Working through
the maze of schedule conflicts this Fall, I held the one formal operating
session on my railroad on Saturday. This
has been an unusually active Fall, with many rail events, including several
falling on my “First Saturday” position in the area operating session rotation. The wait was well worth it.
I had twenty-one
operators join me for the session.
Amazing to me is that my railroad still can absorb a few more operators
beyond that, especially with two-man crews in use. I prefer to have two-man crews on the local
freights and would like to have them on all of the road freights. A second crewmember is useful with long
trains and handling the radio traffic associated with the Direct Traffic Control
system in use. Further, I find it is
best for everyone if new-to-the-layout operators are paired with a more
experienced operator. Three of the road
crews were paired for this session, as well as three local crews. Several other operators ran solo as road
crew, as well as the two helper crews we used.
Fellow model
railroaders note that I rarely operate during my own formal sessions. The reason for that is well known to fellow
owners of larger layouts. We are on-call
for any number of issues during the session.
Though my railroad has settled down fairly well, I still experience
minor physical plant glitches or control system problems that require my
attention. Indeed, I had one switch
point that required a quick re-solder job onto the throw bar as well as several
other minor glitches.
In compensation
for not operating during a formal session, I get to railfan! My enjoyment comes from seeing my vision come
to life with my basement empire. As the
session settled down, I got to sit down and watch several meets take place at
Wicopee, with trains slowly snaking across my future Salt Creek Trestle
site. Note this is the site for the
inspiration photos that appear as the background of this blog and the inset
photo at the top of the right side bar.
My crews are doing a wonderful job of keeping the speeds within the 25
mph freight speed limit on the mountain grade.
A RR-East
freight drifts down-grade and around the Salt Creek Trestle toward a meet at
Wicopee. The RR-West train to be met is
just visible underneath the trestle support.
Mike B. and Brigg F. are guiding the RR-East. Helper engineer on the RR-West train Bob Y. is
in the background. Bob has pulled the
helper duty several times, so he runs as a one-man crew.
Another
perspective on the meet at Wicopee, with Mike B. serving as engineer on the
RR-East train coming down the hill.
Standard practice on the mountain grade in the diesel era is to keep the
down-hill trains rolling to conserve their braking ability.
Dispatcher John
B. kept the traffic rolling with additional management assist to both he and me
provided by retired SP Dispatcher Rick K.
John is filling in train data on the Direct Traffic Control Block Authority Sheet. Above that on the desk is the Train Sheet. Where the Dispatcher records additional
information about each train.
Conductor Mike
B. (seated), helper engineer Dave C, and Road engineer Rick A. await a down
hill train and meet at McCredie Springs.
Part of railroading on a single track mainline is waiting for a meet.
Oakridge Turn
engineer Bob S. (rear) awaits a RR-Westbound controlled by Ken R. (foreground)
coming into Oakridge.
Oakridge Turn
conductor Pete J. (left) watches and plans at Oakridge as helper engineer Bob
Y. drifts down yard track 1 to be ready for the incoming road freight. The new Oakridge crossovers can be seen
connecting the four yard body tracks.
The mainline, siding and house track (right to left) are the three
tracks closer to the depot and backdrop.
Ken R’s RR-West
road freight enters Oakridge Yard, while the Oakridge Turn waits in the
foreground. I issued an operating
bulletin directing the use of Oakridge Yard track 2 as the preferred track for
RR-West freights. The new crossovers
best enable placing the helper two thirds of the way back in the train when
using this track.
Jim M. and Greg
P. work the first Springfield switch job.
This job works the depot side of the mainline at Springfield. A second job works the aisle side.
Yardmaster David
B. keeps his switch crews, Jordan D. (left) and Chuck C. (right) busy at
Eugene. Over the course of the session,
they must build five local freights and break down blocks of cars from arriving
RR-Eastbounds destined for the modeled railroad.
Even though I
could schedule only one formal operating session this Fall, it was a good
session. It was great to have a full crew
and keep everyone busy. Also good were
the relatively modest number of glitches and trouble tags generated. Sessions like this were what my railroad was
built for!
Bill,
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on a most successful large operating session- sounds as though everyone had a grand time- and your pleased everything went to plan. Many years ago I nearly went into modelling Southern Pacific...though as far as I got was the purchased an Athern SW1500 Switcher in the SP Grey and Red...it ran beautifully. Very pleased to see you enjoying yourself with the SP. Regards. KEV.