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Kelly Anderson posted:

The DM&IR #224 was not "Ex".  They would lease their engines to other railroads when Great Lakes shipping was closed for the winter.  In the photo, #224 is brand new, having been delivered by Baldwin in the winter, and delivered directly to the D&RGW for operation until spring, when she was promptly piled up.  That's enough to **** you off if you are the DM&IR!

And the cause of that wreck on the D&RGW was determined to be, the lack of the "water brake" on the DM&IR articulateds. The Engineer was either not aware of the fact, or maybe he forgot, that the DM&IR locomotives were NOT equipped with the "water brake" system that all the D&RGW locomotives had. Thus, the train speed accelerated very quickly on the descending grade.

The D&RGW subsequently stopped leasing the DM&IR locomotives.

Edit: For those folks interested, Google, Le Chatelier Water Brake.

Last edited by Hot Water

The wreck involving 611 was due to excessive speed.  The 611 received a new boiler during the subsequent repairs and that was the main reason why the N&W chose to restore her many years later.  Rumor has it that the late O. Winston Link threatened to purchase the 611 if the N&W did not opt to restore her.   Can anyone else add to this?

Allegheny48 posted:

The wreck involving 611 was due to excessive speed.  The 611 received a new boiler during the subsequent repairs and that was the main reason why the N&W chose to restore her many years later. 

To be clear, the reason that Mr. Robert Claytor WANTED to "restore" #611 was,,,,,,,,,,,she was the ONLY J Class locomotive remaining!

Rumor has it that the late O. Winston Link threatened to purchase the 611 if the N&W did not opt to restore her. 

Don't think so, as #611 had already been "donated/sold" to SteamTown, when SteamTown was still located up in Vermont.

  Can anyone else add to this?

 

The 611's sand dome has the dent, the sand dome is removable.  And in one of Rich's videos, "Queen of the Fleet" I belive...there is an interview with O. Winston Link and he tells of how he put in an offer of first refusal on the 611 but that took place back when he was trying to make sure that she wasn't scrapped by the N&W, not before her 1st excursion career.

Pingman posted:

According to this contemporary account, the Powhatan Arrow service was commenced April 26, 1946, only to be curtailed due to a soft coal strike 11 days later.  The crash occurred only two weeks after the PA service had been resumed.  Basically, the crews had less than a month's experience running the train.  The engineer and fireman perished.

Nope! If you remember, the Class J entered service in 1941 and handled passenger service since day one. Experience didn't fly out the window just because someone hung a name on a train. 

Allegheny48 posted:

Rumor has it that the late O. Winston Link threatened to purchase the 611 if the N&W did not opt to restore her.   Can anyone else add to this?

I don't have any exact quotes or page numbers on hand, but I just recently (within the last 2 months) re-read "Steam, Steel and Stars" and Link definitely did try to buy the 611 to keep her from going to the scrapper's torch.

Clarence Siman posted:

So, if I understand this water brake concept correctly, if you didn't use this system properly, you could seriously damage the locomotive?.

Right. Thus, the reason behind the Santa Fe only experimenting with it, and NEVER putting it into use on their system. The operation is EXTREMELY dependent on having  VERY competent & qualified Engineers. Thus, the smaller, more "family oriented" D&RGW was able to use the system to great effect on their severe mountain grades, even with their largest articulated locomotives.

Hot Water posted:
Allegheny48 posted:

The wreck involving 611 was due to excessive speed.  The 611 received a new boiler during the subsequent repairs and that was the main reason why the N&W chose to restore her many years later. 

To be clear, the reason that Mr. Robert Claytor WANTED to "restore" #611 was,,,,,,,,,,,she was the ONLY J Class locomotive remaining!

Rumor has it that the late O. Winston Link threatened to purchase the 611 if the N&W did not opt to restore her. 

Don't think so, as #611 had already been "donated/sold" to SteamTown, when SteamTown was still located up in Vermont.

  Can anyone else add to this?

 

Gotta jump in here with a correction, Jack.

1218 was once owned by Steamtown and was swapped to the NS in exchange for a couple of diesel units, former NKP GP9 514 and Wabash SW8 132.

Even though 1218 was owned by Steamtown, she had been loaned and displayed in a Roanoke, VA park since 1971.

611 was never part of the Steamtown collection.  She was donated to the city of Roanoke upon retirement and was likewise displayed in the same park, as was C&O H-8 Allegheny 1604.

That last bit was rather odd since neither the C&O or 1604 had any historical connection to the N&W or the city of Roanoke. The only near-link, and it's a stretch, is that the Virginian AG class 2-6-6-6s (copies of the C&O H-8s) operated between Roanoke and Sewell's Point, VA.

 

 

Last edited by Nick Chillianis
colorado hirailer posted:

Dunno if boiler explosions count, but the C&O managed to blow up one of its articulateds coming into Hinton, W.V. with low water.

I believe you're referring to the boiler explosion of 1642, an H8 Allegheny that blew up in June 1953 due to a low water condition.

Here is a TO thread containing a portion of the ICC report on the 1642:

http://www.trainorders.com/dis...n/read.php?10,878598

There is also some description of a low water boiler explosion of a UP 4-12-2 in Kansas.

 

Scott Griggs

Louisville, KY

 

 

 

 

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