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Not sure what is on this train. Looks like it could be ballast. Any rate, CN 9498 and 9447 are in a power braking struggle helping to hold back this heavy eastbound which has just come down the long (8 mile) Dundas Hill.
A scene from the past. I used to enjoy witnessing this action.
Copyright Notice: This image ©A.W.Mooney all rights reserved.



Caption: Not sure what is on this train. Looks like it could be ballast. Any rate, CN 9498 and 9447 are in a power braking struggle helping to hold back this heavy eastbound which has just come down the long (8 mile) Dundas Hill. A scene from the past. I used to enjoy witnessing this action.

Photographer:
A.W.Mooney [2136] (more) (contact)
Date: 08/22/1976 (search)
Railway: Canadian National (search)
Reporting Marks: CN 9498 (search)
Train Symbol: unknown (search)
Subdivision/SNS: CN Dundas Sub. (search)
City/Town: Hamilton West (search)
Province: Ontario (search)
Share Link: http://www.railpictures.ca/?attachment_id=39647
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Photo ID: 38449

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9 Comments
  1. Oh man…i can smell the brake shoes. I loved power braking. Way more fun than throttle modulation or dynamic braking!

  2. Those could very well be Ballast hoppers. I believe these were the older brown ones before the orange rib sided cars. What year would have the orange ones been entered into service?

  3. Could very well be a Paris Turn with construction aggregate for, example, Don Yard.
    In the immediate past this would have been train 830 but by 1976 may well be carrying a different designation.

  4. Those are indeed ballast cars. I worked with those types of cars many times in my 36 yrs at CN. The track gangs hated them because of the system used to dump ballast. The orange fleet are far more popular. These types of trains are sadly a memory now as modern Herzog trains do this duty.

  5. In the Edmonton area the orange cars started showing up in the very late 70′s. What a relief they were/are to work with. Pouring ballast to inside or outside of the rail became a simple operation. Versus the brown sided ones which required getting right in close to the underneath of the car to open up the hatch. Then placing a tie in front of the trailing truck to spread the ballast. The sectionmen basically worked in a cloud of dust all day. I honestly don’t know how they put up with it. 4u is right on with his last comment. :-)

  6. Right you are Larry. I worked with those poor guys spreading ballast in the good old days. I remember the railroad tie under the wheels to “level” the ballast as the train moved and definitely thought the unloading mechanism was kinda dangerous for the workers. Those guys were covered in “ballast dust” at the end of the day. God knows how much they breathed in. Back then the difference was ballast was “slag” that is a by product of steel making. Today its only gravel used on the railbed.

  7. Geez… this pic is very similar to cover photo of the July 1980 Trains mag :)

  8. I wonder where my copy is? That must be the issue with the snake-skin cover.

  9. Lots of drama in this shot.

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