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Re: (erielack) CWR



I'm curious how the CWR would have sat in the gons, since CWR is somewhat
flexible and might sink into each gondola.



                                                                           
             "Paul Brezicki"                                               
             <doctorpb_@_bellsou                                             
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             erielack-owner_@_li         <erielack@lists.elhts.org>          
             sts.elhts.org             "Paul Tupaczewski"                  
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             10/12/2006 06:47                                              
             AM                                                    Subject 
                                       (erielack) CWR                      
                                                                           
             Please respond to                                             
              "Paul Brezicki"                                              
             <doctorpb_@_bellsou                                             
                  th.net>                                                  
                                                                           
                                                                           




Normally CWR is transported in 1/4 mile lengths on a train consisting of
flats equipped with rectangular frames, the rail sits on rollers on the
frame. At the installation site a 'dozer straddling the ties pulls each
length of rail off the train; I think rollers are placed on the ties also.
If shorter lengths are required they're cut at the field, since on the rail
train they're all the same length. Gons are an inefficient way of
transporting CWR, but evidently EL wasn't laying enough to justify a
dedicated CWR train so they used gons which would return to regular steel
service once the project was done. Another option for EL would have been to
use another RR's CWR train on short-term lease, say N&W's during Dereco
years, but it sounds like they didn't do that.

Paul B

I think Rich is right, the cars probably went off line to pick up the
CWR and that required interchange numbers on the cars.

I've always read that CWR came in quarter-mile lengths. If so, that
would require about 25 gons to transport lengths that long. It would
seem that a train that long and unique would have drawn the lens
of railfans. Between the cars being parked, stored, transporting and
unloading the CWR, it just seems some photos of these should have
surfaced on the web, in Morning Sun, etc.

That begs the question: was all CWR sold/made in quarter mile
lengths? Were sorter lengths ever made/sold/used?

If the EL did not install much CWR, perhaps this was a one-time
train, quickly put together to transport a load of CWR, and then
returned to revenue use. That also begs the question: what other
modifications had to be made to these cars besides the installation
of racks? (In WWII when the Erie transported long lengths of
anti-sub cables, the gons had to be chained together in case
of a knuckle breaking)

Ronald R. Dukarm  ELHS #532  ELHTS #66


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