The content of these notes were moved to notes that I wrote while Google's search function for authors was broken.
These are notes that I am writing to help me learn our industrial history. They are my best understanding, but that does not mean they are a correct understanding.
Saturday, March 31, 2018
Friday, March 30, 2018
CB&Q Union Avenue Tower and Wash Rack
(Satellite)
Marty Bernard posted seven images with the comment:
Steven J. Brown posted Burlington Northern E9m 9919 (built 1956 as CB&Q 9989A, became BN 3 - preserved at IRM) is inbound by Union Avenue Tower in Chicago, Illinois - June 4, 1991. Steven J. Brown shared Steven J. Brown shared Kevan Davis: My favorite tower on the BN Steven J. Brown shared Junior Farmer: We ,(IRM) had a member Harold (something) and his wife work that tower all the time . When they retired he got his full pension and she got 50% of that and she got her full pension and he got 50% of that so they were basically getting three full pensions between them. I don't think that's allowed anymore ,but i'm not sure. Ken Jamin: Junior Farmer We’re double dippers also. It ended in the 70s but we’re grandfathered in. Harold J. Krewer: Junior Farmer, that was HEROLD Wind (different spelling). He's famous on the East End for the time he was working Union Ave. on a hot day and stripped down to just his briefs and his work boots. When the lady clerk that held the porter's (janitor) job walked in on him, she ran out screaming and turned him in (in that order). At the investigation, he got off because the safety rules for Operators and Towermen only stated he needed to wear "proper footwear," not a word about pants or a shirt! 🤔🤨🙄 Steven J. Brown shared Edward Kwiatkowski shared |
Steven J. Brown posted Burlington Northern E9m 9904 at Union Avenue Tower in Chicago - March 29, 1988. |
Mark Hinsdale posted Before "MH" Tower... Nearly forty years ago, Burlington Northern's Union Avenue Tower in Chicago, controlled the busy interlocking plant blending traffic from the "Racetrack," the St. Charles Air Line, and the wyes to/from the ex Pennsylvania Railroad main line leading toward either Union Station or 21st Street. Today, this area is controlled from the BNSF Dispatching Center in Fort Worth TX, and the tower is long gone. July, 1977 photo by Mark Hinsdale. Timothy Leppert With this E and train size westbound, the engine is wide open here just off the canal street 25 mph and will stay wide open to 70. We named the Dispatcher now controlling this "Union Avenue Dispatcher". David Viglielmo Timothy Leppert This is the tower my grandfather always hid us from in the engine while heading to the car wash. Joel J. Sieracki What are the small lights above the windshields? Timothy Leppert These were a test. I'll dig out the paperwork. There were a lot of tests during the time the E's were in service. We tried many HEP designs after removing the steam generator. The loco's started with 24rl Straight Air and ended up with New York AB PS68 - probably the best Air for commuter service. Their On Time performance at retirement is hard to duplicate with today's operation. Keith Wagner They were red EOT lights for when pushing Tom Skowronski No, they were white strobes for visibility purposes. They did not last long. I did see them in use. The only "protection" in push mode was red class lights and later the red marker they put under the headlight. Mark Hinsdale shared Marty Bernard shared Bill Edrington Great shot. What were the odds of getting not only the BN dinky but also a Campbell’s 66 Express “Humpin’ to Please” trailer, with “Snortin’ Norton” the camel on the side, heading south on the Dan Ryan? Ron Hull In the late 60’s/early 70’s Penn-Central had trains symboled NYQ/QNY that ran between Selkirk NY and Cicero IL. Back then, work rules mandated that a road crew could only bring a train to it’s “home rails” destination yard, so with NYQ the Elkhart road crew would bring the train as far as the main line at Englewood yard, then they’d get off of the head end and an Englewood yard crew would then take the train down the main to the wye at 16th St., then over the St. Charles Air Line to access the Burlington (to us it was “The Q”). As NYQ typically got into Englewood sometime after 9:00pm an effort was made to get it past the pictured tower, Union Avenue by 11:59pm in order to “save the per diem’, the charges the PC paid to the Burlington for having their cars on PC rails. I often wondered if management appreciated our efforts or was even aware that we tried to save our pathetic employer a few bucks. |
Marty Bernard posted seven images with the comment:
CB&Q Union Ave. Tower, Chicago, Inside and Out the Windows Part 1I worked to summers while in college for the CB&Q. I received the same union wages as the vacationing Agent or the Operator/Leverman I was replacing. It paid for much of my tuition and books.In every station and tower I worked I ran the agency or the tower. Not so at Union Avenue Tower, at the west end of the wye south of Chicago Union Station. There I was a student. I was never left alone, but I sure pulled a lot of pistol grips. Note, all the photos were taken on August 1, 1963.The tower had 144 pistol grips to move the turnouts and set the signals. The tower was closed in 1992 and demolished soon after that.
Marty Bernard shared
Rob Conway: "What's the problem up there Union?"
Stan Stanovich: Rob Conway ...remember the Trains magazine article well, Rob!!!
Rob Conway: That article really hit home for me as I was working at the Zephyr Pit on a daily basis. The part of that article that talked about Warren Williamson's booming voice was right on. Warren had the voice that microphones resonated to. Whether it was the radio, block phone or regular phone, you never had any trouble hearing anything Warren had to say.
Ron Hull: We always tried to get NYQ past Union Ave by midnight to save another per diem charge on the BN cars in the consist.
Marty Bernard shared
Marty Bernard posted two images with the comment: "CB&Q Union Avenue Tower, Chicago, 1963."
I believe you can still see a couple of corners of the foundation. Especially the southeast corner. I highlighted the remnants with red rectangles.
Update: Lou Gerard posted a 1990 photo of the tower and an Amtrak train on the south leg of the wye to reverse its direction into Union station.
A comment from that posting:
Harold J. Krewer Pretty sure the tower was closed about the time when they moved the Galesburg dispatching office to Fort Worth, which was early 1994.
Steven Holding posted two photos with the comment: "Union Ave Tower on CB&Q/BN 1973 posted there."
Holly Day Boothe posted two images with the comment: "I was researching a photo and by googling the building in the background I came across a similar photo. I wanted to post mine as it’s from a different angle but also wanted to thank the person who identified the location many years ago! Photo on the left is the one I was researching. On the right, a screenshot of the post from several years ago."
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Marty Bernard posted two images with the comment: "CB&Q Union Avenue Tower, Chicago, 1963."
Marty Bernard shared
2 Ignore point "C". It's the home of a railfan. |
The "D" part of the above diagram.
Steven J. Brown posted Chicago & North Western SD40-2 6856 (built 1974, given UP 2988 but never renumbered, sold to LTEX in 2003, scrapped circa 2006) on the point of a Powder River coal train to Michigan City climbing the St Charles Airline while a lone Amtrak F40PH is on a wye move at 16th and Canal in Chicago, Illinois - February 10, 1991. Steven J. Brown shared Steven J. Brown shared [There are some comments about the St. Charles Air Line bridge currently being out of service.] Randy Ferguson: Was always told this bridge was privately owned and the railroads paid a steep price to use it. Steven J. Brown: Randy Ferguson True. Dennis DeBruler: Randy Ferguson Everything I've read said the original owners were C&NW, CB&Q, IC and MC. Then MC sold their share to IC. Thus today CN owns half, and UP & BNSF each own a quarter. |
Satellite |
Update: Lou Gerard posted a 1990 photo of the tower and an Amtrak train on the south leg of the wye to reverse its direction into Union station.
A comment from that posting:
Harold J. Krewer Pretty sure the tower was closed about the time when they moved the Galesburg dispatching office to Fort Worth, which was early 1994.
Steven Holding posted two photos with the comment: "Union Ave Tower on CB&Q/BN 1973 posted there."
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Gary Hosek posted Westbound passenger train - Halsted Street Station - Chicago - May 1948 - Russell Lee photograph. Marty Bernard You can see the Union Avenue home signals at the end of the platforms and rectangular Union Avenue Tower just to the right of the signals. The Dan Ryan would be elevated just beyond Union Ave, Tower if it were there. The St. Charles Air Line can be seen taking off across all the tracks from Union Ave. Tower. |
Gary Hosek posted Harold J. Krewer A Phase I E5, possibly even the 9911A. Later units (9912A-B to 9915A-B) had a different style of anticlimber and coupler doors. Timothy Leppert Near Halsted Street, Union Ave Tower. Dennis DeBruler It appears the building on the left has been converted to an office building with a story added on top.https://www.google.com/.../data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4... And, as usual, the fire protection water tower has been removed. Dennis DeBruler The car wash facility is now between the coach yard and Union Station: https://www.google.com/.../data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4... Bob Lalich The branch to the lumber district is seen diverging to the right. |
Dennis DeBruler commented on Bob Lalich's comment on Gary's post So the photographer was facing East. I put a red rectangle around Union Avenue Tower. |
Holly Day Boothe posted two images with the comment: "I was researching a photo and by googling the building in the background I came across a similar photo. I wanted to post mine as it’s from a different angle but also wanted to thank the person who identified the location many years ago! Photo on the left is the one I was researching. On the right, a screenshot of the post from several years ago."
Dennis DeBruler: This is the URL of the webpage that has the post by Gary so that you can access hotlinks that work and/or see other photos of the wash rack:
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Terrence Donahue posted four photos with the comment:
I took this photo in October 1985 of EMD E9 Unit #9904 (ex CB&Q 9977) getting a wash down at the rack near 16th and Morgan. Fifty years earlier, Zephyrs would go through the same apparatus to wash down after a long journey. This locomotive would be one of the few surviving E-Units, becoming Illinois Central #100.
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John W. Barriger III Flickr Bob Lalich: Looks to have been taken from Union Ave Tower. |
Marc Mainekoff posted six photos with the comment: (also posted)
Back in the early 90's I got a phone call from a friend that worked for the BN about a business train on the racetrack on it's way into the city. Well after a quick trip down Lakeshore Drive to downtown and over to Union Ave. I got lucky as the train was waiting for a signal. BN 9920 leads the train into Union Station.[You can see the shadow of the tower in his first three photos.]
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Marty Bernard commented on Marc's post I played with one of your photos, I hope you don't mind. It still could use a little more work. |
Dennis DeBruler commented on Marc's post Union Tower was just West of Union Avenue. https://clearinghouse.isgs.illinois.edu/.../0bwq08048.jpg |
Dennis DeBruler commented on Marc's post I saved a satellite image because who knows how long the overpass of the branch that used to go down next to Sangamon Street will remain. https://www.google.com/.../@41.8595816,-87.../data=!3m1!1e3 |
Marty Bernard posted views of B&O trains from this tower with the comment:
The Route Out of Grand Central Station, Chicago
Trains leaving Chicago's Grand Central Station ran south for a short distance then turned west just short of the St. Charles Air Line and crossed the South Branch of the Chicago River on a double-track lift bridge which has been in the up position, I assume, since soon after Grand Central Station closed in 1969. Then the tracks continued west crossing over the south end of the PRR Coach Yard (now Amtrak), the south leads from Union Station, and the south end of the CB&Q Coach Yard (now Metra/BNSF). The tracks dropped to ground level and continued west under the Dan Ryan Expressway, and past CB&Q's Union Avenue Tower.
The pictures below were taken from the Union Avenue Tower when I was a student leverman there and should be considered grab shots.
The tower was on the south side of the east/west CB&Q tracks at the beginning of the race track to the west. There also was a freight transfer track that went all the way to Clyde Yard. The track just north of the tower went east to the south leg of the wye and to the tracks coming south out of Union Station. The next two tracks to the north went east to the double-north leg of the wye and eventually to Union Station. The next tracks went east to the BNSF/Metra Coach Yard. The next tracks went east up the St. Charles Airline ramp. All these tracks and the track to the train washer were controlled by Union Avenue Tower. Then the were a few local tracks switched by the CNW connected to tracks to the west. Lastly the farthest north tracks were those from Grand Central Station. The trains in the photos are on these tracks. Union Avenue Tower is long gone.
Captions with photos.
Marty Bernard shared
1 1. A B&O train from Grand Central heading west. The first car is under the Dan Ryan Expressway. |
3 3. A C&O Geep with a local freight move. Those are Empire Builder cars on the CB&Q tracks close to the tower. |
Marty Bernard posted SOO Line SW12100 and Caboose on B&OCT SOO 2126 was taken from CB&Q's Union Avenue Tower, Chicago on August 1, 1963. The view is looking north and a little east. The bridges are the Dan Ryan Expressway. Union Avenue Tower was at the end of west legs of the wye south of Union Station. The closer tracks belonged to the CB&Q and lead to the St. Charles Airline and Union Station. The tracks with weeds belonged to the CNW and the tracks further north belonged to the B&OCT and went to Grand Central Station. The CNW tracks dead ended there not going further east. The B&OCT and the CNW tracks no longer exist. Marty Bernard shared Marty Bernard posted From the tower you could see the tracks that just to the east went up and over the south end of the CB&Q Coach Yard, over the north/south tracks into Union Station, over what is now the Amtrak engine facility, over the South Branch of the Chicago River, and then curved to the north into the long-gone Grand Central Station. I photographed some of the trains using those tracks. 6. SOO 2126 caboose light Ronald Kaminen: This looks like the IC Transfer. We would go down into the IC depot and deliver hot paper cars for RRDonnelly printing company. Then walk up on State Street to a steak house and have dinner. Come back to the engine and caboose, and run light all the way back to Schiller. This was a job that had "alot" of whiskers on it..I would catch it off the extra board.I think the steak house was on Wabash Street.!! The engine and caboose would be parked on a short track in the depot until we got back.!! What service. !! |
Jan Zweerts commented on a post Photo taken from Union Tower looking west circa 1981. |
Marty Bernard posted Looking Out Union Avenue Tower's East Windows Union Avenue Tower was at the west end of the wye south of Chicago Union Station. It was a CB&Q tower. This photo from August 1, 1963 is looking through the east windows of the Tower. We see the Dan Ryan Expressway above the tracks and Union Avenue below, going under the tracks. The rolling stock left to right is Train 123's Motor under the Dan Ryan, Train 133 heading west, Train 23's Motors (the Afternoon Zephyr) and GM&O Train 2 (the Abe Lincoln). "Motor" is what a diesel was called by the tower man and the dispatcher. Trains 123 and 133 were Dinkys. The Abe Lincoln is being turned on the Wye. Above Train 133 you can see the St. Charles Air Line taking off. My guess "motor" was to distinguish diesels from steam. Union Avenue Tower is long gone. It was the start of the Q's Racetrack. Marty Bernard shared Marty Bernard shared another post which has a different set of comments. |
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
ALE SK350 can lift at least 4000 tons, SGC-250 does 5000 tonnes
It can lift 4000t with a winch and 5000t with strand jacks. A comment pointed out that the mobile crane helping to place the counterweights would normally be considered a big crane. Each counterweight is a specially reinforced 40' container that is filled with locally available material such as sand or gravel. A filled container is 100t and 4000t of ballast material is needed. [brochure, p 21] The crane was designed as pieces that will fit in shipping containers. It can be assembled in four weeks using a 400t crawler crane. [brochure, p 17] The counterweight assembly is supported on tracks so that the ring can be replaced with a straight track and the whole crane moved on site in just a few days. [brochure, p 25]
The ALE SK350 crane was launched in 2013 with a lifting capacity of 5,000t and a load moment of 354,000tm. The AL.SK cranes are also available in AL.SK190 and AL.SK700 configurations, achieving capacities up to 4,300t and 8,000t respectively. Furthermore, the cranes can be equipped with a 3,400t capacity heavy duty jib. The jib is being used on an FPSO module integration project in Nigeria. [ale-heavylift]
More photos and videos of ALE and other big-lift cranes
Arthur Overdijk shared AL.SH[SK] 350 (Collin Jones ) [A test lift] |
ALE posted, cropped ALE has used its innovative heavy duty jib for the first time with the AL.SK350 crane whilst performing the inaugural lift, weighing 1,276t, of an FPSO module integration project in Nigeria https://goo.gl/BZ3eKk. |
Inaugural Lift "The world’s largest capacity land based crane, the AL.SK350, has been rigged in its current biggest configuration with a 124m a-frame main boom, 49m ballast radius and the 38m jib for additional outreach, along with a heavy winch system and 4,000t ballast for the project in Lagos." |
Inaugural Lift Another of the six modules they are lifting into place during March and April, 2018. |
The ALE SK350 crane was launched in 2013 with a lifting capacity of 5,000t and a load moment of 354,000tm. The AL.SK cranes are also available in AL.SK190 and AL.SK700 configurations, achieving capacities up to 4,300t and 8,000t respectively. Furthermore, the cranes can be equipped with a 3,400t capacity heavy duty jib. The jib is being used on an FPSO module integration project in Nigeria. [ale-heavylift]
More photos and videos of ALE and other big-lift cranes
CraneNetworkNewsSARENS LAUNCHES THE LARGEST CRANE IN THE WORLD: THE SGC-250 |
Crane CN posted A beauty the most powerful of all Barry Cole: What are two white? Lines from ground to midpoint? Tie downs, for wind, storage? Christian Sturm: Barry Cole it's called Wind Ankers keeps the SK350 stable during high wind force. Matthew Chavez: Christian Sturm are these added end of day, long off periods, or work with daily functions? Christian Sturm: Matthew Chavez no only if they get high winds ! Otherwise you have to boom down all the time with the Wind Ankers you can have the SK350 boom up to 120km/h. Gaetan Rahrojan: Formerly ALE crane |
It looks like they just flipped the above photo.
Crane AZ posted A beauty the most powerful of all Blake LeDrew: Argentia Newfoundland Brian Verhoeven: why would the boom be tethered to the ground at the gib connection? Blake LeDrew: Brian Verhoeven for high winds over 120km/h. |
CBC The AL.SK350 is one of the largest land-based cranes in the world. (Twitter) |
It can lift up to 5,000 tonnes. Its boom is 124 metres long — longer than two NHL-sized ice rinks placed end to end.It arrived in Newfoundland in 200 shipping containers, requiring 300-tonne cranes just to piece it together.
Impressive, but none of that is why it's so vital to Husky's operations, as workers piece together a platform that will eventually be floated out to sea and capture offshore oil.
"The real purpose of this crane is just its reach," said Sandy Nairn, vice-president of the West White Rose Project.
ALE designed and built the crane, part of a line of cranes it launched in 2013, and the company website describes the AL.SK350 as "the largest capacity land-based crane in the world by some distance."
That 163-metre reach means it can lift almost anything on the Argentia site, even though the crane itself is stationary.
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The crane will be in Argentia until early 2020, when it will be then broken down again into its small parts and shipped off to its next international destination.
[CBC]
Tweet The massive ALE SK350 crane, one of the largest land-based cranes in the world, will safely and efficiently install fully assembled interior components at the West White Rose Project in Argentia. Learn more at: http://wwrp.huskyenergy.com/Project_overview … |
And some post descriptions are wrong. Thank goodness for comments.
Crane Operators Forum - Heavy Lift profession. posted One of the world's largest cranes set a new world lifting record, lifting 36,000 metric tonnes! Ruud van Sprundel: In 30 lifts combined yes Bjørnar Berg: There is no crane lifting 36000 mT in one lift. The biggest shorebased crane is Taizun, lifting 20000 mt, and the biggest offshore crane is the 12000 mT crane on the chinese vessel Zhen Hua 30. Edso Sluijsmans: there are a lot of cranes with more capacity. Mammoet/ALE PTC240 240.000 tm Paul Anderson: That is EBR shipyard in San Jose de North, Rio Grande Brazil, lifting topside modules onto an FPSO, possibly Modec vessel that was in the yard for integration around 2021 or 2022. I was in the yard in 2016 working on FPSO P74, using similar ring crane, Module weight ranged between 2000 to 4200 tonnes, crane counterbalanced with sand filled containers which are the containers actually used to transport the crane to site. [Another comment explained that after they build one side, they flip the ship around and build the other side.] |
Omitting adjectives such as "combined" is a serious error.
Ruud van Sprundel commented on the 36k mt post |
Adavid added two comments to the 36k mt post with the text: "This sk 350 is good for 5k tonn."
[I've seen another source that also rates the SK350 at 5,000 tons.]
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Jason Woods commented on the 36k mt post above 2012 lifting triple Coker derricks. |
Johnny Stagg commented on the 36k mt post above Currently [Jan 16, 2024] in argentia NL |
May 2024:
Big Engine posted Amazing! AL.SK350 built by ALE and said to be the world’s largest capacity land based crane, has been rigged for the first time and load tested 5000 tons 💪 Neal Hodges: I estimate at LEAST a million bucks to retrofit and get it up to lift capabilities. As a retired operator I'd have liked that money go to wages and not a vanity project! |
Mammoet posted With the #SK6000 currently under construction, we're looking back at some of the biggest projects executed by our SK cranes around the world. Pictured here is the #SK350 configured with 125m main boom and 95m jib to support assembly of an offshore expansion project in Newfoundland, Canada. The SK350 minimized disruption to the site as it lifted from one location, away from other ongoing activities. |