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Derricks and Maintenance-of-Way equipment are an essential part of railroads. It seems to me that these types of models are not very common and aren’t run much on O gauge/scale model railroads. My models of New Haven D-100, B&M 78MWT and B&M M3364 were made by MTH about fifteen years ago. The derricks are too large to run on my O-72 layout. I believe that New Haven D-100 was the “New Haven hook” and stationed in the Elm City. What derricks and MOW cars do you have?

MELGAR

MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_03_NH_D-100MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_04_NH_D_100MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_08_B&M_78MWT

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Images (10)
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_01_NH_D-100
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_03_NH_D-100
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_04_NH_D_100
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_05_NH_D-100
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_06_B&M_78MWT
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_08_B&M_78MWT
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_09_B&M
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_10_B&M
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_11_B&M
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_12_B&M_M3364
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Thank you for starting this.  I recall it was several years ago a similar thread ran....then disappeared.

I've been hankering to scratch build an MOW car or two based on photos in the MOW book for my favorite RR, ATSF.  This thread will be my incentive to move it up on the 'bucket list'.

One reason I believe that MOW trains are seldom modeled is that they're usually simply parked....awaiting disaster or repairs...hardly a scheduled run!  OTOH, if you belonged to a group who celebrated 'operation' as a part of an evening together, scheduling an MOW train to handle a wreck or maintenance would certainly be a way to spice up the night....and take a beer-break for those in charge of the fast-mail, priority passenger, perishables freight, etc., etc..

Otherwise, for those of us who favor simply running trains, an MOW set of cars is usually at home parked on a siding.  And that's not all bad, mind you!  It certainly can make for an interesting display of creative reconstruction of old cars.  The paint/lettering is often ho-hum enough to make a project easy, too.

The photo below was taken by MELGAR at the Danbury Railway Museum in 2017 and shows Grand Central Terminal #1, a double-ended electrically-powered crane built for the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad in 1914. This machine combines the functions of an electric locomotive and a crane and was designed to operate within the restricted clearances of Grand Central Terminal in New York City. It has a 100-ton lifting capacity at each end and is propelled by four 200-horsepower electric motors with two 150-horsepower motors for hoisting and operating the machinery. It could develop a speed of 30 miles-per-hour on level track while hauling a load of 100 tons. While designed to be powered by third-rail direct current between 300 and 750 volts, it also had storage batteries so that it could run when no external power was available. The total weight was 380,000 pounds. This data was obtained from http://members.trainweb.com/bedt/indloco/amtk16000.html#GCT 1

MELGAR

MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_13_GCT_1

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Images (1)
  • MELGAR_DERRICK_MOW_13_GCT_1
SuperChiefer84 posted:
Bill Webb posted:

460B6FEA-D75C-418D-B8AA-D6A1AA9A5D36A8A796BC-E290-4A3B-8A70-23413146D952NS had a derailment in town earlier this week and asked for some local assistance from this N and W Lionel Legacy crane and boom car. They just got cleaned up yesterday and we placed them on a shelf awaiting placement on the layout.

Wow nice looking set you have there! Were these once CSX?

 

 

 

Thanks.

Yes they were. Lionel didn’t make N and W which is what we model. We might weather a box or gondola for the wreck train but these were expensive and hard to work with so we asked Harry Heike to do some of his magic.  He is really talented.

It turned out so well that we may send him the rest to do.

Here's a MTH RailKing crane that I re-lettered & detailed to represent the CNJ's hook #4 (last photo below).  I also added LED "work lights" to front and rear (with separate on/off switches) in attempt to add a bit more realism...

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DSC_08

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Prior to LED work lights being added...

CNJ Crane-8

Here's the prototype...Jersey Central hook #4 in fresh paint pictured at the CNJ's Ashley, PA yard.

CNJ Hook #4-Ashley, PA Sept, 1954

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Images (7)
  • DSC_0007
  • DSC_0017
  • DSC_08
  • DSC_12
  • DSC_10
  • CNJ Crane-8
  • CNJ Hook #4-Ashley, PA Sept, 1954

I took some pictures of my MTH crane and crane tender when I first bought them many years ago, then put them into storage.  Like many other train items I have, I need to get them out and play with them.

MTH CraneMTH Crane Tender

Since my layout era is late 40s, I need to repaint the tender gray since MoW yellow did not come about until the mid-50s.  Here are some pictures of a MoW camp scene I took at last week's PRR Technical and Historical Society's annual conference in Altoona.  They show the PRR MoW cars in the correct gray for me.  Also notice the coal tender for the coal fired crane.

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Images (10)
  • MTH Crane
  • MTH Crane Tender
  • 20180511_145536
  • 20180511_145539
  • 20180511_145532
  • 20180511_145610
  • 20180511_145529
  • 20180511_145455
  • 20180511_145637
  • 20180511_145643

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