped down towards the front, while the modified were flat.
Here is a picture of both factory and modified.
https://www.railpictures.net/photo/898700/
The first two units are GP20s with factory short hoods. The third unit is a GP7u that got it's front hood chopped in an upgrade. The cab was modified also.
All three are Ex AT&SF units.
Yes, the toilets were in the short nose. Many early Geeps were ordered with steam generators in the short hoods for passengers service when steam heat was still the norm.
I'm going to guess it's the one in Versailles (pronounced Ver-sails because it's in Kentucky, not France)? Nice place. I took their Lexington-Chattanooga overnight trip several times....BTW, a tourist railroad I use to frequent in Central KY ran an ex-IC GP20 as their main excursion power for a while after their ex-Army H12-44 blew a generator and their running ALCo MRS-1s was pretty well at duct tape and bailing wire. They now have a super nice restored and refurbed ex-N&W GP9 that they mostly run, but the GP20 still gets a lot of use.
Yep, up until the late 50s the high short hood was the norm for EMD and most of it's competition.This unit got its chopped short nose in a rebuild. EMD started offering a low short hood with the later GP models. The factory hoods sloped down towards the front, while the modified were flat.
Correct, Versailles, although I think you might be thinking of a different operation?(unless they arranged something before my time).I'm going to guess it's the one in Versailles (pronounced Ver-sails because it's in Kentucky, not France)? Nice place. I took their Lexington-Chattanooga overnight trip several times.
Yup, same place. In the late 80's they ran special steam trips one weekend in the fall, from Lexington, KY, to Chattanooga, TN, on NS. One year they ran 611 and another they ran 1218. We'd overnight at the Chattanooga Choo-Choo hotel and go back to Lexington the next day. I don't remember exactly why they quit, but one year they wound up having to cancel the trip and refunding my money and I think NS cancelled the steam program soon after that.Correct, Versailles, although I think you might be thinking of a different operation?(unless they arranged something before my time).
They are a nice little operation, and at their main station/terminal I think they still have an interchange with NS/former SRY although that may be out of service now(or maybe a different shortline is operating it? I forget the little nuances).
The branch that the BGRM occupies once crossed the Kentucky River at the little town of Tyrone by way of Young's High Bridge(which overlooks the US 62 bridge, a nice terra-cotta S-shaped bridge). It primarily serviced the Tyrone power plant, but the other end of Young's High Bridge skirts by the edge of Wild Turkey distillery.
Young's High Bridge was last used in the 80s, and even then it was unsafe enough that it would only handle a small switcher(GE 44 tonner or the like) and a few cars. Now the bridge is a bungee jumping platform.
I've only known BGRM to, at most, run from Versailles to Tyrone. For a while in the early 2000s, they weren't even able to access Tyrone...
Oh wow, I guess that's a SERIOUS gap in my knowledge, and I'm going to have to go hunting for photos now.Yup, same place. In the late 80's they ran special steam trips one weekend in the fall, from Lexington, KY, to Chattanooga, TN, on NS. One year they ran 611 and another they ran 1218. We'd overnight at the Chattanooga Choo-Choo hotel and go back to Lexington the next day. I don't remember exactly why they quit, but one year they wound up having to cancel the trip and refunding my money and I think NS cancelled the steam program soon after that.
It was fun while it lasted.
No idea. It was on tour so I took my 3 year old nephew while visiting. I know nothing about trains, but my grandfather was a conductor between NJ and NYC, so we got some of his caps and punchers and would line up chairs in the hall to play train. That's me punching the ticket back in the mid 50s. Didn't have cell phones back then so we had to use something that is largely missing today - imagination.Dp
Do you know what kind of grade it was capable of pulling? That is very huge for logging work.
Great catch!These shots are pretty poor compared to a lot of the ones earlier in this thread, but here they are anyway, taken last week while we were driving SE on the Yellowhead (Hwy 16) between Neepawa and the #16/#1 junction.
I remember doing the same thing with the kitchen chairs....No idea. It was on tour so I took my 3 year old nephew while visiting. I know nothing about trains, but my grandfather was a conductor between NJ and NYC, so we got some of his caps and punchers and would line up chairs in the hall to play train. That's me punching the ticket back in the mid 50s. Didn't have cell phones back then so we had to use something that is largely missing today - imagination.
View attachment 325034
That would be awesome to see in use!Union Pacific Big Boy #4014. Retired in 1961. It sat in the Rail Giant Train museum in Pomona CA until 2013 when Union Pacific bought it back and started a complete restoration at the UP-rail yard in Cheyene WY. The restoration was finished in May of 2019 and as of 2026 is still operating and touring the USA. UP owned and operated several of these. It was built in November 1941 by the American Locomotive Company at its Schenectady Works and was part of the first group of 20 Big Boys designed to haul heavy freight trains over the Wasatch Range www.trains-and-railroads.com. These "Big Boy" steam locomotives are and were the largest and heaviest locomotives in the world. 4014 is the only one still operational and touring in 2026. 4014 was restored in honor of Union Pacific’s 150th anniversary of the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 2019. Union Pacific Railroad is based out of, and home offices are from Omaha Nebraska.
View attachment 323482
https://www.up.com/about-us/history/steam/big-boy-4014
I recall the #16/#1 junction. It’s like the Golden Triangle of Manitoba!View attachment 325873View attachment 325874
These shots are pretty poor compared to a lot of the ones earlier in this thread, but here they are anyway, taken last week while we were driving SE on the Yellowhead (Hwy 16) between Neepawa and the #16/#1 junction.
I wish O scale could be that inexpensive...as I sit here remembering that I need to pay an invoice for a pair of Atlas O L&N U30cs I preordered(and I should convince myself I don't need to order EVERY road number offered...). The pair of them came out to north of 4 figures. These are from the MTH factory in Korea, but I still got hit with a $30/each tariff. They made a 3rd L&N one in this batch with the GE "XR" paint scheme that I'm really loving, but can't swing the extra cash for it.Does this count? My favorite 60's F Units that I grew up watching. My favorite road name. My favorite paint scheme is the older Maroon and Gold. Over $300 sitting here with Digital Command Control (DCC) and sound. Yikes, the hobby is out of hand.