Wheels of Time Blog
Tuesday
Dec072010

SHIPPING & UPDATE

We are shipping our 70-ft heavyweight baggage-express cars through next week. They look really nice. Yours truly is packing the orders. Our ADA Station Platform Warning Bands in HO- and N-scales are being made. Be sure to check out the bilevel commute coaches (reservations due at your dealer or direct by Dec. 28th). These bilevels will have really fine printing and painting with two-level seating, like the real thing.

Saturday
Nov132010

More photos of 70-ft Heavyweight Baggage-Express Cars

More pics of our new cars. Enjoy.

Chesapeake and Ohio arched roof baggage car with Garland roof vents. C&O used this car for passenger baggage service.Chicago & North Western clerestory baggage-express car. These cars carried express shipments.

Stay tuned for announcements regarding new products for Winter/Spring!

Monday
Nov082010

New 70-ft Heavyweight Baggage-Express Cars

Here are a few snapshots of our eagerly-awaited, brand-new 70-ft Heavyweight Baggage-Express cars. We anticipate completing production in about 2-weeks, and shipping from Hong Kong will take an additional week. These cars will be worth the wait!

Item Nos. 218-220TS Rock Island clerestory baggage-express car, painted in dark olive

Item Nos. 207-208 Wabash arched roof baggage-express car

Items 223 and 224 Unlettered, painted in Pullman Green

Friday
Oct292010

Photo Essay: 6-Wheel Heavyweight Passenger Trucks

We're excited about the upcoming release of Wheels of Time's 6-wheel heavyweight passenger trucks which are perfect for scratchbuilders and kitbashers. Along the way, I took photos of various 6-wheel heavyweight passenger car trucks. Notice the variations in truck details. Enjoy.

 

This is under an ATSF chair car that was rebuilt from a Pullman sleeping car.Truck under Pullman car "Emerald Waters." Notice the variation in the rolling bearing journals.11-ft wheelbase heavyweight truck rebuilt with roller bearing under B&O modernized coach.Notice the "B & O" markings.Heavyweight truck under SP 1975 All Day Lunch Car.SP Class 6-TC-2 truck under SP 77-D-6 Dining Car being retrofitted with rolling bearings. Noticed the "UP" markings under this 1912 UP Harriman business car.This is a Pullman 10'-6" wheelbase truck built in 1900.

 

Friday
Oct222010

The Daily Commuter

Ever been a train commuter? Can you remember what was it like before automatic sliding doors, air conditioning, PA announcements, and passengers tuned to their  electronic gizmos?

I experienced the life of a daily commuter during the summers of my youth, and later, when trains took me to my local JC. My memory is full of small moments that made lasting impressions. If you're interested in commuter trains, stay tuned for a Wheels of Time announcement, coming soon.

In the meantime, to satisfy your inner old-school railroading habit, I'll share some of my memories, some of the daily rituals I had on SP's commute trains before Caltrain, before the internet, and all the gizmos we use to block out the world.

Inside SP's suburban coach. Newspaper from my collection.What was it like? ... I remember reading the Chronicle in the morning, and the Examiner in the evening; flipping the 'walkover seat' to face backwards to have a friendly chat with a fellow passenger; playing a hand of poker on the wooden board located at each end of the commute car - provided by "your friendly SP."
(Need to catch up on your sleep? No problem. The conductor would rattle your seat with his ticket puncher to wake you in time for your stop.)

Eastbound (by timetable) evening SP commute train stopping at San Bruno in March 1983. Notice the red marker light on the suburban coach ("subs" were class 72-IC-1, 2, 3)
I remember the smooth but gentle swaying of the coach with the ever-familiar click-clack on the jointed rails. It was pretty easy to guess the speed of the train by the timing of the click-clack.

I remember the conductor singing out each stop ... "BROAD-way,  broad-WAY", and hearing the release of air brakes and the slamming of the vestibule trap doors, and the scurrying of passengers with their briefcases and Chronicles.

I remember the conductor's wave of the hand to the engineer that all were onboard. Vestibule trap doors closed and trap doors on the other side (where the platforms will be located at the next station-stop) are opened.

My first Cal-Trans Southern Pacific monthly pass, pre-Caltrain era

The conductor and the brakemen collect our money, punch our tickets, and wedge a zone stub into the clip on the seat, actions repeated a thousand times a day.

As the train makes its way through the many tunnels in San Francisco, passengers instinctively close their windows. The final stop is called: Fourth and Townsend. The train eases it way through the maze of track work before you reach the depot. The brakeman opens the trap doors and vestibule doors, and gets a head start on ratcheting the car's hand brake. The train squeals to a stop and everybody rushes off. Out of the sea of humanity, a commuter waves good morning, reaches up and gives his Chronicle to the engineer. As the sun sets, the tide of humanity is reversed and the rhythm is played over again.