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Sunday out on a test flight with my son after installing new oil hoses,
etc... We are out over Lake Huron and looking inland at the color changes in the trees and about 15 miles away we see what looks like a major fire with black and white smoke (old tires?)... So we change course to go see... We find that it is a steam train (apparently the one used to design the Polar Express movie)... Certainly looked dramatic with the black and white smoke/steam billowing - and of course this being a post maintenance flight I didn't bring a camera from the car... Anyway, I'm sure the 'romance of steam' types were happy... I doubt that the farms and towns getting the dose of coal smoke were quite as happy with it... I remember being a child at the end of the steam age and they smelled just like our coal furnace when the draft wasn't set right... Not pleasant at all, and to have 2 or 3 trains an hour go by belching black all over the wash on the line must have been hell... I remember going to town on a still and frosty morning and seeing the individual columns of black smoke rising from all the chimneys as people got out of bed and began stoking up the furnace... There's a reason for progress... denny |
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On 2005-10-17, Denny wrote:
Anyway, I'm sure the 'romance of steam' types were happy... I doubt that the farms and towns getting the dose of coal smoke were quite as happy with it... I remember being a child at the end of the steam age and they smelled just like our coal furnace when the draft wasn't set right... Not pleasant at all, and to have 2 or 3 trains an hour go by belching black all over the wash on the line must have been hell... Well, they should use good Welsh steam raising coal then! I have ten steam trains go by my house each day (the Isle of Man Steam Railway is a narrow gauge (3ft) line that goes from Port Erin to Douglas). We don't get black smoke. The smell is actually rather nice, you smell the hot lubricating oil rather than the combustion products. They are only little 0-6-0 tank engines though. (However, on the various steam railways in Britain which have main line steam trains, they've never belched black smoke that I've seen). -- Dylan Smith, Port St Mary, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net |
#3
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Well, you were just out of place in your gasoline-engined airplane!
http://www.airbornegrafix.com/Histor...ngs/Besler.htm |
#4
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Coal is difficult to find anymore, here in Michigan... It may be they
cannot find the good stuff.. Interestingly this is in the country/continent that has the largest coal deposits in the world... |
#5
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A few years back I happened to visit the California Railroad Museum -
and was surprised to find myself in the middle of a steam festival. They brought out and fired up a number of antique engines, and had several visiting as well. They even had a steam calliope. Great fun! On the other hand, riding a steam train thru a tunnel is no fun at all (done that, too). And I grew up in a neighborhood where everybody burned coal. Guess who often got the job of fetching a bucketful from the bin? The soot made a mess of the snow in the winter, too. It's not surprising that almost no one uses it anymore. David Johnson |
#6
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In article . com,
"Denny" wrote: Coal is difficult to find anymore, here in Michigan... It may be they cannot find the good stuff.. Interestingly this is in the country/continent that has the largest coal deposits in the world... As I recall from 50-60 years ago, the steam trains burned high-sulfur, "soft" coal, which put out quite a smell. |
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Orval Fairbairn wrote:
As I recall from 50-60 years ago, the steam trains burned high-sulfur, "soft" coal, which put out quite a smell. It depends on what part of the country you lived in, and what was available. The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad used to brag about how they were the "Road of Anthracite." It was still high sulfur, so it had the characteristic smell. They used a fictional character for advertising called Phoebe Snow, who was dressed completely in white, to demonstrate the cleanliness of hard coal. It still wasn't clean. The advertising campaigns were the first to combine a fictional trade character with a jingle, like th following: ============== Says Phoebe Snow about to go Upon a trip to Buffalo My gown stays white from morn 'til night Upon the road of anthracite. ============== |
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#9
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#10
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Denny wrote:
Not pleasant at all, and to have 2 or 3 trains an hour go by belching black all over the wash on the line must have been hell... My mother grew up not far from the tracks in Waynesville, NC. She told me that when the whistle blew for crossings a few miles away, everyone rushed to get the laundry off the lines. Sometimes you didn't make it. George Patterson Drink is the curse of the land. It makes you quarrel with your neighbor. It makes you shoot at your landlord. And it makes you miss him. |
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