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Last evening watching the Vanderbilt vs TCU baseball game at the College World Series in Omaha, there was a promo shot for the city of a BNSF SD70 followed by the UP Big Boy. UP extended the tracks when they built the new ballpark, so they are directly across the street. In the past they have displayed the Challenger and 844. This year it looks like the Big Boy was brought down from Cheyenne for this event. I would say a great way of promoting Union Pacific and railroading. Good for UP!

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Originally Posted by Passenger Train Collector:

Last evening watching the Vanderbilt vs TCU baseball game at the College World Series in Omaha, there was a promo shot for the city of a BNSF SD70 followed by the UP Big Boy. UP extended the tracks when they built the new ballpark, so they are directly across the street. In the past they have displayed the Challenger and 844. This year it looks like the Big Boy was brought down from Cheyenne for this event. I would say a great way of promoting Union Pacific and railroading. Good for UP!

Somehow, I don't believe that #4014 was towed dead all the way from Cheyenne to Omaha, on that VERY busy UP main line. Besides, there already is #4023 on display up on the bluff overlooking Interstate 80, in Omaha. However, the 4023 isn't going anywhere else, since it was taken up there but heavy equipment mover, and cost close to a million dollars to get it up there.

Originally Posted by Forrest Jerome:

". However, the 4023 isn't going anywhere else, since it was taken up there but heavy equipment mover, and cost close to a million dollars to get it up there."

 

i remember that. Didn't one of the bolsters break crossing the track and they fouled the main for a while?

Yes, one of the "dollies" on the heavy equipment rig failed, and blocked the BNSF track, i.e. NOT the UP main line.

Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by Lima:

If there is a steam engine, then thinking of a UP steam engine that is cosmetically all together and close if it is too far to tow from Omaha?

 

I don't understand this question.

 

 

 

 
Just going off of this original post. Since it seems very unlikely the Big Boy was brought there, what did he see leading him to think it was? What other UP engine is close enough for them to tow there if they did? Seems hard to believe UP brought a steam engine out and no one here knows about it that's all. Clear now?
 
 
Originally Posted by Passenger Train Collector:

Last evening watching the Vanderbilt vs TCU baseball game at the College World Series in Omaha, there was a promo shot for the city of a BNSF SD70 followed by the UP Big Boy. UP extended the tracks when they built the new ballpark, so they are directly across the street. In the past they have displayed the Challenger and 844. This year it looks like the Big Boy was brought down from Cheyenne for this event. I would say a great way of promoting Union Pacific and railroading. Good for UP!

Originally Posted by Lima:
Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by Lima:

If there is a steam engine, then thinking of a UP steam engine that is cosmetically all together and close if it is too far to tow from Omaha?

 

I don't understand this question.

 

 

 

 
Just going off of this original post. Since it seems very unlikely the Big Boy was brought there, what did he see leading him to think it was? What other UP engine is close enough for them to tow there if they did? Seems hard to believe UP brought a steam engine out and no one here knows about it that's all. Clear now?
 

OK, now I understand. First, the UP currently has some "executive" passengers parked on that display track. Second, there are no other UP steam locomotives in the Omaha area, that the UP would have access in order to tow one there. There is a UP FEF over in Council Bluffs, in a museum, but certainly not towable.

 

Yes, even if UP did have an operable steam locomotive of any size, and it was "out and about", such an activity would have been well advertised, and discussed all over the internet. Thus, nothing of the sort happened.

 

Hard to say what the original poster saw on TV.

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