This time we will provide links to past blog entries about Santa Fe's road switcher diesels, and then we will cover recent layout progress in laying two more tracks and giving a presentation at a recent Northwest Santa Fe Mini-Meet.
Here's one sample of the road switchers we have covered in our past blog entries:
This is a Chard Walker photo of #3004 as a helper at Summit in 1953:
Here's a list of links that should take you to any of the past blog entries for Santa Fe's road switcher diesels:
SF DT6-6-2000s – Apr-3-2022
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2022/04/santa-fes-dt6-6-2000-diesels-in.html
SF GP7s – Jan-1-2023
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2023/01/santa-fes-gp7-diesels-in-victorville.html
SF H16-44s – Oct-31-2021
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2021/10/santa-fes-h16-44-diesels-in-victorville.html
SF GP9s – Sep-10-2023
https://victorvillelayout.blogspot.com/2023/09/santa-fes-gp9-diesels-in-victorville.html
Here's a sample photo from each of these previous blog entries:
SF DT6-6-2000s – Apr-3-2022
Here's a color photo by Jack Whitmeyer of #2601 at San Bernardino in Jan. 1953:
SF GP7s – Jan-1-2023
Here is #2685 helping the eastbound Grand Canyon at Pine Lodge in the early 1950s, as shot by Don Richardson:
SF H16-44s – Oct-31-2021
The H16-44 locos were important in Victorville because one of them was often assigned as the local switcher after Santa Fe's steam locos were retired from this job in mid or late1951. Here's a Stan Kistler photo of #2802 as the local switcher beside the Victorville boiler house on Dec. 23, 1951:
SF GP9s – Sep-10-2023
Here's a great photo by Robert Hale, showing GP9 #701 helping PAs with the eastbound Grand Canyon on Sullivan's curve in 1956:
After the caulk had dried and the water bottle weights were removed, I shot this photo of the new tracks from the opposite direction (the push-pins mark which tracks were new):
Track S1 is the new one on the inside of the big curve, and Track AL has one new section on the outside of the curve. But I discovered that one of our rail joiners had come apart during the track-laying, so I planned to pry loose the last section of Track S1 to re-lay it in the next week.
During one of the breaks, I visited the two sales tables and was able to buy six small Santa Fe trackside buildings from Norm Bruce for just $5 total. They will be very useful along the maintenance of way spur on the far side of my Victorville scene. Later at home, I arranged them for a photo in front of Bill Messecar's recent buildings:
My presentation on "Santa Fe's Postwar Chicago-LA Passenger Trains" didn't begin until about 3:00 pm, and I was able to rush through all the slides in about an hour. But the attendees have my handout to use as a reference for everything I rushed through too quickly.
We are corresponding with Wayne Lawson about other details that may go into the Standard Oil lot, especially the three horizontal tanks in a row, as seen here on the left in Wayne's N-scale scene:
I'm hoping that he will come back to help me with my HO structures, especially the large Hayward Lumber building that was just to the left of the Peterson Feed building, which he previously built for me.
This week I need to go back to the tangle of turnouts in the C Tower area and move one of them to make room for its switch machine to fit in. Also, I'll continue working with Don Borden on the various control panel drawings.