View Full Version : MOW Equipment
Peirce
October 21st, 2001, 09:56 PM
These two machines are on the tracks of the Housatonic RR and made a brief stop alongside the platform at the Danbury Railway Museum. I didn't have time for taking as many pictures as I would have liked.
I believe these are used for pulling ties or rails. Most likely, several of you can give us a better description of their use.
http://images.fotki.com/photos/4/41513/84114/ns-vi.jpg?1012188233
[ 28 January 2002, 03:46: Message edited by: Peirce ]
7600EM_1
October 23rd, 2001, 03:31 AM
Peirce,
The first one is eiter a Tie puller or spike puller or a spiker which puts spikes in. The crane second one is a tie crane its lacking a tie wagon but its what possitions ties in places or picks them up to take then to another location... :D
Martyn Read
October 23rd, 2001, 05:53 PM
Cool! Here's one from the UK! http://www.railimages.com/album/Martyn%20Read/bescottamper.jpg
One of the fun things about privatisation is that things that used to be one corporate colour (in this case, yellow) are now lots of different corporate colours!
This is a rather fetching purple tamper owned by track maintainence co. GTRM. At Bescot (Birmingham) on the 1st July.
[ 25. November 2002, 21:46: Message edited by: Martyn Read ]
Alan
October 23rd, 2001, 05:53 PM
Saw this Tamper a few years ago at Carnforth in the north west of England
http://www.railimages.com/album/Alan%20Curtis/tamper.jpg
[ 24. November 2002, 18:40: Message edited by: Alan ]
Martyn Read
October 23rd, 2001, 05:57 PM
Ooooh, sisters :D
Peirce
October 23rd, 2001, 08:15 PM
Martyn, Alan,
Those look like luxury models. Contrast this other extreme.
http://images.fotki.com/photos/4/41513/84347/013_Handcar_at_the_Valley-vi.jpg?1012245810
Many of the people on my tours remember this type from the old movies.
[ 28 January 2002, 21:55: Message edited by: Peirce ]
watash
October 24th, 2001, 12:12 AM
Peirce, I used to ride on an old pumper like that for fun. I don't see the brake handle on it though. This one seems to have the foot peddle and brake shoes, so must be a later model. :D
Peirce
December 9th, 2001, 10:30 PM
The lowly Burro Crane. (Reposted from the original thread that started this forum.) How many varieties of tasks were these little guys called on to do? This one is at the Danbury Railway Museum.
http://images2.fotki.com/v2/photos/4/41513/84258/023_THIS_BURRO_CRANE_IS_NO-vi.jpg
[ 02. April 2004, 01:34: Message edited by: Peirce ]
rush2ny
December 11th, 2001, 10:34 PM
Sorry Peirce. That pic got accidentally deleted from my ftp. I must look for the pic in my box of pics and rescan it. In the meantime, here is an interesting little crane. The boom actually detaches (It is lite) and is stored in the gondola in front of it.
http://hometown.aol.com/rush2ny/wic2.jpg
http://www.trainboard.com/sigbreak.gif
Russ
Hoffman Valley RR (http://rush2ny.users5.50megs.com/hvrrpage.html)
http://hometown.aol.com/rush2ny/logo.gif
Peirce
December 12th, 2001, 01:11 AM
Wow, that does look strangely thin. Could we nickname that one "Twiggy?"
Peirce
December 16th, 2001, 12:40 AM
Russ sent this picture to me to post for him.
This is the double-ended crane built for the New York Central for working in the tunnels serving Grand Central Terminal. It is now at the Danbury Railway Museum.
http://images.fotki.com/photos/4/41513/84588/crane-vi.jpg?1012325025
I moved this image to a better location so it could be linked and displayed. Peirce
[ 29 January 2002, 18:55: Message edited by: Peirce ]
fitz
December 16th, 2001, 05:49 AM
Now THAT's a big hook. Anyone know why it was built double ended for my favorite RR?
:confused:
Peirce
December 16th, 2001, 10:22 PM
You will notice two unique features on this crane--it is double ended and the booms are short. It was designed to operate in the tunnels serving Grand Central Terminal.
It is my understanding, Two of these units were ordered and delivered. A third one was supposedly planned, but, so far as I have been able to determine, never built. The one in this picture is the only one surviving.
A story that came with this unit is that it was originally named "Wellington." As the story goes, there was a NYC employee named Wellington, for whom it was named. This job title was Wreck Master.
watash
December 17th, 2001, 12:06 AM
Another reason for the double end, is that the crane could work from either side of a wreck without having to rotate 180 degrees. The crane booms on this one could swing like old time derricks where only the boom swings, which enabled it to work in a confined space. The added weight of this cab portion was often enough to keep it from tipping over, even without the out-rigger support arms. When this kind of crane was used up in the mountains, it was for the same reasons. A standard 250 ton BIG HOOK had to have the room to rotate, yet clear the over-hang of the rear of the hoisting cab. These big tunnel cranes also were equipped with "walking engines" that allowed them to move along the rails under their own power. There were a few of the big single boom cranes that could "walk", but often they would strip the gears, and still had to be pushed or pulled into position by another engine. All cranes are fastenating to watch at work.
Peirce
February 1st, 2002, 10:29 PM
It looks like I finally was able to set up new links to all my pictures in this thread. In doing so I moved to still another hosting site, this time one that charges a small annual fee. They do seem a lot more staple than the free sites, however.
Sometime later:
Not only is my present imaging service more staple, it still offers services that are being eliminated on many of the free sites,
[ 21. July 2002, 15:41: Message edited by: Peirce ]
Peirce
July 21st, 2002, 11:05 PM
An engineering test car, belonging to Metro North, caught passing through the South Norwalk, CT, station.
http://images.fotki.com/v2/photos/4/41513/85050/014_METRO_NORTHS_ENGINEER-vi.jpg
Peirce
November 24th, 2002, 08:29 PM
Here is one from England. I caught these on November 11th through the window of the Eurostar. I am not sure the location, except somewhere between London and the Chunnel, on the way to Paris.
http://www.railimages.com/albums/peircebehrendt/aaq.jpg
[ 10. February 2004, 16:56: Message edited by: Peirce ]
Martyn Read
November 25th, 2002, 09:34 PM
Those Railtrack hoppers are known as "Autoballasters", one vehicle in the rake has a generator on it, and it has powered and controllable drop doors, so as the train rolls slowly by, a guy on the ground can control exactly how much ballast is dropped, and in which direction, and from which outlet, it makes the ballasting proceedure much faster and more precise.
The line they are being used on is the first section of the new high speed line being built to the tunnel, currently the Eurostars run on the 750v DC third rail "classic" line from London to the tunnel, and are limited to 100mph on that route.
The new line will be cleared for TGV speeds (186mph+) and has 25kv AC overhead electrification (you can see a mast for that in your pic) The first section (coming along nicely!) will take the line from the tunnel to the outskirts of South East London, the second phase (just being started) will take the line under the River Thames and along the north bank through Stratford to reach a new Eurostar terminal at a much enlarged St Pancras station on the North side of central London.
Peirce
November 25th, 2002, 10:47 PM
That is good news. In an earlier news story, if I remember it correctly, it was noted the new trackage will take another 30 minutes off the London-to-Paris run.
I also heard, but can't confirm, that there are plans to extend the high speed track to Birmingham and other cities. Any subsance to that?
Martyn Read
November 26th, 2002, 03:45 AM
There have been many suggestions so far, one of the bids for the East Coast main line franchise (Kings Cross to Leeds, York, Newcastle, Edinburgh) included a newbuild high speed line for a big section of the route, thus freeing capacity on the rest of it. Eurostars are cleared to Leeds and York already though as GNER (current ECML franchise holder) has some on lease, so services could reverse at St Pancras and go north at least some of the way, though only at 125mph. There are other high speed plans about, but I don't know that many are very far ahead. Virgin's West Coast services were due to increase from 110mph to 140mph with new tilting trains and some trackwork, but this has been cut back to 125mph for the forseeable future due seemingly to Railtrack mishandling the project :(
Anyhow, here's some more from over here!
http://www.railimages.com/album/Martyn%20Read/P3280007.jpg
This is another pic of an Autoballaster, this shows the generator equipped one, complete with a roof to protect it when being loaded!
http://mysite.freeserve.com/uploadpics/P3280008.JPG
http://mysite.freeserve.com/uploadpics/P3280009.JPG
These are side tipping ballast layers, also individually controllable and self powered (sorry, the generator one was at the other end of the set on these :( )
I've also updated my pic earlier in the thread which had a broken link.
Martyn Read
November 27th, 2002, 03:42 AM
Here's a few from the US.
http://mysite.freeserve.com/uploadpics/stock/SPMW7747.jpg?0.7878315288408639
SPMW7747 in a UP freight passing Elmhurst, on the former CNW west of Chicago.
http://mysite.freeserve.com/uploadpics/stock/NS998209MW.jpg?0.6362089463131031
Interesting NS gondola, these apparently were pulpwood flats with the bulkheads chopped down and sides added.
http://mysite.freeserve.com/uploadpics/stock/BN961309.jpg?0.6874078713329503
The helper set is shoving against BN961309 passing through Cresson PA. I think this is a rail carrier, it's in BN's MOW number and paint scheme anyhow. Don't know what it was doing so far east though :confused:
Johnny Trains
November 27th, 2002, 04:50 AM
Martyn, I would imagine that the fellow who walks alongside those ballast cars must need a good pair of work boots and a stong pair of legs! We could be talking a several mile walk during the course of the day! And walking on ballast and ties that far must be physically taxing!
Colonel
November 27th, 2002, 12:28 PM
Originally posted by Johnny Trains:
Martyn, I would imagine that the fellow who walks alongside those ballast cars must need a good pair of work boots and a stong pair of legs! We could be talking a several mile walk during the course of the day! And walking on ballast and ties that far must be physically taxing! Johnny,
After working for more than 20 years on track I can assure you that walking on ballast does wear ankles and knees. Many a morning I have woken with stiffness in my legs and joints from walking on ballast. A lot of injuries are recorded and many a worker requiring knee surgery as a result of tripping on the ballast.
signalguy
November 27th, 2002, 07:54 PM
What is worse than ballast is the iron ore pellets in areas where they are transported by rail. It is something like walking on marbles or ball bearings when they are on top of the ballast and ties. They fall over the side or leak through small cracks and holes in the ore cars, especially in switching yards, so you have to be careful of how and where you step.
Johnny Trains
November 28th, 2002, 05:05 AM
Gil, I've seen those things and would not like to step onto a pile of them in the dark.
They look like rabbit pellets but larger, right? Kind of a purplish/black color?
Martyn, I learned my lesson about walking on the tracks. A few years back, I went out and walked along a mainline that was heavily ballasted. I wanted to see an old scale and a small shack that was a good mile and a half down the tracks. The only way to it was to walk on the rails. Being from New York, I walk fast, walk miles each day, but I walk on flat ground mostly. I was nervous about not having much clearence alongside me, so I took off like a madman down the line. I tried mostly to stay on the side so if I slipped I'd fall away from the rails. (Oh, and I do not do these kinds of things anymore either). I ended up with some nice black and white shots, and made my way back to the car.
The next morning, I ended up in the emergency room with back spasams that were so bad, I was in bed for the next three days. My wife ended up driving roughly 500 of the 650 miles back home. I was hurting for weeks.
I take my hat off to all the MOW guys and gals out there. I can see the long term effects of a tough job like that.
Martyn Read
November 29th, 2002, 08:00 PM
If anyone is interested more in the Channel Tunnel Rail link, they have a great website at www.ctrl.co.uk (http://www.ctrl.co.uk) with loads of information and construction photo's included.
This link here CTRL.CO.UK Page (http://www.ctrl.co.uk/photos/display.asp?ID=3430&L=20&SL=110) should give you a photo of the Medway bridge with a short work train on it. There are two parrallel motorway bridges behind, and you can see how the line swoops down the valley and across the bridge, I think this will be really cool when it opens (meant to be Oct 2003 IIRC.)
Martyn Read
December 7th, 2002, 05:21 PM
Here's a couple more ones from the UK. When Paddington was being resignalled and electrified in the early 90's, this Unimog was used on the train that built the bases for the electrification masts. I think this is a pretty cool bit of kit, complete with a Hiab crane and air brakes (roof mounted!) and a funky orange light. smile.gif The orange silo is behind the unimog, not attached to it btw. Each wagon is the equivalent of a small rail mounted readymix truck.
http://www.railimages.com/album/Martyn%20Read/unimoghayes.jpg
This new track machine had just left the Plasser plant at West Ealing, and is passing through West Ealing station. I'm pleased this pic came out as it was dull and raining heavily, looks like I ended up panning slightly, I don't remember as it was taken in the early 90's. :rolleyes:
http://www.railimages.com/album/Martyn%20Read/westealingmachine.jpg
Peirce
April 2nd, 2004, 07:28 AM
I haven't even seen many pictures of this old MOW transporter--a tricycle hand car, I believe it is called.
http://www.railimages.com/albums/peircebehrendt/acv.jpg
Peirce
April 2nd, 2004, 07:22 PM
Here is some historic detail on that three-wheeler pictured above.
http://www.railimages.com/albums/peircebehrendt/adc.sized.jpg
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