Rails & Tales 2017 Canadian Steam Double Header Pt.1

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • Celebrating Canada's 150th birthday in classic steam style. This year's Rails & Tales event pulled out all the stops in commemorating Canada's birthday by teaming up Alberta Railway Museum's Canadian National H6G locomotive number 1392 with Alberta Prairie Railway Excursion's Consolidation engine 41 for a week of double header steaming up and down Alberta Prairie's track. Our twenty mile journey takes us over the lush farmlands of central Alberta between the towns of Stettler and Big Valley.
    Locomotive 1392
    Livery: Canadian National
    Built: 1913 Montreal Locomotive Works
    Wheel Arrangement: 4-6-0 "Ten Wheeler"
    Tractive Effort: 30,560ft/lbs
    Mass: 297,000lbs
    Locomotive 41
    Livery: Alberta Prairie
    Built: 1920 Baldwin Locomotive Works
    Wheel Arrangement: 2-8-0 "Consolidation"
    Tractive Effort:2 29,000ft/lbs
    Mass: 244,000lbs
    Song: Fiddler's Green
    Artist: The Tragically Hip
    Album: Yer Favorites

Комментарии • 14

  • @maxwellwalcher6420
    @maxwellwalcher6420 2 месяца назад +2

    Fantastic Doubleheader.

  • @rhythmcompany
    @rhythmcompany 4 года назад +3

    Nice to see 41 again. Went on an excursion behind her in 2017, but lost the phone that had all of my pictures on it.

  • @eddawe5660
    @eddawe5660 5 лет назад +4

    Wow a Canadian national and Baldwin locomotive double headed, that is cool😎

    • @Rainhill1829
      @Rainhill1829  5 лет назад +1

      It took a lot of work but it was worth it.

  • @bobwhite3777
    @bobwhite3777 6 лет назад +3

    Wow that's a pretty rare even!! Not often that you see trains have to double head especially old steamers

    • @Rainhill1829
      @Rainhill1829  6 лет назад

      Definitely a rarity we are not going to see again here for a while .

  • @Graulas
    @Graulas 4 года назад

    what whistles does 41 have, cant think of any but i love the sound of it

    • @Rainhill1829
      @Rainhill1829  4 года назад

      I can find out but i almost think it came off a small steamboat.

  • @robertheinkel6225
    @robertheinkel6225 6 лет назад +2

    How do they synchronize the operation of two units? Trial and error?

    • @bobwhite3777
      @bobwhite3777 6 лет назад

      Robert Heinkel always wondered the same thing

    • @hollywood1340
      @hollywood1340 6 лет назад

      Both locomotives have active engineers. The second locomotive responds to the first and is adjusting power to the needs of the train.

    • @Rainhill1829
      @Rainhill1829  6 лет назад

      I asked this crew, they said in this case the head unit does most of the work, the trailing engine is mostly just applying enough power to shift it's own weight. Either engine is more than powerful enough to carry the whole train solo, so it is double-header power where a single engine is more than enough. The Ten Wheeler did most of the work on the outward journey while the Consolidation pulled most of the load back home.

    • @trainknut
      @trainknut 4 года назад +2

      @@Rainhill1829 True doubleheaders - as in, a second locomotive being used as a head-end helper, are rare in the 21st century, the closest to real steam helper operations you might see in 2019 would be on the two surviving sections of the D&RGW narrow gauge down in Colorado, the grades are steep enough and the trains long enough, that you could probably justify a second locomotive for reasons other than just looking cool.