Last time I began creating links into past blog entries about the locomotives seen in Victorville during the postwar decade, so I will continue with that now. This time the locos will be Union Pacific's freight diesels and helper diesels, such as this one:
Here we see a
GP9 ABBA set, led by #147, as it descends with a freight through
Keenbrook in May of 1956, thanks to John Shaw:
After the UP diesels, I'll cover some recent layout progress involving more control panel designs and more tracks being laid down in the C Yard.Here's a list of links that should take you to any of the past blog entries for Union Pacific's freight diesels and helper diesels:
UP FA-FBs – Dec-26-2021
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2021/12/ups-alco-fa-fb-diesels-in-victorville.html
UP H20-44s – Apr-17-2022
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2022/04/ups-h20-44-diesels-in-victorville-and.html
UP F3-F7s – Aug 20-2023
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2023/08/ups-f3-f7-diesels-in-victorville-more.html
UP TR5s – Oct-30-2022
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2022/10/ups-tr5-diesels-in-victorville-and.html
UP GP7-GP9s – Apr-9-2023
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2023/04/ups-gp7s-and-gp9s-in-victorville.html
UP Unusual Diesel Helpers – Oct-8-2023
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2023/10/ups-unusual-diesel-helpers-in.html
UP First Gas Turbines – May-15-2022
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2022/05/ups-first-gas-turbines-in-victorville.html
Let's look at a sample of each of these blog entries now.
UP FA-FBs – Dec-26-2021
Here
is UP FA-FB set #1603 climbing the grade westbound at Frost, just after
leaving Victorville, as shot by Frank Peterson in Oct. 1950:
UP H20-44s – Apr-17-2022Here
we see #1360 and a partner returning light to San Bernardino (along with
some Santa Fe FT helpers) while an eastbound Santa Fe steam loco works
upgrade out of town, thanks to Chard Walker:
UP F3-F7s – Aug 20-2023Here's a set of freight F3s, led by #1404, with an eastbound freight at Alray in March of 1948, as shot by Tom Hotchkiss:
UP TR5s – Oct-30-2022Here's an early color photo of D.S. 1870 at Summit, as shot by Chard Walker:
UP GP7-GP9s – Apr-9-2023Here we see GP7s #119 &114 helping a set of PAs with an eastbound passenger train entering Summit, thanks to John Munson:
UP Unusual Diesel Helpers – Oct-8-2023
A UP loco type that was in
short-term helper service on Cajon Pass was the EMD SD7 roadswitcher.
The UP acquired ten of these in June, 1953, numbered #775-784. Here is Jack Whitmeyer's color photo of #783 in San Bernardino in Aug. 1953:
UP First Gas Turbines – May-15-2022
Here's a Chard Walker photo of double-ended gas turbine #50 and its caboose in Victorville:
This completes our summary of past blog posts about UP's freight diesels and helper diesels.
Next comes my usual report on my layout progress for the last two weeks.
I made a little progress each week on the tracks in the C
Yard of the staging deck.
I also spent some time reading and watching
videos about how to do cardstock modeling on my own, as Craig Wisch has
turned his attention to modeling some Victorville buildings for himself
in S scale. I was hoping to start adding a new paper rooftop and new
wall coverings to the Shipping Office wing of his Lime Rock Plant model,
but that has not happened yet. Building the Rix grain
elevator kit for the plant has slipped too.
On
Saturday a week ago I met Tim Repp at the Boeing club again, and we got to work
doing an inventory of all the books the club has. We found my old
spreadsheet of the books the club had years ago, so we'll use that as
the starting point. We got through two shelves of books this time, so
we'll have to have many more work sessions to get all the books added
in, and I'll have to work on entering them at home too.
Also,
I was able to find the March 1966 issue of RMC in the club's library,
so I made a copy of a photo of the south side of the old passenger
carbody, which Bill Messecar is beginning to build for me from my old La
Belle wooden combine kit. Here is the south side, which is quite
different from the north side we saw last time (and note the depot
across 6th Street in the distance):
While at the club, I also picked up a very large box with
a Walthers 130' turntable, which I'm buying used from the club for my
staging deck (recall that there will be a Turntable Tower panel near
there).
Don
Borden spent part of that week helping me by upgrading three panels for
the C Yard area, using the new track spacing of 3/4" and our new label
conventions. Here is his new panel for the C Tower:
There will be two nearby sub-panels for just the yard
tracks, which will be mostly broken into parking spaces for diesel sets
(except for through Tracks C1 and C10).
Here's the new panel for C Yard - Right:
And here's the adjacent panel for C Yard - Left:
Many thanks to Don Borden for the endless work he puts into these panel upgrades!
A weekend ago I got to work on adding more flextrack sections to Tracks C1,
C2, and C3 in the right half of the C yard, as well as the adjacent
Track AL, which is unrelated to the C Yard but happens to run alongside
it, due to a support post that gets in its way otherwise. I soldered
four new track sections onto the old ones before curving them to follow
their roadbeds, as seen here:
Later I glued them down to their roadbeds using caulk and
pushpins and water bottle weights, as usual. Here's a later view from
the other direction, looking along the new tracks as they curve around
the bend in the C Yard (some of the caulk had not yet dried clear):
From left to right in this photo, we see
the double-track mainlines, then Tracks C1, C2, C3, and unrelated Track
AL, which curves beside C3 to avoid that support post.
The big event of this past week was an op session at the
layout of Steve Shores in Puyallup, WA. On Wednesday morning I drove
south to Bill Messecar's home, and he then drove me and Colin Kikawa to
Steve's HO layout, where we met Don Hubbard and a couple of Steve's
usual operators.
The
layout fills two basement rooms, is completely scenicked, and runs
well. It represents a freelanced railroad in the Northwest in the
1950s, with GN and NP shared trackage. Here's one of the photos I shot,
showing the engine house and turntable area, with Steve visible in the
next aisle over:
I bid on an easy job, so I got to assemble a freight in the staging yard
(using car cards with waybills) and then run it around the long mainline
a couple of times before parking it in the main freight yard. The
power was an NP 2-8-2 with sound. You can see the train here on Track 3
in staging before it left town:
My next job was to run a GN passenger
train with a 4-6-4 with sound, as seen above on Track 7. My final job
was to run an RDC around a couple of times, stopping at all the
stations. We left Steve's at about 12:15 and headed out to lunch before heading
home. It was a very fun day!
Meanwhile,
I corresponded all week with Don Borden and Tim Fisher about the
designs for the next control panels. Here is Don's latest version of
A-B Tower, but there are still a few things to fix, such as the label in
the upper left that should refer to the A Yard - Right panel:
As you can see, this is a very crowded junction, with two double-slip switches in a row to get trains in or out of the A Yard.
I spent some time making a pencil drawing of the related panel for the A Yard - Right panel, which will look roughly like this:
This drawing shows an on-off button for
each yard track, but then Tim Fisher pointed out that we don't need those, as
the locos will be parked elsewhere (such as in the C Yard).
I also made a pencil drawing for the B Yard panel, which will look something like this: Again., the on-off buttons for the yard tracks won't be needed, as the locos will be stored elsewhere.
Don Borden will be working on all three new panels this week, as he finds time. He is a treasure!
This
weekend I got back to work on laying more of the tracks in the C Yard
(namely C1, C2, and C3), where they round the curve and run up to a
tangle of turnouts. I soldered a couple more flextracks together before
curving them, and then I cut and fit smaller sections to meet up with
the turnouts at the left end of each track. After I spread caulk under
them, I used water bottles again to press them down:
Later I shot a photo from the other end of that section
(the push-pins are still in place), with the temporary turnouts in the
foreground:
It's always a struggle to get the tracks cut to just the right length to meet the turnouts!
Meanwhile,
Bill Messecar has continued building a very nice model of the old passenger
carbody that stood in Victorville for the swing brakemen to rest in,
using the La Belle kit I gave him. He plans to visit me next week, so
that will motivate me to get my tracks ready for him.
Sadly,
I made no progress on the bus wires nor the upgrades to the Lime Rock
Plant, so those are still on my to-do list. There are never enough
hours in the week!
If you can help in any way, in person or by building models remotely, please let me know.
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