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Re: (erielack) EL Radio Communications



Jim and Listers,
   
  The MU's didn't have radios until sometime after late 78.  Someone who worked after August of 78 could comment on that more than I could. I left Conrail (Hoboken) the end of August of that year.  The only trains we ojn the M&E side were able to talk to were trains with the U-34CH's. You would need to walk over to the East End side to use the radio to do so. When the new train dispatcher's office was built on the old post office site upstairs by the ferry slips I believe the M&E side got a radio.
   
  When I worked the East End dispatcher's job, I used the radio on a regular basis to talk with freight trains and passenger trains on the Mainline and the Boonton Line.
   
  There were times when "WJ" Ridgewood could talke clearer to someone in Paterson than we could receive. 
   
  Rich P

JG at graytrainpix <graytrainpix_@_hotmail.com> wrote:
  Follow up thought on the Hoboken Dispatcher's radio back in the late 60s and 
70s. I believe that the East End Dispatcher used the radio a lot more than 
the West End did, especially after the thru freights started moving over to 
the Scranton side in '72. Denville Tower might be able to tell a train what 
was going on at Lincoln Park by radio, but east of there it was up to the 
dispatcher to keep the trains informed (e.g., telling a w/b commuter train 
that he was going to get hosed at GA while an NY98 or NY74 was crawling 
uphill from Mountain View on the single track). WR never had radio, and DB 
only got it in '74. Come to think of it, I remember once encountering a 
BC-2 stopped at the east end of Lincoln Park, in late '75. After being 
enlisted to make a coffee run, I was invited up into the cab for a quick 
chat. There was some track maintenance work going on near Great Notch, and 
I could hear Bob Collins on the East End desk talking to the track foreman. 
So the Hoboken radio could be heard by a train at Lincoln Park back then. I 
think that the BC-2 crew did talk to him just before I got off (as they 
finally had the signal and were about to leave). The Hoboken radio probably 
also came in handy at Paterson (recall that the East End desk covered the 
Boonton Line and the Main Line from Bergen Jct. to Ridgewood), when a road 
freight had to make a set out or pick up from the yard.

As to the M&E Dispatcher, he was pretty much lived in a pre-radio world, as 
none of the MU's had radios (I think -- maybe a few did by '76?). He would 
depend on Denville and Port Morris for radio contact with freights and 
diesel passenger trains west of Denville.

Jim G.

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