yama junk owna said:CW
I hear ya about trying to work for railraod companys, I am not a railroad fan, I can only imagine what it's like trying to work for one of those outfits. (I worked for the power company as a steam plant mechanic and that is bad enough, they like the railroad have two faces, the one they like to show to the public and the real one that the employees see.) But I do like the machine, yes steam was hard work and dirty but man they sure were neat, especially when you get into what makes them tick !
Oh the diesels are just a big generator on wheels nothing really fascinating about them. lol.
Yes, the steam locos were pretty fascinating! And I will admit that watching one work with a train of heavy steel coaches is neat, indeed! There is a hill that comes up out of Cramerton, NC from the Catawba river southbound that really made the big
2-6-4, et al, work. The exhaust was deafening in the cuts! And you had to admire the old engineers who cut their teeth on steam and still held seniority. They knew what they were doing, and would "claim out" on the excursion trains just to get to run 'em again. And they could coax the big engines up and over the hill just as they did when they were young--even tho many of them had been away from steam since the 1950's; they never forgot! And, like the high-speed pass that night at
79 MPH, it was all quite the glimpse into how it must have been prior to 1953 when Southern gave up steam. I have a photo that I retrieved from the TRASH, no less, of the day when the last revenue steam run was made. It shows the Best Friend of Charleston replica, the 4-8-4 Mikado being retired, and an F-unit all lined up for an official photo. I got lucky in that the picture hung in the Roadway Equipment shop office for years. When they remodeled the shops, I just happened to be in the office when, in the trash can, was this picture! And I grabbed it. Who knows, it might be valuable someday!
BTW, like you, most railroaders are not "fans" as such. But it was still funny because when the whistle sounded on an un-announced move, the old guys (and about everybody else) would drop what they were doing and run outside to watch 'er by.
And, just as a bit of semi-personal history, if you ever go to the Smithsonian and look at the magnificent Southern PS-4 1401, look at the frame near the drivers (I forgot which side now) and you will find a thermite weld on the frame! I knew the fella who worked at Spencer Shops and put that weld there! He was still working when I came on in the 70's. I just thot it was neat to know those fellas who actually worked on
the PS-4's.
73
CWM