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The photo items are Marx but the subject is "real trains".

I grew up next to the busy main line of the New York Central near Rochester NY. I seem to recall that it was not unusual for some trains to have multiple cabooses. I don't remember any details of seasonal variations or if they occurred mainly in one direction.

Now I know in general terms that train crews, locomotives and cabooses might sometimes accumulate in one place and have to be deadheaded home. I would be interested to hear specific case histories of how and why this happens, especially on the old NYC.

There used to be car shops in East Rochester and perhaps some cabooses were deadheaded there for maintenance, but that's just a guess. Or maybe blocks of empty cars run in longer trains because tonnage is light. Does anyone have specific info on this subject?

 

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At that time, the conductor probably had a cab assigned to him. Many times , the cab was the train crew's home away from home. They cooked and slept on the cab.

If more trains went to the away from home terminal than trains returning to the home terminal, you have an unbalance of crews. Therefore crews were deadheaded home and the conductors cab went with him. This happed on other roads as well.

Last edited by Big Jim

When I saw the title of this post I thought the subject matter was slightly different:

 

     In the mid-1960's -- jade green bay window caboose era -- the Central would run some SuperVan trains west with two cabooses, one end of train and the other somewhere mid-train.  This facilitated running the train to two different destinations;  at Cleveland or elsewhere a cut could be made behind the first caboose, and [ after a brake test, etc ] each section could quickly get out of town.

[ There may have been corresponding eb equivalents, I just don't remember them.]

 

The Road to the Future was quite a contrast to the stodgy -- I am being kind here -- PRR.....

 

Best, SZ

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