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Oh, and interestingly... most of the section about why different audiences care about the stuff was written by the Chat GPT robot. It's pretty wild.
I see "Generally, we have three audiences: railfans and photographers, model railroaders, photographers and railroad historians."I prefer : Generally, our primary audience is: railfans, photographers, model railroaders and railroad historians
When I talk to normies about trains, I often find myself checking my language so that they may have a hope to understand what I'm babbling on about.
Suggested Edit.. RDGReading Company (... yes, its the one from Monopoly. Known as 'The Reading', pronounced "Reding" not reading) .. but a valid connection to non RR people.Maybe include a photo of an S1/S3 Truck vs the S2/S4 truck since you have a photo of an S1/3 on the previous page.S2/S4 (and 1/3) have 1 stack not 2... I think?..I also recently saw a video of what all the SW#s meant along with differences between:SW: Switcher - Welded Frame SC: Switcher - Cast Frame NW: I forget - Welded FrameNC: .... - Cast FrameTR: TransferMaybe that's too much detail..Then you need to put all this into one of those Iceberg Youtube videos so they can digest it.~Ian
Reading update made. As for the other stuff, ain't that crazy about the switchers? Especially how "Switcher, Welded", who's "SW" seems like the best abbreviation for them became the winner. I don't think I want to include that stuff in there, and I had thought about the Alco Blunt trucks too but after a review, those didn't seem to make it into the Conrail (or Conrail adjacent) era. I might do it anyway. We'll see.There's still a LOT to write though.
Ed, Another thought for when you get into the details of a locomotive or car.A photo of the model with circles around the identifying features could be alot easier to digest than reading a description.Are you open to Railwire input on portions you haven't started yet?~Ian
Absolutely! Want me to share the document with you so you can edit?That's the beauty of Google Docs.
Or we can post segments here for you to add.. (It's a pretty big project to open up for public modification).
As for the other stuff, ain't that crazy about the switchers? Especially how "Switcher, Welded", who's "SW" seems like the best abbreviation for them became the winner.
IIRC, the original meaning of S and N in SC, NW, etc. was "six" (hundred horsepower) and "nine" (hundred horsepower). F was "fourteen" (1350 rounded up, rating of the FT and F2) and E was "eighteen" (rating of the EA, E1-E6). Once they switchers went beyond those HP ratings, the "N" now longer made sense, EMD was no longer using cast frames, and the whole class of locos were known generically as "switchers", so SW was adopted for all locos that were classed as switchers, and TR "transfer" continued in use for cow-calf versions. The only single unit transfer loco EMD built (1800 hp B-B-B-B for the IC in 1936) was simply "Model T"- which no doubt made someone at Ford unhappy.