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CN, being the former IC, serves numerous mines in southern Ill. That coal is dirty coal and usually can't be burned "alone." It is usually blended with cleaner coal from other sources to make the chemistry work to EPA standards. There are blending facilities all over to mix the coals to product the acceptable chemistries.Since BNSF would be hauling cleaner Wyoming coal (Powder River) east, you can establish there is a blending location that would bring in the southern Ill coal to blend with the Powder River coal. It is possible your power plant could blend on site. As for car counts, remember there are always holding tracks at these places.
A small-ish plant in Cedar Falls Ia.http://www.bing.com/maps/?v=2&cp=r2mzwb78x2sz&lvl=18.464250211989214&dir=163.92559787827594&sty=b&where1=Cedar%20Falls%2C%20IA&form=LMLTCCJason
Thanks for all the photos, lots of good ideas here! I like the one in Reading and Cedar Falls. Jason, any idea how many cars they get at a time, looks like a fairly compact track arrangement. Also, one thing I've noticed in all these pictures is the large piles of what I am assuming is the coal. Are the trains off loaded into the pile and then moved by end loader or belt from there? Of is this the fly ash waste? My only experiences seeing coal plants is in my hometown, which was served only be semi. I don't recall seeing a coal pile like this but there was some smaller piles of the fly ash.
This plant in Alexandria VA only takes 20-30 cars at a time. It also has a plant switcher (a light blue EMD SW) and unloads cars one at a time. That could keep an operator busy.http://www.bing.com/maps/?v=2&cp=qg30zb8kcwts&lvl=17&dir=0&sty=b&form=LMLTCCBecause the EPA cracked down on it a number of years ago, its outward bound ash shipments are considerable as well.