worldrailboy Posted January 17, 2012 Share Posted January 17, 2012 I'm sure that if I posted the sixth photo or so from this blog page to a forum made up of just american modelers alone they would probably had been scratching their head asking just whats going on [because they've never had anything like this pre-diesels as far as I know] http://blogs.yahoo.co.jp/br1020er/23057408.html got to like japan varieties here don't we?? 2 Link to comment
westfalen Posted January 17, 2012 Share Posted January 17, 2012 Of course US steam didn't last in regular main line service until 1975 either. Modeling the transition era in Japan allows you a much longer time frame. Link to comment
bikkuri bahn Posted January 18, 2012 Share Posted January 18, 2012 Another interesting facet of the transition era was many times the phase out of steam (muenka) skipped dieselization completely (at least wrt to freight), primarily on the main lines- one month you'd see D51's pulling freights, including autoracks, the following month you'd see ED types under the catenary. Link to comment
worldrailboy Posted January 18, 2012 Author Share Posted January 18, 2012 thats true westfalen, still as not to go too off-topic right now I'll just quickly mention that in usa Chicago & North Western did have budd-built steam heated bi-level commuter cars that for a few years was hauled by steam. (and of course if bi-level isn't in your interest, try Southern Pacific. 100% steamed commuters for a long time) bikkuri I'm not too surprised, I've pretty much noticed that japan seem to have a lot of direct steam>electric transitions, aside to switzerland as well Link to comment
westfalen Posted January 18, 2012 Share Posted January 18, 2012 bikkuri I'm not too surprised, I've pretty much noticed that japan seem to have a lot of direct steam>electric transitions, aside to switzerland as well [/quote No domestic oil supply but plenty of hydro electric power are something Japan and Switzerland have in common. Another thing Japan has in common with a lot of countries is that steam lingered longest in coal mining regions. When I'm swapping between running steam and modern era trains on the layout something I don't have to pack away are my DD51's and DE10's. There aren't many locos that a US modeller can run unaltered in front line service on a steam era layout or one set in the present day. Imagine if I pulled a BNSF stack train with a set of cat whisker scheme FT's. Link to comment
worldrailboy Posted January 18, 2012 Author Share Posted January 18, 2012 westfalen hehe well hmm there are a few family owned lines that have old locomotives while still interchanging modern big freight wagons but thats a very small slice of north america tho. actually without going too offtopic, if you want classic electric then try look up 'iowa electric traction', they still use very old trolleypoles-fitted cab units to do grain shunting http://railfan.com/extraboard/extra_sep2010/electric-1.jpg that would probably sum it up, sure some of the wagons are older generation ones but who cares for its the locomotive itself that matters! Link to comment
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