Los Angeles Limited 1946-1948
New Operations Begin After the LA Limited and Transcon Are Consolidated on November 10, 1946
In
response to the immediate rush of post-war passenger traffic, Union
Pacific (UP), along with other railroads, initiated new train services
that eventually became superfluous once the volume of passengers began
to return to more normal operations.
The Transcon
(Nos. 3 and 4) was inaugurated on June 2, 1946, to handle coaches and
Coast-to-Coast sleeping cars running between Chicago and Los Angeles.
Operating on a schedule similar to the LA Limited’s new post-war times of 49 hours, 15 minutes westbound, and 48 hours, 35 minutes eastbound, the Transcon was only 5 minutes slower westbound and 20 minutes slower eastbound.
However, Union Pacific decided to consolidate the two trains as a cost-cutting measure, thus ending Transcon service after five and a half months (not as a result of the Transcon derailment west of Oro Grande on Santa Fe’s Cajon Pass line on September 26, 1946).
In
a notice published in the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday, October 16,
1946, UP passenger traffic manager W.T. Price announced that the Los Angeles Limited and the Transcon
would be consolidated, effective Sunday, November 10, 1946. New public
and employee time tables were issued reflecting the changes.
LA Limited E7s at Summit with Steam Helper 3544 on 12-15-46
After cutting off the eastbound LA Limited, UP
3544, a 2-8-8-0 type, has backed onto the helper engine track at Summit
on December 15, 1946. Meanwhile, two trainmen work to close the lead
unit’s pilot coupler doors over the retractable coupler. The road
engines are EMD E7s 931A, 963B and 930A.
Although the two UP-C&NW
jointly-owned cab units were ordered in March 1945 for planned City of Portland
daily service, the units were delivered in August 1946 without train
name lettering since the expanded schedule could not be implemented for
several months. Instead, the units operated system wide, primarily on
the Cities streamliners, but here they are in charge of today’s LA Limited. Don Duke photo.
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The Los Angeles Limited
(Nos. 1 and 2) was now Union Pacific’s primary non-Streamliner train
between Chicago and Los Angeles, handling all three of the
Coast-to-Coast sleepers previously carried by the Transcon: two
cars to New York City (one via the New York Central and one via the
Pennsylvania Railroad), as well as a single car to Washington via the
PRR. These heavyweight sleepers were painted either Pullman Green or
Pennsy Tuscan Red, all of which were lettered for owner Pullman.
At the same time, the three Chicago-Los Angeles 48-seat lightweight coaches, formerly handled by the Transcon, were cut back to a single Two-Tone Gray coach, reflecting a reduction in passenger traffic.
The LA Limited
continued to handle three Chicago-Los Angeles sleeping cars:
lightweight 2-4-4 and 6-6-4 sleepers, plus a heavyweight 12 section-1
drawing room sleeper in Pullman Green, as well as the Minneapolis-St.
Paul to Los Angeles 6-6-4 sleeper via the C&NW between the Twin
Cities and Omaha. All these lightweight sleepers were painted in
Pullman’s post-war 2-stripe Two-Tone Gray scheme.
LA Limited with COLA 924A ABB at San Bernardino 2-15-47
The eastbound LA Limited
is about ready to depart San Bernardino on February 15, 1947, with UP
4-10-2 5099 helping a 3-unit set of E-units displaced from the City of Los Angeles by new E7s. The diesels include E6s 924A and 926B, both of which were later transferred to the City of San Francisco
for daily service. Although the COLA train name is prominent on the
carbody sides, the lettering will soon be painted out, leaving just a
blank red name board, which was more useful in the general diesel pool.
Jack Whitmeyer photo.
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LA Limited with COLA 922B at San Bernardino 2-15-47
COLA E2 922B is the trailing unit in this “going away” view of the eastbound LA Limited
leaving San Bernardino on February 15, 1947. Note the Southern Pacific
sublettering on the RPO-baggage express car, apparently borrowed from
the San Francisco Overland. Jack Whitmeyer photo.
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In addition, the LA Limited
continued to transport the St. Louis to Los Angeles lightweight 48-seat
coach and a lightweight 6-6-4 sleeper between Cheyenne and Los Angeles,
both in Two-Tone Gray. After the Utahn was inaugurated on May 14, 1947, these cars were handled by Nos. 3 and 4 west of Cheyenne. The LA Limited also carried several Chicago to Portland cars that were transferred to the Portland Rose at Cheyenne (a lightweight 48-seat coach and two lightweight sleepers in Two-Tone Gray).
Also continuing in LA Limited
service were the heavyweight 13 section dormitory cars, which were
former 12 section-1 drawing room sleepers converted to Tourist Car
sleepers in 1940 and renumbered in November 1941 into the 5000-series.
For LA Limited service in 1946 cars 5009, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5034,
and 5035 were painted Two-Tone Gray with PULLMAN on the letterboard
(car numbers from a UP interdepartmental letter dated March 19, 1946).
These
heavyweight 13 section dorm cars were located at the head-end of the
train and are an excellent spotting feature for identifying the Los Angeles Limited in late-1940s photographs: if the dormitory car is not there, the train is not the LA Limited.
Operating ahead of the dormitory car, a baggage car or an RPO-baggage car shows up in the LA Limited
consists; however, their use is not well-documented beyond what can be
seen in photographs. They are usually UP Harriman-roof cars, but
C&NW clerestory-roof baggage cars have also been noted. Depending on
the day and location, sometimes no head-end car is present.
Lastly, the LA Limited
normally had heavyweight dining and club-lounge cars, but a second
heavyweight diner regularly operated, which ran as a coffee shop diner
for coach passengers. These cars could be painted Dark Olive Green or
Two-Tone Gray.
Los Angeles Limited Consist:
Motive Power in The Late 1940s
The first road diesel set to operate regularly on the LA Limited was
a three-unit, 6,000 hp set of Fairbanks-Morse diesels built at General
Electric’s plant in Erie, Pennsylvania, in December 1945. The units were
ordered in August 1945 and assigned numbers 50-M-1A, 50-M-3B and
50-M-2A. After testing they were purchased by UP in May 1946.
According to the book by Kratville and Ranks, Motive Power of The Union Pacific,
on page 226, the Fairbanks-Morse diesels arrived on the property on
December 28, 1945 and the first test in road service was on a westbound
freight of 62 loads and six empties totaling 3,100 tons out of Council
Bluffs on December 30, 1945. The units had a 68:19 gear ratio for 75 mph
operation.
The
text says that, “After many test freight runs, the units were shopped
and re-geared to 63:24 ratio [102 mph] for passenger service. The
conversion and the application of Automatic Train Control to the units
for passenger operation was [completed] at Los Angeles on May 5, 1946…
The units were assigned to the City of Los Angeles from May 5 through June 2 of 1946 and then they were put on the Los Angeles Limited and later into regular pool service, mainly on the Los Angeles Division.”
LA Limited WB UP FM 982A ABA at near Summit on 4-4-47
Fairbanks-Morse “Erie-Built” diesels 982A, 983B and 981A are heading uphill with the westbound LA Limited
about 1/4 mile below Summit, Calif., on April 4, 1947. Renumbered from
50-M-2A, 50-M-3B and 50-M-1A in August 1946, the units were equipped
with dynamic brakes, which will be helpful going down the westward slope
of Cajon Pass.
The consist has a UP 69’ Harriman baggage-RPO, a Pullman
13 section dorm car, a UP 5331-series coach, a UP 5300-series coach, and
a UP heavyweight coffee shop diner, all in Two-Tone Gray, followed by
four heavyweight cars most likely including the three Coast-to-Coast
sleepers. Chard Walker photo.
---------------
In
August 1946 new jointly-owned and UP-owned Electro-Motive Division E7
diesels were delivered, which released several of the older model E2 and
E6 engines from UP-C&NW City of Los Angeles service for operating on the LA Limited.
Also, UP-owned E6s and E7s occasionally appeared, but only those units
that show up in photographs can be reliably known to have operated on
the LA Limited, as these units also ran on the City of St. Louis and the City of Denver.
LA Limited Down-on View at San Bernardino
This
down-on photo of the eastbound LA Limited at San Bernardino was taken
from the Mt. Vernon overhead viaduct and shows the train coming off “the
short way” from Rana, which allowed passenger trains to by-pass the
congestion of Yard B. UP-C&NW E2 921A (renumbered from LA-1 in 8-46)
heads up an E2B-E6B lashup, followed by a Pullman 13 section dorm car
and a pair of UP 5300-series lightweight coaches, all in Two-Tone Gray
livery. After stopping at the depot, a steam helper will be coupled on
for the climb up to Cajon Pass.
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LA Limited on Santa Ana River bridge 6-1-47
This often-published photo of the eastbound LA Limited
on the Santa Ana River bridge on June 1, 1947, is useful for studying
the motive power and train consist. The diesels are UP-C&NW
jointly-owned E2 921A, E2 923B, and E6 926B, all of which have had their City of Los Angeles train
name lettering painted out for general pool service.
The consist
includes a Pullman 13 section dormitory, two UP lightweight coaches (a
5331-series and a 5300-series), followed by two UP heavyweight dining
cars, the first of which is running with its kitchen to the rear as a
Coffee Shop diner for coach passengers. Next is a heavyweight
club-lounge car with a roof-top radio antenna, then four heavyweight
sleepers and three lightweight sleepers bringing up the hind end. All of
the cars, except for the heavyweight sleepers, are painted in the
Two-Tone Gray scheme. Don Duke photo.
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Due
to poor water conditions and the added cost of water treatment
facilities in desert areas, UP intended to dieselize the Los Angeles
& Salt Lake route in the mid-to-late 1940s by purchasing a number of
passenger and freight diesels from various manufacturers, although it
wasn’t possible to completely eliminate steam power for passenger road
engine service on the LA&SL until July 1948.
East of Salt Lake City the LA Limited
was generally powered by steam locomotives such as oil-fired 4-8-4s in
Two-Tone Gray with “elephant ear” smoke lifters, while on the Chicago
& North Western between Omaha and Chicago the train could be handled
by E7 diesels or steam locomotives, such as their streamlined 4-6-4
Hudsons.
LA Limited with FEF 821 at Ogden on 9-3-47
Steam power still reigned east of Salt Lake City on the LA Limited, as
evidenced by UP 4-8-4 821 shown arriving at Ogden, Utah, with westbound
No. 1 on September 3, 1947.
A major change in operating procedure
occurred coinciding with the inauguration of City of San Francisco daily service on September 1, 1947. Beginning on that date the LA Limited and the City of Los Angeles were routed through
Ogden via the south wye, thus by-passing their regular stop at Union
Station. This was implemented, much to the consternation of local
citizens and the Chamber of Commerce, to save time by having to pull the
trains backwards into or out of the station.
In this view, the LA Limited
is coming under the Bamberger Railroad overhead bridge on
left-hand-running Track 2, and will presently cross over Tracks 3 and 4
(to the right of the train) and proceed to the south wye to continue its
trip to Salt Lake City. Emil Albrecht photo.
---------------
More
EMD products came to the LA&SL in October 1947 in the form of 15
passenger F3s delivered in five ABB sets, numbers 964A-968A and
969B-978B. These were renumbered to 900-904 and 900B & C to 905B
& C in April-May 1948. Then in May-June 1948 twelve additional F3s
were delivered in three ABBA sets, numbers 905-910 and 905B & C,
907B & C, 909B & C.
LA Limited with F3 964A above Sullivan’s Curve in 1947
This
view shows UP’s first passenger equipped F3 diesel set, engines 964A,
969B and 970B, heading uphill above Sullivan’s Curve with the eastbound LA Limited
shortly after their delivery in October 1947. Although running
unassisted in this scene, this 4,500 hp diesel set would’ve been
somewhat underpowered for the climb up the west slope of Cajon Pass. UP
supplemented their original five 3-unit F3 sets with three 6,000 hp sets
of F3s in mid-1948, after which whenever F3s operated over Cajon Pass
they would appear in the ABBA configuration. Donald Duke photo.
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LA Limited WB with F3 968A at Frost
Shown here at Frost after leaving Victorville, the westbound LA Limited
is ascending the grade toward the flyover near Thorn where westward
trains begin left-hand-running operation over Cajon Pass. In charge
today are F3s 968A, 971B and 977B that were delivered in October 1947 as
part of an order for five passenger service 3-unit sets. This LA Limited consist includes a 13 section dormitory car, still lettered OVERLAND, after it was displaced from San Francisco Overland service by an SP baggage-dormitory car converted from a former U.S. Army hospital car in 1947. Donald Duke photo.
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LA Limited with UP E6 957A at Summit in 1947
This photo shows the westbound LA Limited
at Summit in 1947, powered by a lashup of UP E6s with 957A on the point.
The train has slowed to allow the sacked mail to be tossed up into the
Dark Olive Green baggage-RPO car by the agent on the ground. The second
car is a 13 section dorm followed by two UP 5300-series lightweight
coaches and a heavyweight Coffee Shop diner, all in Two-Tone Gray. Next
are a couple of Pullman Green heavyweight sleepers. The switch in the
foreground is where the wye track begins. Malcolm Gaddis photo.
---------------
In
September 1947 American Locomotive Company (ALCo) delivered two ABA
sets of their PA and PB model passenger diesels. These six units,
numbers 994A-997A, 998B and 999B, were renumbered in March 1948 to
600-603, 600B and 602B. Then in January 1949 eight additional ALCo units
were delivered, numbers 604, 604B, 605, 605B, 606, 606B, 607 and 607B.

LA Limited with ALCo PA 996A above Sullivan’s Curve on 11-28-47
A matched set of two-month-old ALCo road diesels 996A, 998B, 994A glisten in the afternoon sunlight as they power the eastbound LA Limited
unassisted uphill above Sullivan’s Curve on November 28, 1947.
This
3-unit diesel was one of two sets of ABA road engines built by American
Locomotive Company in September 1947. In the background, just to the left
of the diesel’s pilot, part of the westward track can be seen. The
consist includes a heavyweight Pullman dorm car, two lightweight UP
5300-series coaches, a UP heavyweight coffee shop diner, and three
lightweight sleepers, all in Two-Tone Gray paint. Don Duke photo.
----------------
In
November 1947 four Fairbanks-Morse Erie-built diesels were delivered
with a new style carbody featuring large windshields. Numbered 984A,
985A, 986B and 987B, they were renumbered in March 1948 to 702, 703,
702B and 703B. Then in March-April 1948 six additional F-M units arrived
on the property, numbers 704-707, 704B and 706B. These units also had
the large windshield carbody, but were equipped with ALCo PA-type
trucks.
FM Erie-built 984A at Atlantic City in 6-47
Fairbanks-Morse
rolled out their latest road diesels, along with a 2,000 hp H20-44
demonstrator, for display at the June 1947 Railway Supply Manufacturers’
Association trade show in Atlantic City, N.J. The pair of cab units
shown here featured a new, large windshield carbody.
Although they were
painted and lettered for Union Pacific, units 984A and 985A also had
F-M lettering, since they would be used as demonstrators on several
Eastern railroads. Prior to delivery to the UP in November 1947, along
with matching B-units 986B and 987B, the cab units were equipped with a
Mars white and red combination signal light and a single lamp headlight
mounted in the nose door. Louis A Marre collection.
---------------
In
the next installment, we will look at how an influx of new passenger
equipment delivered in 1949 for upgrading the “Cities” streamliners
brought a number of changes to the Los Angeles Limited consists.
Thanks to Jeff Koeller for all of the above text, photos with captions, and consist table.
Here are some notes on modeling this train in HO, thanks to Robert Rogers' quick reply today:
HO models based on the May 28, 1948 LA Ltd consist WB at SLC:
HW mail-storage UP 2045 a 60' Harriman baggage car Old MDC/Athearn TTG or PG
HW RPO-Baggage UP 2322 69' Harriman Golden Gate (decal for UP) Stand In,
13 Sect Pullman 5005 in TTG, Walthers 12-1 in TTG same car
LW Coach UP 5340 ('41 Challenger) TTG CYard and Brass Car sides all unpainted
LW Coach UP 5317 ('38 car) TTG CYard & Brass car sides "
LW Coach UP 5326 " " " "
HW Diner UP 3603 likely TTG. Walthers does all the HW cars in UP TTG
HW 12-1 Pullman Kinnikinnik (decal on UP Microscale sheet) Walthers PG
LW 6-6-4 American Skies Walthers Pullman Pool Scheme (TTG)
LW 6-6-4 American Clipper (CNW assigned car) "
LW 4-4-2 Imperial Cape Walthers Pullman Pool Scheme (TTG)
HW Diner UP 3620 Walthers TTG
HW Lounge UP 1525 CYard makes this car, unpainted
HW 12-1 McClellan (plan 3410, PRR car, likely Tuscan, Branch Line did this car in Tuscan Pullman
HW 6-6 Poplar Point (PRR Plan 4060) Soho undec decals for 'Glen, Hill, Lake & Point'
HW 12-1 Red Cannon Plan 3410 Walthers Pullman Green (PG)
HW 8-1-3 Watching Tower Plan 4090D Stand In Walthers 8-1-2 PG
HW 6-6 Poplar Center (Plan 4084C NYC) Oriental Ltd. 'GN Sleeper'
Sums to 18 cars, need a helper!
Thanks, Robert!
I
always like to look up what the train times through Victorville were.
In the LA Division timetables of June 2 and Sep. 29, 1946, as reported last time, the LA
Limited was listed as Train 201 westbound and Train 202 eastbound.
Train 201 passed through Victorville without stopping at 11:08 a.m., and
Train 202 passed through at 2:39 pm, so these were not nighttime trains
that I can omit.
These times changed a little with the Nov. 10, 1946, timetable to 11:57 a.m. westbound and 1:17 p.m. eastbound. They changed again on June 8, 1947, to 8:32 a.m. and 2:47 p.m. On Aug. 31, 1947, and on Dec. 14, 1947, they were 7:49 a.m. and 3:17 p.m. Then they were stable on Feb. 29, 1948, and Mar. 21, 1948, and Nov. 28, 1948, with the westbound train (#201) coming through at 7:07 a.m. and the eastbound train (# 202) at 3:17 p.m.
As for layout progress since last time, on March 8 I wrote this first bi-weekly report:
Two weeks ago I had finished gluing down Tracks A1-A10 and B1-B7 in the
straight part of the A and B Yards on the staging deck. My next step
was to start laying down the A Yard curves where the 10-track yard has
to curve around at the end of the big peninsula. Using my pencil track
plan for the curves, I tried to find where the center point of the
curves was, and I used some old poster-board temples of various curves
to locate them, as seen here:
Using the poster-board template for a 36" radius curve, I began to locate each of the 10 tracks as it starts to curve around:
But
there were a couple of problems with this: Track A1 (the outer-most
one) should not follow inside the curve of the mainline, or it will have
a radius less than 36", and each curve inside there will be even
tighter. Secondly, you can see that the inside curves are colliding
with the outside curves, because the center point is not quite correct
compared to the track plan.
The
solution was to move the center point farther in toward the center by
an inch and then to re-position all 10 track curves, as seen here from
the opposite end, so they are centered on the focal point and do not
follow the mainlines:
In
the above photos, the white poster-board curve has an outside radius of
36" and an inside radius of 33 3/4" (for the standard 2 1/4" track
separations that I'm using). So Track A7 has a 36" radius, while Tracks
A8, A9, and A10 each has a smaller radius, and Tracks A1 though A6 all
have a radius wider than 36".
Note
that I'm only working on the first half of the large curve, as the
second half will have a different center point and will require me to
move my dozens of Victorville model buildings out of the way over there.
My
next step was to start locating, outlining in pencil, gluing, and
pinning each of the A Yard curves, starting with Track A1, as seen here
after it had been glued and pinned in place (near the mainlines):
Then came the water bottle weights while the glue (caulk) dried
overnight. Then came Track A2 just inside A1, and here I am spreading
the caulk for Track A3:
In a later shot, the water bottles are resting on Track A3 while the caulk dries, as seen from the other end:
I will continue gluing down the A yard curves, one track at a time, for the first half of the big curve.
In
other news, three helpers have been working on Victorville models for
me (many thanks!). I recently visited Bill Messecar and picked up a
beautiful model of the Sand House with Sand Bin that he had completed.
At home, I set it on a sheet of cardboard on my bed for a few photos:
Here we see the Sand House and Bin beside the spur track where the sand
will be delivered in a gon and shoveled into the bin:
And here's the other side of the Sand House and Bin:
There were three buildings in a row inside the Victorville wye, and Bill
has now completed all three of them! I set them up as they will appear
on the layout, with the Sand House and Bin, then the Elevated Fuel Oil
Tank, and then the Boiler House: Here we see them all along the local
switcher spur track:
And then from the opposite side, where the mainlines and helper loco tracks were located:
Many thanks to Bill Messecar for his beautiful work on scratch-building these three buildings!
My
friend Don Hubbard has recovered from some health problems and is back
at work on the Standard Oil scene. Here's a photo he sent me today,
showing the three horizontal tanks (note all the pipes he added along
the bottom edge of the tanks) and some fuel unloading and loading
structures:
The
piece of paper represents the Standard Oil warehouse,
which he built and gave to me last year, but the warehouse belongs in
the bottom corner of this view, and the truck fueling station belongs up
where the truck is. I'll place them in their correct locations later.
I
recently sent to Craig Wisch part of a 1948 photo I discovered, which
happens to include the Union Oil tanks in one corner of the photo:
I noted that there were two wide tanks to the right of the four tall
tanks, and my track plan left room for those two tanks. Craig seems to
be interested in modeling the two wide tanks, as he sent me this photo, showing a concept for how he might model them: By
the way, I did receive the four tall tanks that he rebuilt for me, and I
plan to add the catwalk and ladder from the Walthers "Trackside Oil
Dealer" kit, but I haven't found time yet.
I'm excited about all the progress that is happening now. If you can help, please contact me.
Then a week later, on March 15, I sent out another progress report:
I
normally write a layout progress report every two weeks, but I worked
on the staging tracks more than usual this past week, so I'll do a
report after just one week this time.
A
week ago I had glued down Track A3 where it entered the big curve at
the end of the peninsula. My next step was to glue down two flextracks
for the Track A4 curve and then the Track A5 curve, one in the morning
and then one in the evening, after the first one had dried. The next
day I did the same process for Tracks A6 and A7. Track A7 followed a
36" radius curve, which is the minimum for the mainlines, so the tracks
outside of that have wider curves, while the tracks inside will have
sharper curves.
The
next day I glued down Track A8, and the next day I did Tracks A9 and
A10. I placed a poster-board template over Tracks A7 through A10 to
show how the radius decreases from the 36" of A7, as seen here:
Then I did a side project to clear off the other half of the peninsula,
which has been covered with models of Victorville buildings and piles of
turnouts and wires and tools. I decided to set all the building models
on top of the staging tracks in the adjacent room, sort of in the
relative positions they will have on the upper deck someday. I shot a
photo of the buildings that will be at the left side of Victorville,
including the Lower Narrows:
Moving to the right, here are buildings that will be near the depot, in the center of town:And the right of there, I placed the building models that will be at the right end of the scene:
Note the Walthers turntable, which I'll install there in the final phase of the lower-deck track laying.
When
all the buildings and turnouts and things had been moved off the other
side of the main staging peninsula, I shot a photo of it, with some new
work on the B Yard stub-ended tracks also going on in the foreground:

Each
B Yard track had to have an extension track cut and attached to it, to
lengthen it as far as possible without interfering with trains on the
Track A10 curve. Most of the B Yard tracks also had to be partly
loosened and re-glued to be straighter and to maintain the 2 1/4"
spacing.
Then I finished adding the B Yard track extensions and gluing them all down, as seen here on the right side:
Note that I was also starting to lay out some flextracks to see where
they will fit when I start work on the other half of the A Yard curves
and straight tracks, as well as the adjacent stub-ended D Yard tracks.
Here's another view of the A and D Yard tracks just loosely placed where
they may go (the D Yard will be stub-ended on the right):
So, I'm excited to be half-way done with all these staging tracks and anxious to connect them all together, starting next week.
Then on March 29, I sent out this progress report:
When
I reported two weeks ago, I had glued down the 10 A Yard staging tracks
where they start to round the big curve at the end of the peninsula.
Since then, I've been working almost every evening on how those tracks
should be extended around the second half of the curve.
I
cut out a large piece of butcher paper and traced where the outer rail
of each track was located in the first half of the curve, then moved the
paper to locate where the curves could be extended:
Then I removed the butcher paper and extended the 10 tracks around the
curve, widening the radii where possible. I pinned down possible
locations for each of the tracks in the second half of the curve, as
seen here:
I also shot the yard from the throat end, showing how Tracks A1-A5 might
come together in a series of four left-hand turnouts beside the
mainlines:

But
I'm not entirely happy with this arrangement, because Tracks A1-A5 come
to an end sooner than I hoped for, so I'll be trying different track
arrangements to try to lengthen those tracks.
Also,
I'm using up all my flextracks, so I sent for another 20 of them, which
should arrive soon. And I've also used up my left-hand #6 Atlas
turnouts, so I need to find another batch of used ones on eBay.
The
rest of my news this time will be about Victorville structure models
being built by friends. Don Hubbard has completed the last parts of his
Standard Oil lot (including the three horizontal tanks and a truck
fueling station), so I'll meet with him this week to receive them.
And
Bill Messecar has agreed to build me a Santa Fe-style stock pen to go
along the tracks between Standard Oil and the Lime Rock plant. Here's a
Chard Walker photo showing the stock pen in white paint in the
distance:
And
here's a circa-WW2 photo from up on the Upper Narrows, showing the
stock pen in the foreground, with the Standard Oil buildings behind it:
I set up all my building models from the Depot on the left to the Lime
Rock plant on the right exactly where they will be when they are on the
upper deck. My track plan showed space for a pen that was 8" wide by 6"
deep, but I found that the pen could be 8" deep, as Bill hoped for.
Here's photo showing an 8x8" piece of white paper where the pen will go:
In the view above, the Standard Oil lot is in the foreground (waiting
for the tanks and other parts from Don Hubbard) and the paper for the
stock pen lot is behind there. Here's a view of the stock pen area from
above the Lime Rock Plant model, with the spur track on the right:
Many thanks to Bill for undertaking a model of the stock pen for me!
My
friend Craig Wisch in Victorville is mailing me the two wide tanks that
were at the back of the Union Oil lot. He shot this photo before
sending them:
They look wonderful! Then Craig chose another project to work on for me --
a cardstock model of the Packing House that was the central building
between the cement plant silos along the tracks, as seen here:
That building is still there, but the view of the lower floor is usually
blocked behind freight cars parked there for loading. Here's an old
c.1950 color slide image I sent him to show some of the details:
Craig
found a cardstock model kit that he can use for this building, making
it 12" wide (6 bays instead of 7) and four stories tall, to match the
prototype. This was exciting, until he took a closer look at the kit and decided not to try this building after all.
Normally
I would also write a blog entry now (March 29), but I'm moving it back a week,
to offset it from the bi-weekly reports again. For now, I'll get back
to work on locating those 10 tracks of the A yard.
Please let me know if you can help in any way, by building models remotely or by helping to lay and wire tracks in person.
John