Re: Cleaning up a wreck the old way
Author: HUTCH 7.62
Date: 12-28-2017 - 14:19
Erik H. Wrote:
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> SP 0-6-0 Wrote:
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> -----
> > With the Amtrak 501 wreck, I imagine cleanup was
> done by contractors and rented cranes. It > used
> to be the railroad had its own skilled workers and
> wreckers to do the job. Railroads
> > were more capable back then.
>
> Did the railroads "back then" have cranes that had
> the capability of picking up a locomotive that
> landed well beyond the right-of-way, 20 feet lower
> than the railroad and 200-300 feet away?
>
> I'm pretty sure that even "back then", the
> railroads would have needed help. What railroad
> owned heavy rubber-tired cranes for such a
> derailment? My local shortline uses rubber-tired
> cranes (and recently scrapped one of their two
> rail wheeled cranes), but they still lack the
> heavy hauling equipment to move the equipment away
> if the equipment couldn't be rerailed.
Back then like today usually equipment is dragged by winches or dozers to the ROW to be rerailed. Often times it was left where it layed or scrapped in place.