Showing posts with label railcars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label railcars. Show all posts

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Careless Whisper




George Michael's, "Careless Whisper," might be the "at bat" song for a major league baseball hero, but I can also tell ya that it was played a lot selling hot roll coils like these, long before it was the "at bat" favorite.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

The Trains at Fair Park Are Thinning

The next consist to move at month's end
The brakes are being rebuilt.
The Big Boy on the left. Over 1 million pounds of steel!

     The old trains at the former Museum are just about gone. The next big consist is being readied to move across the Union Pacific tracks out of Fair Park to the BNSF yard in Irving before being moved those final miles to the new Museum at Frisco. Looking at what's left, shows the years of neglect while on display at Fair Park.
     Of course, the Big Boy move will be the last to go. It is the biggest locomotive under steam that I have ever seen. I must say that. This is the one that everyone has been waiting to see on live rail again. The enjoyment of seeing an old steam locomotive under it's own power moving on the tracks is still exciting. To see this locomotive under it's own power will be an experience of a life time.
     Meanwhile--here are a few pictures from Fair Park. There are a couple taken from the other side of a chain link fence and the slight grey blur is the camera's reaction to the object in the lens. The Facebook page for the museum is saying that the move will be March 31. That's a Sunday and the TRE will not be running. That means that the trip should have live rail free from traffic to move to Frisco. It would not be expected to have this piece of equipment sitting on a yard siding at Mockingbird or Irving yard. It would be assumed that it will move non-stop from Fair Park to Frisco in one move. That is, of course, just an assumption. There is a little bit of politics being played out by a few and that always spoils the broth some.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Looking Backward: New Discoveries

An old rail car going to a museum.

One of the carriage horses that pulls the flower laced carriages in downtown for the visitors and even locals that take the ride.



 
It will soon be time for the annual Dragon Boat Races in Las Colinas
 












 
Looking backwards will always turn up new discoveries. That's why photography really is "a moment in time" because sometimes months will pass before you see an image from an old shoot. Once the image falls behind the shutters, it's still that exact moment when you clicked the shutter. But, the excitement isn't lost. It's still just as exciting as if you had just shot the image only hours ago. Indexing images is very important and I don't always index a shoot like I should. So looking backwards will turn
up lost images. Here are a few examples of a three month period of lost indexes.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

A Train of Trains

History moving up the road from Dallas to Frisco. This is the consist of the hospital move of two engines and two diesels on their own wheels. It had left Irving about 45 minutes prior from this spot and from the Gribble siding going north toward Carrollton.
Just north of Gribble siding. The train behind waited as this consist passed it on the right, then back on the main track .
The Santa Fe diesel familiar to every one at Fair Park
Spot No7 and another moved as a hospital move
Chained Down and 20'06" on the move

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Moving on the Rails (1 of 2 post)

The tank cars were used for support in the move and are not part of the museum collection.
The Last Car
Here are a few images of the old rail cars moving to a museum as they passed between the Medical District and the Wye at Irving where they are spending at least one night.

It All Started in the wee hours of May 28th when 80 MPH winds was tossing everything against the side of my house.

 Those winds were substained for well over 40 minutes. The results were trees everywhere down or large branches broken off. One of my bus ro...