Friday, August 28, 2015
Friday, December 20, 2013
Welcome railfanners and friends to my fourth blog post! Today I will mention some fun Christmas train events to attend, and other fun train rides in California.
Christmas time is coming! We're all very excited. The Metrolink trains are excited too. So there is an annual Christmas train that runs through cities such as Simi Valley, Oxnard, Oceanside, Riverside, Irvine and many other stations in Southern California. It’s a train that performs shows, plays music and it’s even decorated with Christmas lights. Furthermore, the show is free although they ask that you bring a small gift for charity. I think this is a fun event and I certainly recommend it. Sadly it is not running this year but maybe it will be here again next year.
Another fun Christmas train ride in Woodland, CA features a two hour show and train ride with a special story “Morgan and the Magical Christmas train”. More information can be found here http://www.sacramentorivertrain.com/whistletix.php?Page%3dhttp%3a%2f%2fwww.whistletix.com%2fSacramentoRiverTrain%2fEventPage.aspx%3fEID%3d171676
Monday, December 9, 2013
Welcome back to my RailNut blog, week three! This week I
will post some information about how to railfan (the equipment you’ll need),
and as usual I will post the rail word of the day, my new quiz, and the answers
to my previous quiz.
If you are a beginner railfanner, you might wonder what
equipment you need, and what kind I recommend. Most camera companies sell
cameras that are quite reasonable for railfanning. I personally suggest buying
a rather small camera, instead of than a heavy-duty camera. When you’re
trackside, you might have a dolly, a camera, and a camera bag (with extra
batteries and SD-cards), so having a large camera can make it a lot harder to
go over a bridge or under a tunnel to access another track. Back in the day, if
you wanted even reasonable quality film for video, you had to use a very large
and expensive camera. These days you can purchase a small camera with full high
definition recording (which is what I have) for only $150 or so. Tripods can
also be found used on eBay or Amazon for very low prices.
Some railfaners tend to go railfanning with just their
cameras, with no tripod, dolly, extra batteries or even extra SD-cards. My book
mentions when and when not to bring a tripod and other equipment. A dolly is
also useful to wheel your camera and tripod around when there’s an overload of
trains.
Another fun railfanning tool is called a scanner, basically a
ham radio. This little device can pick up radio signals from the train crew,
workers in the yards, and also dispatchers. I currently own a GRE PSR-700 which
I find very useful in knowing the cause of delays (this information is from
dispatchers and the engineer), when and where the trains are arriving, when
they are departing and at what station, and just listing for fun. The only unfortunate
thing is that railroad radios are only 5watts, which doesn’t give you much
signal when you’re very far from the tracks. Some people use scanners to listen
to emergency services, public safety and air-traffic-control. Also people like
to get extra antennas to stick on top of their car or house to get much better
reception. Railroad frequencies include 97 channels between 160 and 162
megahertz. I would recommend GRE scanners. They have stopped making them, but you
can still buy used GRE scanners are great! A few suggestions are to make sure
the scanner you purchase is analog, make sure it can access channels between
160 and 162m, and purchase a more powerful antenna.
Now that we’ve discussed the equipment you’ll need, lets go
into the details on how to railfan. Preparation: Download my free eBook (see
link in right-hand column) and choose which location you would like. Since only
a few of my locations have directions, I recommend you go on Google maps and
print out some directions (and, if you have a GPS, the address). Next I
recommend checking the schedule for trains in your area, and read the
description of the station in my book. Then, choose a time to go, when there’s
a major overload, which is usually in the morning and evening rush hours. Or, if
you can only go other times, choose commuter trains. These trains stop at most
stations, which will double the film you get if it’s an Amtrak/Metrolink shared
station.
Once you finished planning, you should consider getting to
your destination by some means other than car. If your railfanning destination
is San Diego (for example) and you live in Los Angeles, you can take Metrolink
and Coaster or Amtrak to avoid the stress of driving.
However you go, when you arrive don’t waste time chilling
out or eating at nearby restaurants without checking the schedule, because
there could be an overload you might miss. That happens to me all the time. I come, wait 30 minutes and
no trains come so I leave. Then, right when we get in the car a train comes. Then,
we go past a railroad crossing, and I see train headlights in both directions.
Get the picture?
Anyway once you set up, check the schedule and set up your
camera at least 10 minutes before any scheduled trains (tip, you can set up
your camera and zoom in to see trains a lot farther than your eye can). You
have to choose your trains. When railfanning, there might be four Metrolink
trains coming in on one track and two Amtrak trains on the other. You have to
choose which is more important, seeing those two special Amtrak trains, or the
four Metrolink trains that will come all the time. Personally I prefer the
Amtrak trains, but it’s always up to you.
Setting up your camera. When you set up your camera, the
most important thing is that you tighten the knob to hold the camera very
steady. As I always say, trains come in at high speed and they can wobble your
camera, which usually ruins your viedo. Do not tighten the knob until your
camera is in position. I suggest practicing following the train with your
camera before its arrival, that way you know you’ll record it properly.
1. Here
are the answers to my previous train quiz: What trains does Fullerton station link together: Amtrak, Metrolink,
BNSF and Southwest Chief
1. How many tracks are located in Fullerton:
3
1. What’s the final destination of Amtrak
572: San Diego
1. What time is the departure of Coast
Starlight train number 14? 10:10 AM
5. How many stops does the standard Amtrak Surfliner make from San
Diego to Los Angeles? 9
6. How many platforms are located in Irvine? 2
7. What company owns the tracks from Camarillo to Seattle? Union
Pacific
8. How many gallons does a standard train fuel tank carry? 2,200
gallons
9. What is Amtrak’s official name? National Railroad Passenger
Cooperation
10. Name the stops the standard Amtrak Surfliner train makes from San
Diego to Los Angeles: San Diego, Solana Beach, Oceanside, San Juan Capistrano,
Irvine, Santa Ana, Anaheim, Fullerton and Los Angeles.
Here is this week’s quiz:
When did the first Amtrak train run?
What type of locomotive does Amtrak trains long-distance
trains use?
List the order of the Superliner consist including
locomotives and baggage car.
Name the two prime companies that own the majority of
railroad property in the United States.
Name the four sleeping accommodations Amtrak offers.
Are café/lounge cars offered on non-long-distance trains?
Are full sit-down meals available on short-distance trains?
What type of locomotive is used on APS trains?
What freight company owns the tracks form Los Angeles to Chicago?
What is a side track?
How would a yardmaster or engineer know which P42DC
locomotive was his since they all look alike?
True or false. Amtrak serves all states in the lower 48:
Answers to this quiz will be posted on Monday December 15
Suggested links:
http://www.greamerica.com
(GRE scanners)
http://www.uniden.com
(Uniden scanners)
Railroad word of the day: Middle ordinate. The distance measured from gage line of
rail on a curve to the middle of a string drawn taut, and held to contact with
gage line of rail at its ends. The middle ordinate is a convenient means to describe
curvature, and is used in the adjustment of curves and the investigation of
accidents. It is also a factor in bending rails to a desired curvature.
Thanks for reading railfaners more next Monday,
Skyler
| Onboard the Rocky Mountaineer in Canada |
Monday, December 2, 2013
Welcome to my fourth RailNut blog post! Today I will be
posting some information about Amtrak’s long-distance trains and the services
they provide. I will also include the answers to my quiz as I promised, and
post my railroad word of the day.
Amtrak operates 9 Superliner long-distance routes in the
United States with thousands of route miles shared with freight companies.
These routes have a lot in common, but there are still some differences. Amtrak
Superliner long distance trains have two main options for passengers, coach
seating or private sleeping accommodations. Coach seats are large and very
comfortable with foot and leg rests.
As for sleeping accommodations, Amtrak offers four choices.
You can choose from a Roomette (which is a small room with no toilet or shower for
two people), a Superliner bedroom (a bedroom which has its own private toilet,
sink, vanity and shower), a family bedroom which is made to accommodate four
people instead of two like the roomette and bedroom), and a Handicapped accessible
bedroom which is fully equipped for passengers with disabilities.
The Superliner bedroom is designed for 2 people (it can
accommodate 3 in a pinch, since the lower berth is very wide) but it can be
combined with another Superliner bedroom to make a suite for four people and is
always located on the upper level. The roomettes are mostly on the upper level,
but there are 4 downstairs that are made to accommodate 2 passengers each. The
handicapped and family bedrooms are always located downstairs.
I always recommend that you get rooms upstairs no matter
what! I would highly suggest that you never purchase the family or handicapped
bedrooms because these rooms are directly on top of the wheels and you’ll never
sleep! Even if you have four people traveling, you can call the Amtrak phone
(800-USA- RAIL), and specify that you want two roomettes on the upper level.
That way, you don’t take the chance of being booked on the lower level by
accident. Even though the roomettes on the lower level are not directly on top
of the wheels, the scenery is much better on the upper level. I would also
suggest that you get rooms towards the front of the train, so you have few
people walking past your room to get back and forth from the dining car.
Amtrak also offers full dinning service (try their Signature
steak) on the Superliner long-distance service trains, as well as a lounge car
with snacks and beverages. These cars are personally my favorite (especially
the lounge cars). The lounge cars have a fun configuration with tables on the
upper level to play games, and the other half of the upper level has swivel
seats. The lower level has the snack bar and the whole car has oversized
windows for great viewing of the scenery.
As I have promised, here
are the answers to the last quiz:
1: Difference between Viewliner and Superliner:
Viewliner trains are used mostly east of the Mississippi River and
only have one level. They consist of a baggage car (the same type as Superliner),
a sleeping car with normal windows, along with the ones for the upper berths of
roomettes. There is no family sleeper on Viewliner trains.
The lounge car on Viewliner trains is the same used on most Amtrak
short haul trains. The lounge car
is mostly made up of tables and has a cafe in the center of the car. The lounge
car is used on the Empire service, Northeast Regional, and many other routes.
Coach cars are slightly different from Amtrak short-haul trains
mentioned before. On single level long distance trains, Amtrak uses Amfleet 2
coaches, which are slightly different from Amfleet 1 which is used on many
Amtrak short haul trains such as Keystone Service, Empire Service, Northeast
Regional and other routes. The difference is comfort: Amfleet 1 stuffs more
people in with less legroom. Amtrak’s Amfleet 2 coaches are designed for
sleeping and have less seats.
The dining car is very different from the rest of the train. There are also windows at the top and
the door is near the center of the car.
Superliner:
The Superliner lounge car features extra windows on the top, swivel
seats, a cafe located downstairs, and is only used on Superliner trains.
Superliner dining cars have doors in the center of the car on both
sides and there are no windows in the center of the car. Other than that, it is similar to the
rest of the consist.
2: What is the only train that uses Deluxe sleepers?
The Auto Train, which goes from Lorton (near Washington D.C.) to
Sanford (near Orlando, Florida)
3: What is a transition sleeper, which trains is it used on and where
is it located on the train:
A transition sleeper is generally used for the crew. It is used on all Superliner long
distance trains. Sometimes if there is room they will sell some rooms to
passengers (the entire upper level is roomettes, the lower level has one
Handicapped bedroom and a crew lounge). A Superliner transition sleeper is
located just behind the baggage car with a special lower level connection to
the singe-level baggage car (one reason why a special car is needed as the
baggage car is a different height than the locomotives and bi-level cars).
On Viewliner trains, the crew must use the normal passenger sleeper
cars.
4: What is the origin and final destination of the Southwest
Chief: Los Angeles-Chicago
(40+ hours)
5: List as many Superliner (double-decker, or more professionally
called, Bi-level) routes as you can.
Hint, most Superliner routes are west of the Mississippi River:
Auto Train, California
Zephyr, Capitol Limited, City of New Orleans, Coast Starlight, Empire Builder, Southwest Chief, Sunset Limited, and Texas Eagle.
6: What is the name of the locomotive that Amtrak operates on
most of its short-haul and long distance trains? Hint: it is 4,000 horsepower. P42DC (Direct
Current)
7: Exclusively on
all Amtrak California short distance trains they use a special locomotive, name
it:
F59PHI
8: Where are the origin and destination for most Amtrak Pacific
Surfliner trains (hint, the answer is not San Luis Obispo): San Diego (SAN)
and Los Angeles Union Station (LAX)
9: List the standard Amtrak Superliner consist including
Sleepers, Coaches, Diners, Lounges, Baggage car, and Locomotive(s) in order:
Two P42DC locomotives, one baggage
car, one transition sleeper, two Sleepers, one dinning car, one lounge car, and
2 or 3 coaches.
10: List the California Zephyr origin and destination from west
to Midwest: Chicago-Emeryville (San Francisco)
This week’s Quiz. *For questions 1, 3 and 7 just tell me which numbers
are the answer (there can be more than one answer)
1. What trains does Fullerton station link together?
1. Amtrak
2. Metrolink
3. Union pacific
4. BNSF
5. Coaster
6. Coast Starlight
7. Southwest Chief
2. How many platforms are located in Fullerton station?
3. What’s the final destination of Amtrak 572?
Los Angeles
San Diego
4. How many stops does the standard Amtrak Surfliner make from San
Diego to Los Angeles?
5. What time is the departure of Coast Starlight train number 14?
6. How many platforms are located in Irvine?
7. What company owns the railroad tracks from Camarillo to Seattle?
Union Pacific
Amtrak
BNSF
8. How many gallons does a standard train fuel tank carry?
9. What is Amtrak's official name?
10. Name the stops the standard Amtrak Surfliner makes from San
Diego to Los Angeles:
Suggested links:
Amtrak.com, Amtraktrains.com.
Explanation of Terms:
Superliner: Visit this Wikipedia link.
Consist - the
set of vehicles forming a complete train.
Railroad word of the day:
Gage tool - A tool by which
the gage of track is determined. It is made of wood and steel, or all steel and
sometimes has a guardrail gage attached. It may be combined with a track level.
Thanks for reading, please make comments,
Sky
| Tracks in West Corona facing East |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)