[PRCo] Re: Question about 69 Squirrel Hill Route
John Swindler
j_swindler at hotmail.com
Sun May 6 21:00:08 EDT 2012
As they say, 20/20 hindsight is perfect. This seems to be arguing about how JB interpreted what he was told and how he put it on paper. Besides, Electric Railroads was a railfan publication - it wasn't a thesis. That's not to say that Electric Railroads didn't have some good stuff over the years. But what's not in the Electric Railroads issue was any commentary on the original cars assigned to Charleroi service. No one read the local paper to note the accident reports around 1906-08 in Mon Valley. Another fable was the alleged higher speed of the interurban PCC cars. > Subject: [PRCo] Re: Question about 69 Squirrel Hill Route
> From: fwschneider at comcast.net
> Date: Sun, 6 May 2012 20:16:28 -0400
> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementix.org
>
> Karl Hittle was in engineering. But I think your point is well taken from another perspective. The writers probably gave credit to those Karl because they provided a roster. Karl was always very helpful in that connection. He ran tons of paper through the copier making reproductions of drawings for me when I was a teenager. He was wonderfully supportive of the fans. But crediting him does not say or even imply that Hittle or his boss Howard Bierwith actually reviewed the text to see if any gremlins snuck in.
>
> Remember the comment about reducing unsprung weight that Tom Parkinson made. There really isn't much on a PCC truck below the springs except wheels, axles, axle housings, journal bearings, pinions, ring gears and the portion of drive shaft weight carried on the axle housings.
>
> You would not want to increase the weight of the bolster because it hangs on swing links. Increasing that weight would cause more lurching on curves.
>
> You cannot readily change the weight of the motors ... they are about 695 pounds a piece from the factory. Westinghouse made those. Not Pittsburgh Railways.
>
> That leave only the brake beams, the frame tubes (filling them with lead?) and the cross members, all of which came from the factory in one design.
>
> It really doesn't make sense.
>
> There is a tremendous amount of material that floated around the Pittsburgh Electric Railway Club that didn't make sense .... a lot of hearsay that Ed Lybarger has attempted to verify and has never been able to. Examples include the supposed line up of 830s stuck in a snow storm in Greensburg on the Irwin line ... I remember Ed saying to me something to the effect that, 'If that happened, would it not have been in the newspaper? He checked the Greensburg newspaper ... whose staffers could have looked out their windows and seen them ... nothing mentioned. That is one of many examples. I think a lot of the stories probably began with motormen who just wanted to see how far some of the crap would spread if they started it! You know how that works ... these trolley jollies are crazy ... let's see if we can put one over on them. :<)
>
> I think, like a lot of the political things we see on the internet that once started have a life of their own, this story about the extra weight built into the trucks is probably another one of those stories that has, over time, achieved a life all its own and even if disproved, it would never go away.
>
> Brown was the president (for sometime at least) of the Pittsburgh Electric Railway Club. I think he had an EE degree. He worked for Union Switch and Signal and later for the Pennsylvania Railroad in signals and communications; I think it was Penn Central when he retired. When I first met him, he lived at 341 Stanford Avenue in West View ... that was when the club's members bought 832, M1, 3756 and moved them out to Arden. Later, when he was with the railroad, he was living near Paoli. He also installed the first train phones on the Strasburg locomotives. He now resides on the Washington interurban right of way near Donaldson's Crossroads, Washington County, in Forest Lawn Cemetery.
>
> Bartley lived in Ben Avon. I only met him once as a 13-year-old. Bought some photos from him as late as my college years. Have no clue what he did.
>
> Dengler was a letter carrier obsessed with photographing every car that Pittsburgh Railways ever owned ... up front, close and personal. He often would take a whole roll of one car if he thought he could sell them. He died before Brownie.
>
> Edward S. Miller was a delightful chap who lived in Pittston, about midway between Wilkes-Barre and Scranton. He left home upon graduation from high school and worked for Con Ed in a power plant in Long Island until the military drafted him. He was in the transportation corps, U. S. Army, in England in World War II. His mom remarried and he got the heck out of Pittston. His old buddy Mike Lavelle was a motorman for Capital Transit so he moved down there. Step father died so he moved back home about 1952 to take care of mother and worked for a variety of companies. A couple of years ago, Ed was getting ready for church and fell ... a neighbor broke in and got him to the hospital. Ed was one of those people who would do anything for anybody ... loved people. He was the Catholic who attended mass every day they had one. He celebrated his 90th birthday in a nursing home but was never the same. Ed was one of those people best described as the salt of the earth. !
> They didn't come any nicer.
>
>
> On May 6, 2012, at 6:18 PM, Herb Brannon wrote:
>
> > Too bad none of the contributors to that article weren't either Maintenance
> > Employees or PRCo Engineers (P.E. type). Maybe then they would have
> > spelled out what they meant by, "....had some weight applied...".
> > On Sun, May 6, 2012 at 9:35 AM, Phillip Clark Campbell <pcc_sr at yahoo.com>wrote:
> >
> >> John Baxter wrote the "Electric Railroads" 1952 article about
> >> the Prc interurbans. This is 12-letter-sized pages. Contributing
> >> to the article were 3-reporters from the "Washington [Pa.]
> >> Reporter."
> >>
> >> Newton E. Tucker, Albert R. Dauk, William A. Keller, and
> >> Karl H. Hittle from Prc were contributors along with
> >> Kempton F. McNutt of the Philadelphia Co. and
> >> Herman P. Hewitt, retired Washington operator with
> >> 46-years of local and interurban service.
> >>
> >> Photo credits include Robert H. Brown, Charles J. Dengler,
> >> Edward S. Miller, and Harry C. Bartley.
> >>
> >>
> >> The following is page-6, top right above the map. This reveals
> >> more than I remembered and is most interesting. I am sure many
> >> here have this article don't they; please verify the "facts" as they
> >> are quoted below:
> >>
> >>
> >> "In January 1946, local PCC car 1613 from Craft Ave. car house,
> >> with some minor body changes (fender replaced by pilot, trolley
> >> retreiver lowered, rear window opened, fare box replaced by Ohmer
> >> register, etc.) had some weight applied to its trucks and became
> >> the first experimental PCC interurban car. The next month special
> >> St.Louis-built trucks, which had earlier been applied to PCC car
> >> 1278 for use on Rt. 37-Shannon, were rebuilt and applied to 1613.
> >> Later 10 special trucks [sets] were bought and applied to various
> >> PCC cars (as indicated by the accompanying roster) for
> >> interurban service. Placed on the Washington route, they served
> >> as guinea pigs for various components later ordered for the
> >> 1700--1724 series of PCCs delivered in 1949 expressly for
> >> interurban use."
> >>
> >> "All cars in service on interurban routes are provided with extra
> >> equipment as follows: extra trolley pole mounted on roof, fire
> >> extinguisher, flashlight, trolley wire pickup, glass covered took
> >> kit including axe, wrenches, sledge, etc."
> >>
> >> The above is what I have written previously on the topic
> >> relative to 1613 entering interurban service with B2 trucks. New
> >> information indicates car 1613 first used the experimental B3
> >> trucks in revenue service Feb-1946 doesn't it.
> >>
> >> http://lists.dementix.org/mlist/pittsburgh-railways/2012-05/msg00048.html
> >>
> >>
> >> The complete interurban roster (mentioned above) is not included.
> >> Please refer to your copies of this article.
> >>
> >>
> >> Phil
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> ________________________________
> >> From: TEP <tompark at telus.net>
> >> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementix.org
> >> Sent: Friday, May 4, 2012 6:29 PM
> >> Subject: [PRCo] Re: Question about 69 Squirrel Hill Route
> >>
> >> Sounds odd to me as we are always trying to minimise the unsprung truck
> >> weight -- up to the point where the truck is unstable or has wheel-lift
> >> that
> >> could cause a derailment. Possibly this is why, a truck designed for slower
> >> speeds on street track, needed better stability for higher speeds on "T"
> >> railtrack. Lighter trucks mean less wheel and rail wear and slightly lower
> >> power consumption.
> >> Tom Parkinson P.Eng, Vancouver BC Canada 604-733-5430, fax 604-733-5437
> >>
> >> On 04/05/2012 12:52, Fred Schneider wrote: Or does heavier simply mean
> >> super
> >> resilient wheels instead of the regular design? There really isn't an easy
> >> way to add weight to a B2 truck unless you were to weld weight to the
> >> bolsteror fill the frame tubes with something like concrete. I'm skeptical.
> >> Istill want someone to tell me how it was done rather than simply tell me
> >> thetrucks were heavier. Phillip, where did you get this information that
> >> weight was
> >> added to them? On May 4, 2012, at 3:37 PM, Derrick Brashear
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> > --
> > Herb Brannon
> > In Cuyahoga Valley National Park
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
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