Author Topic: Naming Trains  (Read 911 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

taholmes160

  • Crew
  • *
  • Posts: 61
  • Respect: +2
Naming Trains
« on: September 09, 2018, 03:34:54 PM »
0
Hi Folks:
I have several trains that run multiple times a day -- for example I have the manifest freights -- M-ALAWAL that run AM and PM,  likewise, several mine turns  C-ALAOXB -- runs 3 times a day. 

 What is the modern practice for naming / numbering them?  C-ALAOXB-A, C-ALAOXB-B, C-ALAOXB-C? or something
 else?

Thanks

TIM

Jbub

  • Crew
  • *
  • Posts: 1849
  • Gender: Male
  • HP 9999
  • Respect: +584
Re: Naming Trains
« Reply #1 on: September 09, 2018, 10:40:34 PM »
0
I'm still trying to figure out how you get M-ALAWAL and C-ALAOXB. I'm guessing the M is manifest, the C is Coal and the 6 letter is the origin and destination?
"Noooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!"

Darth Vader

C855B

  • Crew
  • *
  • Posts: 10868
  • Respect: +2416
Re: Naming Trains
« Reply #2 on: September 10, 2018, 12:08:36 AM »
0
Modern practice? Anything you want. Pretty much. Every RR seems to have their own scheme.

NS: http://railroadfan.com/wiki/index.php/NS_Train_Symbols
UP: http://uphs.org/articles/trainsymbols.pdf
BNSF: http://www.qstation.org/bnsf/bnsfsymbols.html
CSX: http://railroadfan.com/wiki/index.php/CSX_Train_Symbols
CN: http://railroadfan.com/wiki/index.php/CN_Train_Symbols

Back when I worked for SP, we had a system similar to UP's current scheme, two-character origin, destination and train type, with a two-digit suffix for day of month of scheduled departure. For example the BRLAT-22 would be Brooklyn (Yard, in Portland, OR) to Los Angeles TOFC departing on the 22nd. I said "scheduled departure" because if something or somebody messed things up and delayed a late-departing train past midnight, it was possible to have two of the same symbol departing on the same calendar day.

Multiple instances of the same symbol in a day frankly wasn't a consideration since practically speaking no train of a specified service would occur more than once a day. IIRC extra trains or additional sections would get unique symbols in this case, maybe a BRLAX or something like that.

Timetable-based systems (essentially, pre-1960s) elicit a whole 'nuther discussion.
...mike

http://www.gibboncozadandwestern.com

Note: Images linked in my postings are on an HTTP server, not HTTPS. Enable "mixed content" in your browser to view.

There are over 1000 images on this server. Not changing anytime soon.