Monday, August 19, 2013

1981 Manifest Freight Powered by C30-7 8050

Santa Fe C30-7 leading a eastbound manifest freight.  In 1976,  GE C30-7 was introduced as the successor to the U30C locomotive and contained several internal and external design changes.  With 16 cylinders and 3000 h.p., this model was GE's challenge to the EMD SD40-2.  Between 1977 and 1982, Santa Fe purchased 157 of these units.

General Electric U23C locomotive 7514 is the second unit in this train.  It was a 2250 h.p. turbocharged loco designed for the intermediate horsepower situations.  They mostly served in the Southwest on copper trains, but occasionally strayed west.  Here she is in the original Yellow Stripe paint scheme.  Santa Fe owned 20 of these units, the largest domestic purchaser of the U23C.


EMD SD45-2 number 5661 is a 3600 h.p., 20 cylinder locomotive, representing the highest horsepower of any regular production locomotive in the 1970's.  That's 20 diesel cylinders at 645 cubic inches each.  (Today's current V-8 gasoline engines run about 300 cubic inches total.)  the diesel engine provided power to run the six electric motors, mounted one per each axle.  In reality, these locomotives are diesel electric locomotives.   Santa Fe owned 90 of these locomotives.

ATSF 60' gondola, heavily weathered as all gondolas should be.  There are two in this train, but just one pictured.

When this Bx-74 box car was refurbished,  it was incorrectly painted red representing a Shock Control car.  It is not.  It should have been painted Mineral Brown.  Who knows why... See "Santa Fe  Freight in color...the series" by Priest and Chenoworth, pg. 45.

Former Mechanical Reefer, now a plug door box, as the quick paint patch indicates.  The diesel refrigerator motor has been removed.

Heavily weathered 55' covered hopper.  I added Gold Medal Models etched brass walkways to this car.

Heavily weathered BN 50'plug door box

A not so stock Micro Trains car.  I removed the "Ship and Travel..." logo and replaced it with Santa Fe billboard lettering.  I really like the looks of this car now.

A very, very old Burlington covered hopper and a heavily weathered NP covered hopper.  I cannot remember the manufacturers of these cars.

MT custom painted GN 50' plug and sliding door box.  This paint scheme is supposed to be in GN "Sky Blue", but the rumor is that shop personnel were just using up the left over "Glacier Green" paint.  Sounds logical, as many cars ended up with this paint scheme.

MT GN covered hopper and Santa Fe covered hopper of a completely different design.

More covered hoppers, weathered

Close up on a Frisco covered hopper.  I believe this and previous model hoppers of this design were manufactured by Athearn.

Addendum:  Brad (of Tracks Across Nevada) informs me that the Airslide hoppers were manufactured by Atlas.  Thanks, Brad.

BN 50' plug door box from Micro Trains.

50' Kansas City Southern outside braced 50' plug door box, mildly weathered and a heavily weathered CB&Q covered hopper.

First appearance of "Beer Tankers" or "Shorty Tankers"

These cars carried many different liquids, but never beer.

Custom painted Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy 40'boxcar.  I added an 8 ft. door per the prototype, then weathered it.  The DF logo refers to "Damage Free".  UP covered hopper nicely weathered.

Stock MT Shock Control car

Double door Conrail boxcar from MT.  When built, these cars were beautiful, with the green and black paint scheme, with the three color NYC logo.  What a mess after Conrail creation.  They all looked like this in the late 70's and early eighties.  So sad.  One of the proudest railroads in the country gone to hell.

Heavy weathering and light weathering

Custom painted and decaled 50' Santa Fe plug door box.  This car was built in the mid fifties as a Damage Free car.  The logo is orange rather than yellow indicating  the freight car is insulated (as lettered below the large DF).  The insulation helped stabilize temperature sensitive lading.

Custom painted Burlington DD 50' boxcar, lightly weathered

Lightly weathered Detroit, Toledo and Ironton 50' plug door box.

Surface rust on this WP 55 ft. covered hopper from Micro Trains

Damage Free 50' boxcar, paint scheme from the 60's.  Atlas caboose completely revamped with caboose parts from MT, including trucks, end rails and ladders, smokestack, and couplers, and then custom painted and decaled. 

A video of this train can be seen on YouTube at:

                                                http://youtu.be/E7g-jDQrORE

2 comments:

  1. Another great looking train Mike.

    Those Airslide cover hoppers - Frisco, NP, & ATSF are from Atlas.

    ReplyDelete