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Originally Posted by Zephyr:

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Now, my question is, and actually had been - why was there ever a high hood in the first place?  Considering the obstructed view?  Maybe to make transitioning from steam to diesel, lol....

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I'm no expert, the theory was it better protected the crew.  By legend, this dates back to the wreck of a PRR P5 boxcab electric and resulted in a redesign of the P5 cab and led to the GG1's design.  

 

I had always heard the unions were involved, and assumed this was because of the safety issue.  But a recent piece in TRAINS magazine was enlightening for me because it pointed out the unions also used the high hood to justify more crew in the cab to call signals, since you needed a crew member on each side of the cab.  Of course this was happening in a period were the RR's were shedding huge number of jobs because of disealization. 

 

Bob

 

Originally Posted by nyc5340:

Trust me from working on the railroad you don't want to be in one too often!

 

Scott

 

I agree wholeheartedly! I've spent many hours on several high hood GP38-2s, and I cringe whenever I see a (NS) 5000 or 5100 series engine on the work order. Plus the the overall layout of the cab is messed up IMO. Rather be on a former Conrail unit.

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