Action at the roundhouse
#1
Hello Everyone---Apart from taking pictures on Doctor Wayne's EG@E,another favourite spot for taking pictures is down at the local roundhouse.Here's a few photos showing the daily activity

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#2
Nice shots Mr. Nutbar. I especially like 6153. All of the valves and rods and things a tthe cylinders look good. And the rust streaks on the concrete in the turntable are convincing.
Three Foot Rule In Effect At All Times
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#3
Thanks Gary---there's always lots of activity---here's a few more shots

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#4
That's some nice detail you got there on that steamer Thumbsup
Tom

Model Conrail

PM me to get a hold of me.
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#5
Outstanding pic's of some outstanding modeling. Cheers
Mark

Citation Latitude Captain
--and--
Lt Colonel, USAF (Retired)
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#6
Tom and Herc---thanks for your feedback.Here's a shot that may have been taken from the back seat of Barney Secord's plane

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#7
Hello Everyone---here's another shot of CNR #4100

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#8
I like the looks of that latest shot, Ed. Thumbsup Thumbsup The new lighting may be a help, too, but I think that you're starting to get some really nice results with that camera.

Wayne
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#9
Ed, your lighting and color levels are right on, some very good photography here.
Charlie
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#10
Beautiful locomotives, beautiful photography and a beautiful setting.

In short - Beautiful! Worship
Alan Curtis
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#11
Hello Everyone---Thank you,I really appreciate all the kind remarks but those of you who have been following my threads know who deserves all the credit.
After some TLC at Doctor Wayne's paint shop,CNR #3377 makes her debut at the home terminal

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#12
That thar locomotive is a beautiful machine, and a great set of pictures.
Thanks for sharing.
Charlie
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#13
I am not sure why, but I seem to prefer Canadian steam locomotives to US ones. And that 3377 is wonderful! A 2-8-2 is such a balanced looking machine.

Beautiful. Worship
Alan Curtis
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#14
I know the feeling. My biggest weakness in steam is for the combination of all-weather cab, Elesco and Vanderbuilt evident on 6153 and 4100.* Particularly the all-weather cab; though I like many steam engines that don't have it, if I think about it, I consider it an important feature missing on most US steam. Conversely, the thing most lacking from the Canadian steam scene were Mallets.

In contrast, I can't think of anything important the US was missing in the diesel field, but much that Canada was, most notably older GEs. Oh... there is one cool thing Canada has a lot more of, and that's freight cowl units.

There is one major aspect of Canadian freight operations where the US feels lacking. US covered hoppers are mainly bulged-side (like ACF designs) or ribbed-side (like PS-2s). Some cylindricals do exist, but they're mainly for plastics and so on. Probably the best-known US grain trains, the BNSF "earthworms", are made entirely of the bulged-side style. I find the NSC and Hawker Siddeley cylindricals to be some of the most necessary pieces of freight equipment, and their typical paint schemes are engaging. One type of covered hopper I've never seen in Canada and is uncommon in the US are those shaped like PS-2s and the like but without external ribs. The only place I know where those are common is Brazil.

But I digress.

* Actually, no. That's the commonest thing I love. The prettiest Canadian steam are the late CP 2-8-2s and 4-6-2s with recessed headlights, like the Royal Hudsons and other CP streamliners except not really streamlined.
Fan of late and early Conrail... also 40s-50s PRR, 70s ATSF, BN and SP, 70s-80s eastern CN, pre-merger-era UP, heavy electric operations in general, dieselized narrow gauge, era 3/4 DB and DR, EFVM and Brazilian railroads in general... too many to list!
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#15
Triplex Wrote:* Actually, no. That's the commonest thing I love. The prettiest Canadian steam are the late CP 2-8-2s and 4-6-2s with recessed headlights, like the Royal Hudsons and other CP streamliners except not really streamlined.
I believe the official term was semi-streamlined.
David
Moderato ma non troppo
Perth & Exeter Railway Company
Esquesing & Chinguacousy Radial Railway
In model railroading, there are between six and two hundred ways of performing a given task.
Most modellers can get two of them to work.
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