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Gave up waiting for MTH, Lionel, or someone to build a Milwaukee Road steeple cab. Started building one myself. She will have K-line S-2 trucks, both powered. I need to find a very small electronic reversing unit. It must fit in a very small cab. Any suggestions? Thanks Don

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Brad, all my other electrics run off overhead so she will also. Nick, it's none of the above. I hate to say this but it's a Q Car kit I bought sometime in the 90's and forgot about. I'm still unpacking from our move and finding all kinds of things I didn't remember I had. I also found a smaller brass kit of a steeple cab but many parts are missing. Thanks Stewart and Bob, I'll check those out and see what one fits. Charliez, the brass electric I made with S-2 trucks can run slow if your careful. Thanks All. I will keep posting on my progress. It's kind of slow because the other thing that was missing are the directions. Don

A little more progress. Those hand rails look easy. It took me three hours from start to finish. Hand drilling and filing the brass to fit. Now I have to do the other end. Body parts are not in place yet. The three parts are just sitting there. I'm hoping I can get a small E unit in one end so I can put a full interior in the cab. Don

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Don, this is off topic to the model but, when I was ATSF Road Foreman at Barstow, the UP brought in a new Road Foreman for the trackage rights.  He was ex-Milwaukee Road, UP took him when the west end closed down.  His was the regular Engineer on the steeple cab electric goat at -- I can't remember for sure -- Deer Lodge(?) when they shut off the power.  My next door neighbor when I was a San Bernardino Engineer was the daughter of a MILW Engineer at Three Forks, and he was in the freight pool then, running Joes and SD40's.  I took promotion to Engineer in 1973 with a Winslow Fireman who had previously worked several years as a brakeman on the box cabs in Washington before coming to the Santa Fe.

 

The Milwaukee electric zones reached pretty far south by proxy.  That's a nice looking carbody, and I believe you're going to have a slick little goat when you're through with it. Sic 'em.

Thanks Tom, I never saw the Milwaukee even though I lived for a time in Washington State. Somehow I fell in love with it. I have so many books and videos about the line that I feel like I know it. A few years ago may wife and I drove along the line just to see where it was. Thanks goodness she comes from a railroad family even though it's SP. I spent all my summers as a kid in the Yakima area and watched that little electric work the apple trains. There were two electric motors working. Years later I drove with a friend through the area and the line was still working, though it was part of the UP then. We talked to the crew and they asked if we wanted a ride. It helped that my then girl friend was good looking. They even gave us some tools from the engine house. I still have them. There is something about electric locomotive that really works for me. Thanks for the nice note. 

I had a great client "The Golden Gate Railroad Museum" We shot for years every run of their steam engine. What great fun. The perfect job for me. Don

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Man! I love this forum. In just the last couple of days, here Walt from RMT answers this, and the other day I was talking about Lionel, and Mike Reagan answered.

It's a lesson to those companies who obviously monitor this forum, and don't become involved. GET INVOLVED, HELP YOUR CUSTOMERS, SOLVE LITTLE PROBLEMS BEFORE THEY BECOME BIG PROBLEMS.

Originally Posted by scale rail:

 it's a Q Car kit I bought sometime in the 90's and forgot about.

Looking good!  Those kits are generally very nice and I think that you can get a lot of detail parts from Q-car for it as well.

 

Looking forward to seeing what you do with the cab interior, too!

Hi Don,

 

Yesterday, I was looking at a recent issue of Classic Trains, and on page 14 there is a picture of a BCH(BC Hydro) steeple-cab. There is a brief paragraph, accompanying the picture, titled "Long-lived steeple-cab". As a kid, I remember seeing the occasional BCH switcher engine, passing through my area; and I remember the paint scheme being similar, to the steeple-cab in the pictures, livery.

 

BTW, the engine in the picture is BCH 961; originally built by Alco-GE in 1912 for Oregon Electric; 961 and two other steeple-cabs came to Canada in 1946; and worked in central Vancouver for BCER(British Columbia Electric Railroad).

 

Eventually, the steeple cab ended up working in Edmonton, Alberta; and, is now part of the Edmonton Radial Railway Society collection.

 

 

The BCH scheme looks good on the quirky looking, little electric engine.

 

Yours is coming along, quite nicely.

 

 

Rick

I enjoyed both seeing and reading about this steeplecab project and look forward to seeing it under your equally well crafted catenary wire. Both the lack of off the shelf wire and the steeplecab projects are aspects of model railroading that I have often groused about publically here and I am glad to see you have jumped over both of these hurdles.

I saw another example of a steeplecab, albeit more tilted toward "from scratch", that used two Marx ( inexpensive) slope back tenders attached to either side of a cab placed on a 44 ton switch engine platform. If I recall correctly it was a heavier model, a Class D ..I imagine a Plastistruct styrene cab could be fashioned. I wonder if a Camelback cab may work but finding an odd lot that includes this is pretty nil.

I look forward to another update. After seeing this I may get my Zona saw out of the toolbox.

  

  

Electoliner, I'm sorry to say I had to prioritize my time and put the steeple cab project on a back burning. I was doing to many things at the same time. Building my layout had to be number one on my list. I'm building new structures (two right now) and framing. I found I wasn't getting much done jumping from project to project. I really like that little electric and will get it done as soon as I get the layout running. I'm filling almost the entire four car garage so it's going to be a big job. I'll keep you posted. Don

Originally Posted by scale rail:

Electoliner, I'm sorry to say I had to prioritize my time and put the steeple cab project on a back burning. I was doing to many things at the same time. Building my layout had to be number one on my list.

Don:

 

Hurry, hurry, hurry!  Gotta get that layout up and running...complete with scenery, of course! 

 

Actually, folks, Don will have a catenary article in our June issue, so I guess I'm responsible, in part, for taking up a bit of his time.  In Hawaii, though, the concept of "time" is relatively meaningless.

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