I held my third mainline operating session with my local
crew on August 8, 2015. Note this
is just three years into solo construction. Track is still needed for the engine facilities within the
Eugene Arrival-Departure Yard (reverse loop staging) and a few more tracks in
that A/D Yard, but the vast majority of the railroad has been built.
This third mainline operating session was a success, with
few—minor—issues discovered.
Whew! The railroad has come
together just in time for the NMRA National Convention at the end of the
month. My layout is on the formal
bus tours, will host an operating session, and is on the Layout Design Special
Interest Group Tour. I had
accepted the state of the railroad this summer for the tours. What I needed was a successful
operating session. That has been
accomplished!
The Eugene Yard crew is hard at work, with Jim M., David B.,
and Chuck C., visible. Bob S. is
over at Springfield working the depot side of the mainline with the first Springfield
Switch job.
Having worked down my priority “fix-it” list from the first
two sessions, I could concentrate more on proper organization for operation for
this third session. That effort
paid off handsomely as the full crew of 14 was kept busy throughout the
day. One can get a sense of that
from the organized look of the Eugene Yard and in the image above and Bob S’s
activity in Springfield in the photo above. More will be evident in photos below.
I am discovering just how big this railroad is by its
ability to absorb rolling stock and still need more. I was able to put together and stage three 25-car freights
each way—about half of my intended operation. The trains were assembled differently based on direction of
travel. The RR-Westbounds represented
loads headed up over the Cascades toward California. As such, the pair of trains mostly forest products freely
intermixed flats and boxcars. The
more general merchandise train also had appropriate cars and loads.
The RR-Eastbound trains (downhill) were assembled as if the
Roseville and Los Angeles Yards (Colton for the 1984 era of the current
equipment on the layout) had classified them for return of empties to
Eugene. In an earlier era, these
cars full of lumber empties were known as “XMUGs” for general freight empties
(possibly to EUGene). As such,
they are very distinctive. One
train was composed entirely of boxcars, almost all SP or SSW (home road). Another was about half home road
boxcars and a long string of empty flat cars. The third RR-East train was another general merchandise
train.
I also added AMTRAK to the mix, starting it from Crescent
Lake in the morning. Eventually, I
plan to double these trains and add a hot piggyback train (LABRT northbound,
BRLAT or CZLAT southbound).
Meanwhile, we had more than enough equipment to begin operating!
Visiting Californians Wayne C. and his son Kenny control a
train drifting down from Cruzatte
(upper line in the rear) toward Salt Creek Trestle and Wicopee.
Ex-SP Dispatcher Rick K. discusses the finer points of
dispatching with Direct Traffic Control (DTC) with Dave H.
One of the joys I experience with this layout is attracting
a great group of operators, including several former Southern Pacific operating
personnel. Dispatcher Rick K. has
been particularly helpful by designing an initial operating scheme using Direct
Traffic Control (DTC). DTC was
SP’s answer to dispatching by radio, replacing the old Timetable and Train
Order system, which required many train order operators stationed along the
railroad. Both control systems
were used in territory not controlled by Centralized Traffic Control (CTC)
which SP had installed on most mainlines by the mid-1960’s. Eventually, my railroad will have
CTC installed, as the Cascade Line was upgraded to that in 1955. I will discuss more about my DTC system
in a subsequent post.
Oakridge Turn engineer Mike B. works at Oakridge while
helper engineer Dave C. wraps up his return with light helpers to the engine
facilities at Oakridge.
We used manned mid-train helpers for the RR-Westbounds going
uphill from Oakridge to Cascade Summit.
This went very well. I had
cut back the size of my road power sets from three units to two based on
earlier testing. This added to the
operations, as it now took two crewmembers, each with a throttle to guide
trains uphill. After the help was
provided uphill, the helpers needed to return light to their base at
Oakridge. This added still more to
the operation. This also was a
major priority of the layout design and it was gratifying to see this come into
action.
Road engineer Norm
A. and helper engineer Bob Y. pull a train into Cascade Summit.
Rick A. studies his DTC authority sheet as he guides a RR-West
lumber drag past Westfir.
The railroad operated well and the operating system proved
functional. The railroad is ready
for guest operators during the NMRA National Convention!
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