0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
I remember hearing stories about planned tests out west (Calgary to Edmonton?) that were canceled due to the track conditions west of Hornepayne Ontario. Does anyone know if there is any truth to this and if a trainset was actually sent west and turned around due to track issues?
They couldn't do a slow order, or was it all of the track west of Hornpayne? That is a lot of track
The Railwire is not your personal army.
The story I heard is that they got that far, and had so many issues that they canceled the test and sent it back east... I heard this back in my N trak days, and with the people that told it to me I trust there is some level of truth to it. but would love to confirm/bust it either way...
The CN Turbo was rushed into service in 1968 after just over one year of testing. There were significant cold weather reliability problems. The snow would get into the intakes and cause havoc. The train was pulled and did not properly enter service again until December 1973.In January 1969 testing was done at Taschereau Yard with a large snow making machine blowing snow into the intakes. But CN and Pratt & Whitney crews wanted some real-world cold-weather testing so they headed for the Prairies. Unfortunately, by the time they reached Foleyet the Prairies were in a massive thaw. So they decided to head back to Montreal. They did whatever cold weather testing they could do in northern Ontario.All of this is well documented in my book, TurboTrain: A Journey. We still have a handful of copies left at the office, out of an original print run of 6000. By Canadian standards that is considered a best seller, but as we aren't a real publisher nobody in the publishing business knew about it!-JasonPS if you ever hear anyone tell you the Turbo was "unreliable" or other such nonsense, send the offender to my book. In the 1970s it was the most reliable train in Canada: 97% on time, 99% availability. It was killed for political reasons and not for reliability reasons.
All of this is well documented in my book, TurboTrain: A Journey. We still have a handful of copies left at the office, out of an original print run of 6000. By Canadian standards that is considered a best seller, but as we aren't a real publisher nobody in the publishing business knew about it!-Jason
How does one go about acquiring one of the aforementioned books?