by Ocala Mike
Great pictures of the nearest thing to "mountain railroading" on Long Island!
Ocala Mike (formerly Hillside Mike and Deer Park Mike)
Railroad Forums
Moderator: Liquidcamphor
RGlueck wrote:Matt, you're telling me Cold Spring Hill is now double-tracked? See what happens when you're away for 45 years?I know you're just kidding around, I know everyone that posts here knows what I said. It was in case someone asked. Also it's still mountain railroading.
I'll be darned!
nyandw wrote:You mean B-A1A configuration. That means the front truck had two powered axles, and the rear truck also had two powered axles with the center axle unpowered. A-A would mean two unpowered axles.keyboardkat wrote:2402 was one of four 2400hp F-M C-liners purchased with Bankruptcy Court permission by the LIRR. The other eight C-liners had the 10-cylinder 2000hp engine. ...Thanks for the info!
http://www.trainsarefun.com/lirr/lirrCl ... liners.htm
#2402 in its Goodfellow repaint Starting in 1955 with the arrival of the new Alco RS-3 diesels to replace the last of the steam locomotives, the “Goodfellow colors” (as they are often referred to) came into use. These colors were a smoke gray body and orange ends and pilots. This scheme was applied to all diesels as they went into the shop for maintenance and repainting, and was completed by 1959 when the Dashing Dan herald started appearing. The first timetable to have Dan was in September 1959, although he was introduced in the April 1957 Long Island Railroader.
Fairbanks-Morse CPA-24-5
Numbers Built Serial Heritage Class
2401-2404 10-1951 24L497-24L500 New FP-24SC
(F=Fairbanks Morse, P= Passenger, 24=2400HP, S= Steam Generator, C= Speed Control)
All had 5 axles. A-A, A-1-A configuration 3 chime Nathan-Air chime M3R1 mounted on top of cab.
Fairbanks-Morse CPA-20-5
Numbers Built Serial Heritage Class
2001-2008 6/8-1950 21L331-21L338 New FP-20SC
(F=Fairbanks Morse, P= Passenger, 20=2000HP, S= Steam Generator, C= Speed Control)
All had 5 axles. A-A, A-1-A configuration 3 chime Nathan-Air chime M3R1 on top of cab.
hotbike wrote:Yes, but Fairbanks Morse continued to produce it's opposed piston engine for the Navy, on account of the "silent running" , which was the thing to have in a Diesel Submarine.Today the company is called Fairbanks-Morse diesel, and they build OP engines, including turbo-charged models, for marine and stationary power applications. They also build the Alco-designed model 251 engine, for similar applications. F-M had been working on turbocharging the OP engine at the time it quit the locomotive business.
R36 Combine Coach wrote:Thank you. In 1971 I lived in Queens and had a job in Levittown. I would take the train to Hicksville. It was my fist time as a commuter on the LIRR. I didn't realize that the line was newly electrified. I remember hoping to get an air conditioned train instead of the "old ones". Now I wish I could ride on an old open window train again.Crabman1130 wrote:East of Mineola (Huntington), 1970.RGlueck wrote:The M1 train is the first run of a revenue MU passenger train on the PJ branch.When was the PJ branch electrified?
RGlueck wrote:RG: Good group of LIRR pictures - I figured correctly that the first three were of the Oyster Bay yard...