Heritage Unit Photos (NW Mailing List)

NW Mailing List nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Fri Apr 27 14:39:47 EDT 2012


Foamer-words, Abram?

I can tell you from very personal experience (and I know there are
others on this list to back me up) that locomotives are indeed called
"units." I suspect it comes from the days in which a single locomotive
could be made up of multiple units - for example, an ABBA set of FT's
would correctly be a single locomotive, at least when first delivered.
Also, have you ever heard of the connections between locomotives being
called ME or ML ("multiple engine" or multiple locomotive")
plugs/hoses? I have NEVER heard of them being called anything other
than MU ("multiple unit") plugs and hoses. If you think about a
locomotive in the terms of the steam era, it referred to the machine
which pulled (or pushed) a train and which was under the control of an
engineer. By the same logic, I (as an engineer) would control multiple
"units" in the diesel-electric replacement for that steam locomotive.

On a related note, a steam locomotive also has an engine - the
combination of cylinders, rods, and main drive wheels (whichever wheel
set the main rods go to) is correctly called the engine. A steam
"locomotive" is made up of the engine, boiler, tender (in most cases)
and whatever additional wheels are needed to carry the weight and
distribute the power of the engine. A diesel locomotive also has an
engine - also knows as the prime mover - which is a very large (in most
cases) internal combustion diesel engine, and which powers the main
generator which provides power to the traction motors which move the
locomotive. Thus, as you can see, "locomotive" and "engine" do not mean
the same thing.

I cannot say a lot about "grabs" other than to say railroaders are lazy,
and why use two words when one will get the message across? That said,
we don't discuss them that often - we just use them. I cannot recall
hearing them called "grabs" but then I cannot recall hearing them called
anything, except during training.

A "ground throw" and a "hand operated switch" are in fact two different
things. The ground throw is the mechanism (with handle and sometimes
target) which is used to operate a hand operated switch. The switch is
the track, the throw is the part the conductor or switchman uses.

I can't say I've heard much talk about signal heads (and even less about
arms) on the railroad. We usually call them "aspects," and yes I am
aware that the aspect more properly refers to the lens and bulb rather
than the entire head. Historic nomenclature notwithstanding, a modern
color light signal has heads, not arms. the term "arm" comes from the
days of semaphores, and CPLs could be considered similar, since they
were basically stylized illuminated versions of semaphores. I
understand that the N&W did use the term when referring to the signal
parts in question, though I do not know if it was official or cultural
inertia.

Foamer-words, indeed! I'm all for being a curmudgeon, but get it right,
will ya?

Ken Rickman
engineer-at-large

On 4/27/2012 12:12 PM, NW Mailing List wrote:

>

> Why must we call locomotives "Units" ?

>

> What's wrong with the age-old, tradition-tried word "Engines" ?

>

> The same goes for such foamer drivel as "grabs" for grab irons,

> "ground throws" for hand operated switches, "heads" for the arms of a

> signal, and such like weenie-talk.

>

> Y'all need to talk right, Fellers ! Use the historic vocabulary, not

> foamer-words !

>

> -- abram burnett

>

> curmudegeon-at-large

>


--
Kenneth Rickman
Salisbury, NC
C:\WINDOWS C:\WINDOWS\GO C:\PC\CRAWL

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