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Nostalgia & History > Man, that's some kinda bloody nose!Date: 10/15/17 11:12 Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: santafe199 Here’s a dandy slide dupe I was able to pick at Summerail ’17 a few weeks ago. As a kid in the 60’s I remember seeing Uncle Pete’s version of General Electric’s original U-50 rolling through my 2nd home town of Abilene, KS. But I never got the chance to see in person this SP version with that “towering” red nose. Wow! What an intimidating sight this must have been…
1. SP 9951, one of only 3 SP U-50s poses in Los Angeles, CA in November of 1976. (‘East West Rail Scenes’ copy slide image) Thanks for looking back (& up)! Lance Garrels santafe199 Date: 10/15/17 16:46 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: BoilingMan I seem to remember Steinheimer suggested these were maybe the spiritual descendants of the cab forwards. I can see his reasoning, but, of course, the U-50's did not enjoy anywhere near that kind of success.
SR Date: 10/15/17 17:07 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: PHall Looking at the large vertical "pipe" just behind the pilot and just ahead of the front truck.
Is that a "poop chute"? Was the toilet in the nose of these units? Date: 10/15/17 17:57 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: santafe199 PHall Wrote: > ... Looking at the large vertical "pipe" just behind the pilot ...
My guess <earlier> was a sanding hose leading to the wheels. But now I see the "vertical" pipe you guys are talking about. And you may be right: watch your step. The more I look at the "hose", the more I think it might actually be the speed recorder attachment... Lance/199 Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/15/17 18:54 by santafe199. Date: 10/15/17 18:49 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: Railbaron I see that hose but the vertical pipe he's asking about probably is indeed the dreaded "poop chute" back before retention tanks were on engines and cabooses - back when you had to watch your step. <G>
Date: 10/15/17 19:50 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: PHall Yeah, the red "hose" is the speed recorder drive. I'm asking about the 4-6 inch pipe forward of it.
Date: 10/15/17 21:26 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: Railbaron PHall Wrote:
------------------------------------------------------- > Yeah, the red "hose" is the speed recorder drive. > I'm asking about the 4-6 inch pipe forward of it. See my response just above yours, although perhaps I didn't type it clear enough. I would say the pipe you ask about is indeed the old "poop chute". Date: 10/15/17 22:24 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: coach How did these engines perform? Slippery? Good pullers? Mechanical issues?
Date: 10/15/17 23:27 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: cewherry PHall Wrote:
------------------------------------------------------- > Looking at the large vertical "pipe" just behind > the pilot and just ahead of the front truck. > Is that a "poop chute"? Was the toilet in the nose > of these units? Yes, the hopper was located in that very cramped nose and the outer nose door was next to useless especially while moving. You really put your life at risk when trying to move from unit to unit at any speed above 15 mph. The door(s) leading from the cab into the nose compartment consisted of two springed metal panels, (think of full length saloon doors from from a western movie though without the louvers). You had to turn your body sideways in order to make the passage. Charlie Date: 10/16/17 11:03 Re: Man, that's some kinda bloody nose! Author: MILW16 If Union Pacific's locomotives used the span bolsters from traded-in turbines, what did GE use on SP's? Extra UP span bolsters?
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