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Curious if anyone knows from personal or written accounts how those things rode.I know conductors and brakemen were pretty vocal when it came to their comfort.
In April of 2010 I had the opportunity of a lifetime to ride the photo freight at Strasburg, in the bobber caboose, and jumped at it. I rode in the cupola.
Ah, yes! And thanks for the photos you sent. @randgust From that vantage point do you have any photos or any recollection of the windows in the main cabin? I ask because in working on the window size and placement I was running against some illogical dimensions... UNLESS, the windows are mounted flush to the inside wall, sliding in tracks mounted to the interior wall face or at least nearly so. I was coming to this conclusion, finding it peculiar at least as any normal household window might be mounted, as I was trying to get the obvious deeply set outside dimension to work with one of the few dimensions I had that I was reasonably comfortable with, that being 3"+ wall thickness. Just as I was concluding that the windows must project into the cabin I received some of the pics you sent and low and behold, up in the cupola, the windows are mounted as I was thinking they must be, albeit thinner walls and sliding rather than lifting. For a matter of knowing these things and little to no extra effort, they can be made correct rather than my own idea of what they should have been. The meeting that decided that was WAY before my time and I wouldn't have been invited anyway.
Mark I think you are right. The windows may well be mounted on the inside wall in the same way that the window on the rear door is mounted, on a sliding rack.Worth noting that, as per the pics you posted, the window frames are not 'centered' in the openings when closed. On another note, perhaps easier to have brass etchings of the window frames made so you could apply glass almost flush with the frames?
Here, check this out. There are interior shots of the wooden PRR N6B at Whippany, which can be assumed to be of similar if not identical construction methods. The windows show clearly.http://www.whippanyrailwaymuseum.net/exhibits/equipment/cabooses/penn-n6b-cabin-car
Easier to laser print the frames on clear acetate than to try to build things up.
I think that the regular frame dimension visible from the outside, on the sides and top with the extra exposed frame at the bottom, is the result of a window with uniform framing width and the reason we see the wide bottom is because the window slides up and that face is fully exposed from the outside, just sets/ stops on the sill where the other three sides are partially hidden and serve as the interior sliding faces, retained by a channel of some sort from the interior. That interior guide will be very visible from the interior so I want to get some detail of it to get its appearance acceptably correct. With a detailed interior, glass windows, and the interior lit, these will be visible to anyone crazy enough to get up close and look in. Detailing of the interior will be optional but again, it won't really be any harder to make them correct even if only I know they are there. Making them functional? That would be another whole challenge which I have not accepted... yet. @randgust thanks for that link to the N6b. It has some useful views but the cabin windows aren't mounted as I am determining they must be on the ND series. The doors are and also the cupola, I think, but the cabin windows slide within the wall, further confirmed by the exterior view that shows them with way less inset than the ND. At least I think that's all true with just a quick view. I'll be studying them further. I had no idea what that framing business on the outside of the door was, thinking it might be some sort of beefed up metal security frame added at some later time but this cleared that up for me. It IS the window sliding frame, mounted on the outside, with the window sliding downward to open. I wasn't even thinking of those being able to open. Kinda' weird looking but totally functional. As much as I hate it, I will have to include it. It also showed up on the Ma&Pa caboose that had different exterior window framing. At least this far, I will use it as indicative to what the interior cabin window slides might have looked like. I also think the interior guides may have limited the window to 1/2 open, up one set of glass panes.
Pics on the website appear to indicate that the side windows didn't open at all? The back of the window frame was flush with the inside wall and was held in place by what look like 3x1s.Unless there is an internal frame that is not immediately apparent. This is a different/rebuilt class, so might not be the same. YMMV...
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