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I went to Jersey to see an old friend...
I guess TRW doesn't recognize Youtube Live URLs as a Youtube URL anymore.. (or youtube changed the URL format this week).
And came home with a priceless work of art.I don't feel worthy, but I'm not gonna argue with the Wizard.Deets: http://davidksmith.com/modeling/layouts/TomsRiver/toms_river.htm
I went to Jersey to see an old friend...And came home with a priceless work of art.I don't feel worthy, but I'm not gonna argue with the Wizard.Deets: http://davidksmith.com/modeling/layouts/TomsRiver/toms_river.htm
YODA - I don't know if Jersey counts as The Dagoba System.
A great home for another work of art. I'm so glad these are going out in the world to preserve memories. Good memories.
I've seen tons of B&O E units on early Amtrak trains. Threadbare and beaten, but to the end, the B&O maintained their equipment to be at least operable, so many were folded in to Amtrak, even if much of the B&O schedule wasn't. A lot of C&O equipment was transferred to the B&O when Chessie's road dropped passenger service a few years earlier, which begat the later blue/silver scheme you show. The ex C&O units could be identified by the second nose headlight housing in the door.A quick google search should net you plenty of evidence.I've got a mostly factory Atlas E7
Those Roco-chassis E7's were actually a pretty good locomotive, sure made the original Atlas Rivarossi E's with the single-truck drive look like junk despite the body shell paint. I actually took one of those and put it under a Lima FP45 shell to make an Amtrak SDP40F about.... 1978.That was the first thing I ever saw from Roco that wasn't, well, you know. It's a landmark design.http://www.spookshow.net/loco/atlase7.html
Nah, Toms River is just like that. Just the space magic is provided by all the toxic waste instead.