East Erie Commercial Railroad (Wabtec test track): (
Satellite)
US-20: (
Satellite)
The arch bridge carries the Wabtec/GE test track. On the other side of that bridge, we get a glimpse of the arch bridge of the CSX/NYC.
Linda walked the Sixmile Creek from here to the South. So this is the creek view of the above scene.
After she pointed out the little waterfall and some snakes, a test train appeared on the Wabtec test track. I was surprised that Wabtec still uses the GE logo. Also, we can see clear through the NYC arch bridge.
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| Same Reel |
The test train consisted of two blue and one BNSF locomotives.
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| Same Reel |
After seeing a snake swimming in the creek, we get a closeup of the NYC Bridge.
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| Same Reel |
Another view of the NYC arch because a NS/NKP train is on their bridge. It is gone in later views. The concrete girder bridge in the background is the US-20 Bridge.
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| Same Reel |
She turned around for this shot of the NYC Bridge. The road bridge behind the test track bridge is PA-955, which is on Iroquois Ave. As Linda explains, the NYC Bridge is a double arch and we can see the gap between the arches in these NYC views.

The NYC Bridge needs some TLC. I think the date is 1909.
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| Same Reel |
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| Same Reel |
Linda called the NKP bridge the CSX bridge. I verified that she was wrong. When they split up Conrail, CSX got NYC. NS got NKP because of the N&W+NKP+Wabash merger.
Linda also considers the US-20 bridge to be blah because she spent about 2 seconds on that bridge in her video.
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| Same Reel |
These fossils are underneath the US-20 bridge.
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| Same Reel |
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| 1960/62 Harborcreek Quad @ 24,000 |
The East Erie Commercial label in the above map is still the name of the railroad that Wabtec uses to test locomotives. Linda had a few more scenes of the test train going over their bridge in her video.
"It takes about 25 days start to finish to build a brand new locomotive....We track test 100% of every locomotive we ship....They travel about 40 to 50 miles on the test track. We want high-speed runs and we want to do low speed run. Exercise that locomotive and all the conditions it may see out in its environment....Grand total, it varies on the model, but testing and painting takes anywhere from about 6 to 10 days." [
2:14 video]
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