I will be winding down this blog (except for occasional special events) since the major portions of the rebuild are essentially completed and there were no responses to my "anybody reading" request on the August 8th
post. It is therefore
appropriate to finish with recreations of highlights of our last operating
session where we basically ran a complete PRSL 1954 freight schedule. (Engine
assignments were fudged!)
This will be in 2 parts.
We began the day with the Philadelphia transfer arriving in the Pavonia yard with loads
from the frontier (anything beyond southern New Jersey). It is headed prototypically
by a Pennsy RT624 (sometimes PRR FAs). A pair of BS12s head out to meet it and begin
breakdown and reclassification of the freight cars.
A quick aside here. The only N scale manufacturer equipment available painted for the PRSL are (3) Atlas GP38s (w/o
the extended cab) and (6) Bowser N5 cabins (both logos). A friend has also re-lettered
an Atlas VO-1000 (~BS12) and 2 RDCs for me. I have (4) AS-16 (WM version)
shells but will need to find help getting them completed and on the road. The
AS-16s were the entire PRSL road diesel power from 1950 until the arrival of
the GP38s in 1967. When the PRSL needed additional power, it was provided from it's
parents, the Pennsylvania RR and the Reading Company. Almost anything the
parents had could find its way onto the rails in South Jersey.
Kicking off the road parade WY841 was the coal drag to supply the power plant in Deepwater.
Here we find it leaving Camden.
I am sure the Woodbury commuter did not find the swirling coal dust enjoyable during WY841's run-by!
WY843 the Deepwater local leaves next and here we finding it stopping along the way to
deliver sand and cement to the Buzby Bros. facility in Westville. (All trains
on these branches are “turns”. They leave the Camden freight yards go to one of the 3 branch terminuses (Millville/Salem/Deepwater) and return to Camden the same day.)
WY843 delivering loads of sand and cement to Buzby Bros. in Westville |
A pair of PRR H30 covered hoppers |
WY27, the Millville local, has already departed and now the Salem local (WY51) follows soon after. Here
it is passing the Broad Street Lake in Woodbury and shifting reefers at the
icing facility in South Woodbury.
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