Clean out tracks

NW Mailing List nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Mon Jan 14 21:23:37 EST 2019


All this fine stuff happened after I left Shaffers Crossing in 1962.  

EdKing

From: NW Mailing List 
Sent: Sunday, January 13, 2019 1:19 PM
To: NW Mailing List 
Subject: Re: Clean out tracks



I turned up some new info on the improved boxcar clean out and upgrading facility that was located west of Shaffers Crossing.  At the monthly breakfast of NS Mechanical Dept. retirees this past Friday, I discussed this subject with Bill Pickle, General Car Foreman, Shaffers Crossing at the time of the improvement and with Cecil Williamson who was a supervisor at the improved clean out facility for several months.  They told me several details with which they both agreed, as follows:  The clean out facility consisted of two sets of three tracks each.  The box cars to be cleaned out were placed on the outer two tracks of each set of three tracks and the Mule Train (both agreed that was the common term for this innovation) operated on the middle track of each set, moving from one middle track to the other as the cleaning progressed.  The laterally extended platforms of the Mule Train were mounted on flat cars to place the platforms on level with the box car floors.  The actual cleaning was done by a extra gang of maintenance of way laborers who shoved the debris from the box cars onto the ground on the side opposite the Mule Train, where it would be bulldozed and loaded up in something (not covered in the discussion with Pickle and Williamson) to be hauled away (I don't know how the space between each set of tracks was accessed for the bulldozing.  Maybe there was an extra wide space between the two sets of tracks?).  As mentioned previously, the Mule Train was equipped with tools (including an air compressor to provide a stream of air to blow dirt and debris out of the cars, according to Pickle and Williamson) and supplies to make minor repairs to boxcars, so that they would not have undergo additional handling to take them to the shop track for the repairs.  I think this latter was the most important benefit of the innovative Mule Train.

Gordon Hamilton


  On 12/4/2018 5:03 PM, NW Mailing List wrote:

    When I was a Shop Inspector at Shaffers Crossing Car Dept. 1959-1961 they established a boxcar cleaning and upgrading place on three tracks south of the west yard.  They put a platform on top of a couple of G-1 gons wide enough to make easy access to box cars on either side (they were just at the right height).  They had a Trackmobile for motive power.  The platform gons had tool boxes and even a steam generator for washing cars out.  I worked the thing for a few weeks, there were probably a half-cozen carmen assigned to it.  We’d go down the tracks and clean out the cars, making small repairs to the linings and floors, and classify the cars for distribution.  I don’t remember ever using the steam jenny.  We’d do two tracks in the morning and they’d pull them and put another two tracks in for the afternoon.  

    We made a lot of class C cars for the Warehouse (freight station) and B-1 cars for bag loading at Buchanan (couldn’t have any splinters that would snag a bag).  We didn’t get any cars that we could make suitable for cigarette loading at Winston-Salem or Durham, or A-1 cars for bulk baking soda at Saltville.  Those usually came off the shop track.  Cigarette cars had to have straight and vertical ends, and we had no “stobo” machine to straighten ends.  The stobo was an ingenious way to straighten ends used in connection with a Hyster crane.  The boxcar side at the shop track made good use of it.

    Ah, for the good old days of the 40-foot boxcar.  And the Journapak lubricator pads.  I was lucky to be there then because journal bearings were undergoing a metamorphosis that would culminate with roller bearings, and cushion underframes, and all that good stuff.  Fun times.  I saw the first H-11 hopper, the 30000, come out and do its test runs.

    BTW – it should be established that I hold the worlds record for the number of hotboxes on one four axle car out of Shaffers shop track.  Eight hotboxes.  That got me the Ig-Nobel prize . . .

    Ed King

    From: NW Mailing List via NW-Mailing-List 
    Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2018 3:44 PM
    To: NW Mailing List 
    Cc: NW Mailing List 
    Subject: Re: Clean out tracks

    Jim, Jim and Ken,


    In my days on the yard, 1981 onward, the tracks Jim and Ken spoke of , I knew as the "dirty hole", or "clean-out tracks". Even though there was no cleaning of box cars at this date, there was an area toward the east end of these tracks where MofW disposed of old rotten ties, fill dirt, etc. There were only three tracks, I believe, that were used at all. MofW stored their cars on two of them. The third was last used to load fuel oil (for company use). We would spot as many as 25, or a few more. Trucks from Montvale would continuously ran back and forth filling these company tank cars. Almost every day, a 2nd shift yard crew would pull the loads and re-spot the empties. 


    Concerning the customers job of cleaning out their own cars, some still didn't get the message! Crews were instructed not to pull cars with trash still in them.

    I forget which year, but the old "dirty hole" was turned into a nice looking EPA approved landfill.

    I personally believe the "super-elevation" was simply the lack of track maintenance, coupled with the fact of the ground settling around all the junk that had been dumped over the decades. It was obvious during my time there was no maintenance on those tracks, unless they were cleaning up a derailment!

    Jeff Sanders


    On Tuesday, December 4, 2018, 1:11:12 PM EST, NW Mailing List mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org wrote: 


    Thanks Jim and Ken!

    On Tue, Dec 4, 2018 at 11:52 AM NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:

      Jim 

      Just to add to Mr. Blackstock excellent write up. The are west of Shaffers was referred to, at least by my father a Radford Division conductor, as the “Clean-out hole”.

      Now, my father was a child of the depression, and always wanted to repair, fix or use something over rather than buy something new. Now, I am not faulting him on that. So, with that in mind, at least once,  I recall him taking me down there one time to pick up some good plywood he had spotted them tossing out, so he asked, they said help yourself, and we went back in the truck to load up. I honestly don’t remember what we used the stuff for, but I remember walking around and like Jim said there was trash and nails everywhere, did not remember seeing any rats. But it was cardboard, paper, wood, scattered all over, and maybe 3-5 tracks full of boxcars.

      I suspect there are not many if any photos of the area, not because it was unappealing to rail fans, but it was deep on company property. The area is now all filled in, nicely covered with grass, and fenced off, hard to tell what might be buried under there.

      Ken Miller



        On Dec 4, 2018, at 9:43 AM, NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org> wrote:

        Jim

        The clean out tracks at Shaffers Crossing was just west of the engine terminal on the South side.  The old stock pen was in the same area.

        Re excessive super elevation.  Not sure on this.  Could be that the area between the tracks were worn down by removal of some dirt every time they ran machines to clean up the debris.  On the other hand it could have been by design to keep those rats from jumping in the open box cars.

        I was only at the clean out tracks three times.  One time to show me as a new employee where they were, one time to check on the location of a car and another to check out some interesting junk to see if it had potential use.  When you were at the location you had to watch every step.  There were plenty of nails and rats to avoid at all cost.  I never did see a rail fan with a camera taking any photos in this area.

        As for me, I would rather walk through the stock pens than the clean out tracks.

        Several years after my clean out experience when I was in the Traffic Dept. we put in charges for cleaning out cars.  This was a tariff charge that required all empty cars be cleaned by the customer before releasing the car to the carrier as an empty.  The only exception was dunnage used to block and brace the load being returned to the original shipping origin.  This eliminated the need to operate the massive clean out tracks.

        Jim Blackstock


        On 11/28/2018 12:57 PM, NW Mailing List wrote:

          On another list there has been a discussion about clean out tracks and the cleaning of cars; some photos show the clean out tracks to have excessive super elevation that assisted in the removing of dunnage and the cleaning of the car, i.e. steam cleaning. 

          Does anyone have insight in how N&W handled cleaning of box cars, etc? Were the clean out tracks super elevated?  Any photos?

          Thanks.

          Jim Brewer
          Glenwood, MD

           
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