Thursday, December 26, 2019

Christmas 2019 - What a Year!

Well, another Christmas has passed.  I've been pretty busy with projects and stuff that doesn't really lend itself to blog posting.

Minor photoshopped picture from January 2018 LMRC 'Winter on Tehachapi' TT/TO session.

I've been working on several projects which I'll probably be posting about in the upcoming year.

Tender Swapping (Part 2) - Spare Tenders?


A pair of Sunset 70-C-9 & -10 tenders... Extras you say, do tell!

In this upcoming blog, we'll be looking at what we can do with our 'extra' tenders... and what did SP do with their 'extra' tenders?

Weathering - How To & Examples


During 2019, I was able to visit with TSG Multimedia again and we shot a weathering clinic 'How-To' on using Apple Barrel acrylic paints and inexpensive brushes to do basic weathering.  These techniques can of course be expanded with other methods as well.



In upcoming blogs I'll be looking at what I'm doing with some other fun and unique cars!

ATSF War Emergency Boxcar

A likely candidate for some fun weathering... IMRC's WWII Emergency boxcar.  Just look at that funky door!

Hercules Powder Tank Cars

Tangent's 10k gal GATX Tankcar.  This should be a fun one for some airbrush weathering for the 'truck grime' splashing up on the tank from the wheels.

Stauffer - Acid Tank Car

Weathering a Stauffer chemical tank car.

Kitbashing SP 47870

Starting with Tangent's Type 17 GATX 10k Gallon Tank Car.

CN Fowler Boxcars (Accurail & Westerfield)

I'm hoping to get the last bits together to build up three Fowler boxcars.

Car completed in 2024 as NC&StL 15337

Passenger Car Modeling


I'll be continuing with passenger car modeling and specific passenger train consist modeling in 2020.

Express Boxcars - The Forgotten Head-End Car

I'll be spending a bit of time covering various foreign line express boxcars that would show up on Tehachapi regularly.

Is it an automobile boxcar?  No, it's an Express Boxcar!

Santa Fe's TTG 'Valley' Series 6-6-4 Pullmans

Santa Fe's take on the Pullman 'Western' Two-Tone-Gray paint scheme as applied to cars in their secondary trains.

Kitbashing an SP 70-BP-15-4/5/6

I'll be doing a couple of options to kitbash an 70-BP-15-4/5/6 which shows up a number of Pacific Lines passenger train photos.

Kitbashing an SP 73-C-1 Chair Car

This will be a kitbash to model a reasonably priced stand-in for several versions of SP's 73-C-1 class coach/chair car.

SP 10124 - Daylight HW Diner


The starting point will be a Bachmann HW "Spectrum" Diner, which will require a bit of work.

This will model the three AC&F ex-EPSW diners which became SP 10123-10125, the 10124 which was actually painted in Daylight colors.


Finishing Up Existing Projects?



During the upcoming year I hope to get more progress on multiple projects which I've been blogging on and off for several years.

SP 10251, backdating the kitchen to have windows per 1949 version, not doors as the 1953 version.

As part of the Articulated 1949 Diner set, I'll also be finishing the modular Lounge-section seating for the Diner SP 10250.

My San Joaquin's other major cars will be finishing the SP 5069 RPO and SP 3301 Combine.

The SC&F kitbashed SP 5069 body needs to be finished up with some minor parts.

My MTH SP 3301 kitbash is almost done, it just needs a bit more paint and finishing work.

Steam Modeling?


SP 1774 at Bakersfield with 90-R-1 tender - Eddie Sims collection.

Yes, there's a number of steam engine models I hope to work on as well in 2020.

SP 1774

Heavily modifying a Sunset Models M-6 to become SP 1774.  This project should move forward again in 2020.

SP 3203

SP 3203 starting from a Sunset Models Mk-4.

Another fun project coming up is SP 3203, and Mk-4 starting with a Sunset Models engine.  The SP 3203 will be modeled as she appeared when working the Owenyo Local on the "Jawbone" Branch around 1949-1954.

SP 2335

The WSM T-28, 2339 model will become SP 2335 as seen in excursion service on the Owenyo Branch.

I'm looking forward to expanding my modeling skills into installing a new BooRim gearbox into my WSM T-28 and replicating the SP 2335 as she appeared in excursion service with the SP 2350 on the "Jawbone" Branch.

Too Many Projects?!


I just sat down to write a quick end of year update with what I hope to do in the next year.  I realize that I have about four years of blogging projects backed up and 2019 was a crazy year for me.  So well, maybe I have 'too many' projects started or 'active', but at least this way there's always something interesting to work on when I have time!  The modeling hobby should be 'fun' after all, so I don't really think there are too many projects.  Every project can stall for a while while more research is done, parts and materials are acquired and inspiration lurks, waiting to pounce again!

Some of the projects on my workbench in 2019.

There's a number of other projects I'd like to start this year as well, but we'll see what happens!  In the last six weeks several new projects have pounced and I'll be working on researching some fun new areas to make some cool models eventually.

Closing Thoughts...


Let's see what the new year has in store for the HO Modeling Community.  Highball 2020!

My main reason for blogging about these projects is to encourage my fellow modelers to push their limits and experience new aspects of the hobby!

Jason Hill

Related Articles:

A Month Away - Modeling on the Road (Oct 2016 visit to So.Calif. and Palm Springs Air Museum)

A Year Modeling in Review (2017, end of 1st year blogging)

Two Years of Blogging - Reflections (2018, end of 2nd year blogging)

General Blog Update for 1st Quarter, 2019 (The start of 2019's challenging year)

Three Years of Blogging and Counting (Review)  (2019, end of 3rd year blogging)

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Tehachapi Operations : Part 2 - The "Mojave Shorts West"

For over a year I've been debating how I want to broach the next steps in the topic of the freight symbol system we use at LMRC and spotting guide for the various 'signature blocks' which the LMRC Car Clerks and Chief Dispatchers use to determine what the restaging work should do and what the new symbol will be returning onto the modeled portion of the layout.  I don't believe any one post will be able to cover any serious depth in these topics, so I'll start nibbling away with a post in-depth on one symbol or type of car movement at a time, hopefully that I've been able to get some decent photos of to keep the posts 'pretty'.

In the last post (Tehachapi Operations: Part 1 - Mountain Work Train) we looked at the extreme close-up action of the Mountain Work Train doing its work and only lightly touching on the supporting system of 'Shorts', through freights that do basic pickups and setouts between Mojave and Bakersfield.

Mojave Yard Engine works local cars on the Mojave Shorts West. January 14th, 1953.

So today we'll take a closer look at the "Mojave Shorts" train symbols, what they do, what they carry, and what sets them apart from the other 'overhead' traffic which moves over Tehachapi Pass without doing work between the major yards.

Overview of the "Shorts" System


The basic 'Shorts' system is the concept that one symbol will be used between LA and Bakersfield to handle all the heavy lifting of the local traffic across the Division.  This will reduce the weight and engine required on the locals that work over those areas to one engine.  The mid-point at Mojave became the focal point for most of the locals working in three directions (Mojave Sub, Tehachapi Sub, and Jawbone Branch).  The "Shorts" trains work from their originating yard (Bakersfield or LA) to Mojave, where the whole train is left behind to be worked by the Mojave Switcher.  The crew of the Shorts train picks up the new train which was classified by the Mojave yard engine over the previous 24 hours from the arriving cars on the locals and any through cars which came in on the arriving 'Shorts' train from the previous day.  The new train departs and works from Mojave to the terminal (either LA or Bakersfield) where the train will be again classified.

Ideally, the 'Shorts' trains carry no through cars.  Any cars being classified at the end terminal will be local cars from the Division heading to points beyond the Division.

So, let's get into the details by starting out Los Angeles:

LA-Mojave Shorts West (LA-MSW-14)


Starting in Los Angeles Yard the LA-MSW works to Mojave working blocks at Saugus, Palmdale, and then drops the remaining consist at Mojave to be classified.  The crew then takes the engine and switcher moves the caboose over to another track to pick up the new MC-MSW which has all the westward cars that arrived over the previous 24 hours into Mojave Yard from the Owenyo Local, KI Local, "Blitz" (Palmdale) Local, and Searles Turn (Trona Rwy interchange).

Sample Consist List for LA-MSW-14 (which covers two sides of a switch list).

Photo of LA-MSW-14 switchlist handled by SP 6245 with caboose 1142, and 50 freight cars.

The setout work west of Mojave needs to be blocked at the head-end for: Monolith, Tehachapi (KI), Caliente, and Bena.  Pickup may also be made at these stations and will be noted on the crew call and by switch lists with routings at the stations. - Currently in 2019 LMRC doesn't have enough freight cars to really fill out the Mojave Shorts trains, and have enough cars to drop the whole consist.  The result is the MSW and Mojave yard crews need to make a quick 'pass' on the train to pull out the Mojave cars and the 'setout' cars for short of Bakersfield, then a quick second pass will be made on the 'setout' cars to get them in the right order for easy setout from the headend of the MSW.

On January 14th, the incoming LA-MSW-14 at 50 cars has a number of through cars for Bakersfield, and the Chief Dispatcher decided to keep the MSW crew on duty and wait for the switcher crew to work the train over and make MC-MSW-14.  Because LA's hump yard at Taylor Yard is still a couple years in the future, the consist is a real mixed back which each yard will have to sort through to get their cars out.

Check out "Westward SP Symbol Freights" from my previous blog post.

The SP 5300 switches LA-MSW cars at Mojave  to get them blocked for setout en route.

So let's look at the consist in detail (2011 LMRC Roster photos used):


1. CDLX 1008 (Insulated Tank) is hauling fuel oil to Trona - Route to Searles Turn
2. SHPX 8795 (Tank) is an empty-to-load (x-ld) to the Agent at Bakersfield, who is then going to forward it to Taft Cotton Compress for cotton seed oil loading.
3. ETCX 225 (Insulated Chem tank) is loaded with chem's for the Antioch-Martinez petroleum district, routing is to AW-symbol.
4. UTLX 76787 (Tank) is loaded with fuel oil for the fuel dealer at Porterville, on the Porterville Local  out of Bakersfield. (sorry not the best photo)
5. UTLX 77640 (Tank) is loaded with fuel oil for the fuel dealer at Cocoran on the ATSF 55 "Super Local".
6. SP 63752 (Auto-box) is loaded with House Hold Goods (HH Goods) is heading to the Oakland area on the AW.  This is an example of a 1950's cross-country moving van before the interstate highway system and moving vans became common.
7. NP 20104 (Box) is loaded with Freight Forwarder cargo to the Acme Fast Freight at Bakersfield SP Freight House.  Acme was the freight forwarder that was associated with the SP.
8. GATX 51121 (Tank) is empty heading to Oil City, out of Bakersfield on the Oil City Switcher to be loaded.
9. FTDMS 14007 (Box) is loaded with another load of House Hold Goods (HH Goods) also heading to the housing boom around Oakland to be forwarded at Bakersfield to the AW-symbol (West of Tracy, CA).

10. NP 20107 (Box) is loaded with Frt Fwd to the Mojave Freight House.  LA's Freight House would send out consolidated freight forwarder traffic in 'captured' foreign cars en route towards their home railroad.  In this case, a NP boxcar takes a load back towards Roseville and Eugene, Oregon.

11. UTLX 78022 (Tank) is loaded with fuel oil for the bulk dealer at Taft.  Routing to Taft on the Sunset Local out of Bakersfield.
12. SP 69234 (Auto-box) is loaded with Aircraft Parts for Plant 42 in Palmdale.  Routing to Palmdale on the "Blitz" Local.

13. GATX 50984 (Tank) is loaded with fuel oil for the narrow gauge industries, which will be interchanged or moved to tank semi-truck at Owenyo on the Jawbone Branch, and will be setout at Mojave. (sorry not the best photo)

14. SP 83142 (Box) is loaded with hay for Bena, which will be blocked at Mojave and setout en route.  Alternately the car could be blocked with the Caliente S/O and the KI Local will make the run to Bena.
15. CDLX 1075 (Insulated Tank - Wine Service) is empty-to-load in assigned private car service on the Porterville Branch wineries.

16. PRR 601185 (Box) is loaded with Aircraft Parts for Air Force planes at Muroc AFB, it is routed for transfer to ATSF at Mojave for the Boron Local.

17. SAL 19499 (Box) is loaded with Freight Forwarder to Oakland area on the AW-symbol. (sorry not the best photo)

18. SOU 14675 (Box) is loaded with Freight Forwarder to Oakland area on the AW-symbol.
    (No photo of actual car)
19. CBQ 62199 (Box) is loaded with Hay for Tehachapi Hay & Grain, is routed for S/O at Mojave and blocked for KI for the KI Local to spot. 

20 LSI 2241 (Box) is loaded with Machinery for Trino on the Arvin Branch, will be interchanged to ATSF at Bakersfield.

21. SAL 11984 (Auto-box) is loaded with Furniture for the Acme Fast Freight at the SP Bakersfield Freight House. (sorry not the best photo)
22. CNW 46583 (Flat) is loaded with Tractors for the Team Track at Porterville.

23. SSW 85082 (Flat) is loaded with Farm Equipment (Plows and Seeders) for the Tehachapi Lumber & Supply Co. and will be blocked for KI at Mojave and setout en route for the KI Local to spot. (sorry not the best photo)
24. WM 28237 (Box) is more HH Goods for Pleasenton (West of Tracy) and routed AW at Bakersfield.
25. SP 69215 (Auto-box) is loaded with Rocket Bodies for final assembly and testing at Inyokern-China Lake NWS, the car will be setout at Mojave and routed on the Owenyo Local.  Some cases the Inyokern-China Lake railroad connection can be an extension of the Searles Turn, as heavy rail ends at Inyokern for larger movements of cars than the Owenyo Local can handle.
26. MP 90426 (Box) is loaded with Hay for Bealville, setout at Tehachapi (KI) en route for KI Local to spot.  KI, Woodford, Bealville, Caliente, and Bena are importing winter hay for the ranch horses and cattle.
27. SP 63678 (Auto-box) is loaded with Hay for Caliente.  This car will be blocked at Mojave for Caliente and the KI Local will make the final spotting near the Corrals for the local ranchers' trucks to unload team-style and transport to the ranches.
28. SP 19020 (Box) is another carload of Hay for Caliente, same as SP 63678 above.
29. MP 34813 (Box) is loaded with Freight Forwarder traffic for AW-symbol out of Bakersfield.
30. PRR 81209 (Auto-box) is loaded with more Aircraft Parts for Muroc AFB, setout Mojave for ATSF Boron Local to Muroc.
31. CO 15347 (Box) is loaded with Engine Components destined for the aircraft assembly at Plant 42, Palmdale, CA.  Routed to Blitz Local at Mojave.
32. CNW 85160 (Box) is loaded with Grain for the Tehachapi Hay & Grain for S/O at Mojave or KI for the KI Local to spot.
33. PHD 1509 (Box) is loaded with Freight Forwarder to the depot at Tehachapi, also S/O at Mojave or KI for the KI Local to spot. (sorry not the best photo)
34. TNO 52152 (Box) is empty-to-load for Monolith, setout at Monolith or Mojave for KI Local to spot.
35. TNO 55610 (Box) is empty-to-load for Monolith, setout at Monolith or Mojave for KI Local to spot.  These two cars are effectively 'home road cars' which are being ordered by the Monolith Agent to fill loading requirements for the 15th.
36. BO 380934 (Box) is loaded with Freight Forwarder for the Mojave Freight House. (Not actual car)
37. PRR 198082 (Hopper) is loaded with coking coal for Kern Steel at Bakersfield.
38. TP 5298 (Flat) is loaded with steel beams for the California Highway Department's earthquake repairs of the Hwy 466 Bridge at Woodford.
39. SP 151379 (GS-Gondola) is empty-to-load for the Owenyo Branch for loading with boxite at the 'Beet' Trestle at Owenyo from the narrow gauge interchange.
40. HOLX 1267 (Covered Hopper "CH") is empty-to-load for the Owenyo Local which will be loaded at Bartlett, CA.
41. SCMX 902 (Tank) is loaded with chemicals for processing of oil on the Oil City Branch.
42. TNO 52146 (Box) is empty-to-load for Agent Mojave.  This car is currently unassigned, but the Agent at Mojave has ordered it for his pool of cars to protect the various locals which work out of Mojave. (Not actual car)
43. UOCX 8022 (Tank) is loaded with petroleum products for the Union Oil of California bulk dealer at Bakersfield.
44. SHPX 10776 (Tank) loaded with fuel oil for Palmdale on the Blitz, setting out at Mojave.
45. NCStL 42185 (Gondola) is loaded with cable for the Searles Turn, and interchange to the Trona Rwy for West End Chemical. (sorry not the best photo)
46. SP 45962 (GB-Gondola) is loaded with Company Materials for SP Company Lumber Shed - Bakersfield. (Not actual car)
47. SP 152344 (GS-Gondola) is loaded with Engine Service Sand for the Bakersfield Roundhouse Sand House.
48. SP 19026 (Box) is empty for the Agent at Monolith, probably to be loaded with bag cement, and will be blocked for setout at Monolith.
49. SP 19023 (Box) is empty for the Agent at Monolith, probably to be loaded with bag cement, and will be blocked for setout at Monolith.
50. ACY 1195 (Box) is loaded with Machinery for the mineral processing plant at Trona and West End, which will be setout at Mojave for the Searles Turn.
51. SP 1142 (Caboose) - Live.  This is the working caboose, which the conductors riding in.  Sometimes we'll list the caboose, other times just listing it at the top of the switchlist next to the engine if there will be other cars added to the list and the caboose will be moving around. (Not exact car number - sorry)

Mojave Yard Work


At Mojave the train was reblocked into four pieces: Mojave Yard, Bakersfield (MC-MSW-14), and Setout blocks; Monolith, KI, and Caliente, which are put on the head-end of the MC-MSW-14.  Separate switchlists are written for each of these blocks so that at each setout station a simple drop of the cars into a setout track and dropping the switchlist for the KI Local to work later is all that is needed.

Edit: I should add the note here that the crew laws of the time allowed 15:59 hours of service per day and 8 hours of rest, allowing the crew to maximize their service pay.  The normal trip times for freights of the late 1940s and early 1950s was in the 12-14 hour range.  Probably resulting in the very fast consist swaps at Mojave and very limited en route picking up and setting out of blocks at four to six stations.
I'm sure that some days the Chief Dispatcher would make the call that no set outs would be made at Monolith or KI due to how late the Shorts West was running out of LA.  On those days the KI Local could be given a 'short helper' out of Mojave to get their heavier train up to Monolith or Summit before returning light to Mojave.  The switchlist routings would be superseded to instruct Monolith and KI cars to be kept at Mojave and not added to the front of the MSW train in the afternoon, and instead would have been put out on the KI Local in the morning.
This 'short helper' could range from a protection local engine (usually several laying over at Mojave for the three locals which worked out of there), usually a C or light Mk class engine up to an one of the AC-class.  Often one or two AC's would work out of Mojave on a rotation basis for the Searles Turn and working 'short helper' or 'through helper' to Summit or Bakersfield.

ATSF BAW-O works Mojave Yard on January 15, 1953.  Loaded Searles Turn cars are visible with their loads of white minerals at the far left.

The old LA-MSW-14 list stayed at Mojave with the yard there as a point of record.  The new MC-MSW-14 list including the extra 14 cars picked up which the Mojave Yard Engine had already classified with full transfer of the car routings for all the Bakersfield and beyond traffic.  Unfortunately I didn't get to photograph those switchlists.  Pretty much those lists will look like the LA-MSW-14 list, but with any reference to the setouts at Mojave are dropped because those have already now been done.

En Route to Bakersfield


Once the Extra 6245 West departed Mojave pickups and setouts are made at Monolith to and from the Center Siding for the KI Local to spot.  The train continues to KI where another set of drops are made into the double-ended track off the westward main track.  In the future S/Os will probably be made into the No.3 Siding once it is made double-ended.

The MSW-14 continues as a 'normal' road freight westward to Caliente where the KI Local has blocked a pickup and the setout for Caliente and Bena are made for the next round of the KI Local.

The last work between Mojave and Bakersfield complete, the MSW-14 heads west to Bakersfield to be broken up and sent to the four winds.

Notation on the Switchlist


I should mention the difference between "Empty" or "X" in the load column and "X-LD" or "Empty-to-Load".  "Empty" is a car that is not assigned, if it is a foreign car en trained then it is a car moving on reverse rights towards its home railroad.  SP "Empty" cars are either moving on SCO (Service Car Order) "Tidepool" move or just back to the nearest yard to be assigned.  The "X-LD" or "Empty-to-Load" means a car which is currently empty, cleaned, ready for loading and also assigned to the industry for loading by the Freight Agent. 

The "X" cars could also be shown as to which Agent wants the car, and they will make the assignment.  At LMRC there are East and West Agents, if the movement is being grabbed within the Agent's work area, then the clerk will just go ahead and mark the list of where he wants the car to go.  If, for example, I'm sending the car as the East Clerk, and I don't need the car moving west, I can mark the car as an "Empty" to the Bakersfield Agent, and then the Yardmaster will ask the Agent where the car will go.  Bakersfield also tries to keep a small pool of empty home-road boxcars available to protect the loading.  I'll talk about the Bakersfield Agent's responsibilities in a future post.

Obvious road name abbreviations include "P" for PRR, "Q" for CBQ, and "AT" for ATSF.  I also am very careful on the LMRC layout when using the abbreviation for Bakersfield.  I NEVER use "BK" as we have a Santa Fe symbol "BK" which is a priority Bakersfield-Kansas City-Chicago symbol.  As a result ALL of our clerks know to ALWAYS use "BAK" if they mean Bakersfield (City/Station) and "BK" for the freight symbol.

Oddities of SP & ATSF Clerk Nomenclature


The Southern Pacific always called double-door boxcars "A" on the car classifications.  The Santa Fe would use "B5D" or "B4D" to indicate 'Box 50 Double Door" or "Box 40 Double Door".  A number of our guest operations will mark car type based on the AAR type on our lists as "X" for boxcars and "LO" for covered hoppers.  The Santa Fe clerks I've talked to say they always used "CH" for covered hoppers and "H" for the hoppers, then the number indicating bays in the hopper.

Staging Yard Block Shuffling Making New Symbols


Mojave "Shorts" West in 1953 with brand new RSD-5s working west at Cliff

I was the clerk that wrote this list, so I'm adding comments about the routing and what the car was doing.  I should make it clear, the cars available in the East Staging Yard (LA) is rather limited, so the East Clerk/East End Staging Yardmaster had to have a good idea of what cars will work on a symbol such as MSW and then make the rough cuts in the arrived freights in his yard to make a reasonable starting point for the new symbol.  Therefore, the question of 'do you switch the train first or do you choose the cars, and then switch it?' is rather a chicken and egg kind of question.  The answer is that both happen at the same time.

The East Staging Yardmaster/East Clerk also obviously makes up all the westward freights from the eastward freights.  Normally, through cars for Bakersfield proper and beyond, to points short of Roseville will be sent on the TMW (Tehachapi Manifest West) symbol freights.  The TMW symbol does not have the additional 24 hour layover switching time in Mojave Yard.  So the LA-MSW-14 list shows as somewhat of a combined TMW/MSW symbol.  If we had more cars in the pool and more time to shuffle the blocks then full consists of TMW and MSW can be made and sent out one per day.  As it was on January 14th, we had already sent a TMW during the previous 12 hours, so we needed a MSW symbol.

LA-MSW-15


LA-MSW-15 with SP 4264, 15 cars, and SP 286 caboose.  Jan 15, 1953.

This is the following day's LA-MSW-15's consist, a much lighter day with only the SP 4264, AC-11 class working the train out of LA.  Pretty much a smaller version of the Jan 14th, 1953 list, however this time we have three CH's in assigned service to Monolith, which already have "X-LD" routing.

Other Traffic on the MSW Symbol


Mojave Shorts also moves other large blocks of traffic which the Jan 14th, 1953 train didn't have.

Mineral Service


MSW in 2012 is shown here with loaded hoppers full of potash and soda ash from the plants at Trona and West End, off the Searles Turn 6 nights a week.

The mineral service from the Owenyo transfer trestle (Narrow Gauge connection), Bartlett, Saltdale, Trona, West End, Cantil, etc. was handled predominantly by steel GS-Gondolas, Open Hoppers (which we have a pile of T&NO H-70-5, three-bay models in service), and new covered hoppers of NAHX (American Chemical & Potash Corp) and SP company cars (H-70-4/6/8-series).  General Service boxcars certainly were still in use for smaller orders of bagged minerals, as the use of the new covered hoppers only started in 1947-48 and was 'boarded' with "When Empty Return to Agent Trona, Calif."  The SP's Mojave Agent would control the pool of SP boxcars and covered hoppers and order cars to be pulled from the empties track by the yard engine to make up the locals.

Most of this loaded traffic moved to the Port at Long Beach on the MC-MSE or Oakland area on MC-MSW to Bakersfield and then on AW to Tracy and Oakland.  Potash was heavily used in fertilizers in the farming areas, so carloads could be seen moving to various farming areas around the US.  Generally this traffic would be forwarded east of LA easily enough from the MC-MSE routing.  Other possible routing include Roseville on the MC-MSW to Bakersfield, then forwarding on the TMW to Roseville.

Sulphuric Acid Traffic


Tangent's made some lovely Gengeral America acid tank car.

One of the interesting specialty traffic cars is the acid tank cars from the sulphuric acid needed at the West End plant in the refining and binding process of getting the various minerals from the Searles "Dry" Lake.  At least two (20k gallon) cars of this were needed at Trona in 2002, working backwards with the train sizes of the 1950's, I estimate that it would have been between two and four cars per week.

Industrial Fuel Oil Shipments


One of the 'Signature' blocks of the Shorts trains over Tehachapi is the dozen or so SP fuel-oil tank cars.

We're starting to wonder why there's a discrepancy between the eye-witness traffic flows of the Consolidated Mojave Pipeline loading facility at Mojave supplying the fuel oil needs of the massive plant at Trona, CA.

One of the largest tank cars in large numbers were the SP's O-50-8/9 class tank cars with 12,500 gallon capacity.

However, photos of the Shorts trains during the 1952-53 era show a large number of tank cars working over Tehachapi Pass, which would suggest that these carloads are not going to LA Harbor, Long Beach, but we're starting to think that there was damage to the Bakersfield-Mojave Oil Pipeline from the 7.5 Earthquake.  More research is needed, but that would explain why regular movements of dozens of tank cars would suddenly show up, but most crews at Mojave for years remember the Trona fuel cars coming from Mojave's own loading facilities.

Cement Traffic - Monolith


Santa Fe No.7 blasts through Monolith on January 14th, 1953.

The Portland Cement Plant at Monolith was built originally 1908 for the new California Aqueduct, which was also the reason for the construction of the Jawbone Branch to Owenyo and the Red Rock Canyon Railroad branch out of Cantil.

SP's H-70-series covered hoppers introduced in the late 1940's specifically for the highly perishable cement traffic.

The Monolith Cement Plant was still heavily using boxcars, but the new covered hoppers certainly were taking a larger and larger portion of the traffic by 1953 as soon as they could be built and put into service.  Most of our SP and ATSF 2-bay covered hoppers are predominately assigned to Monolith cement service.

The SP's CH pool is based at Mojave CA, any extra eastward empty CH's are sent to Agent Mojave Yard for holding until requested.  Westward empty CH's are routed to Agent Mojave Yard and then forwarded on MSW or KI Local as directed by the Chief Dispatcher.  ATSF 2-bay CH's are also based out of Mojave and are worked likewise by the N-34 eastward and BAW westward.  A small pool of boxcars would also be kept at Mojave ideally to cover any holes in the CH pool to cover the loadings at Trona, Monolith, and the Owenyo branch.

Other Monolith Traffic


Monolith of the 1950s was fueled by a natural gas pipeline.  The coal-fired fueled plant wasn't built until the 1970s, with the large rotary kilns and sorting tower.  However coal-ash is needed for the processing of Portland Cement, so foreign cars with coal-ash would have also been accepted by Monolith of the 1950s.

Closing Thoughts


The SP also ran 'Shorts' up the San Joaquin Valley in both directions, and there's of course the Mojave Shorts East.  I may get around to covering these in detail with their unique quirks at some point, but for now, they're basically doing the same thing.  The Valley Shorts works between Fresno and Bakersfield in both directions and the Mojave Shorts East works between Bakersfield and LA doing the reverse of the Mojave Shorts West, which we've just looked at.

The KI Local sets up a pick-up for MSW-7 by shoving it into the Tejon Ranch Co. Spur at Bena on January 7, 1953.

I'll be flagging this post on my Tehachapi Freight Symbols Index 'page' at the top right of the blog page, this will provide an easy way for readers to return to this post and see updates.  I'll come back and make minor updates and add additional comments about the traffic when I get the chance.

Jason Hill

Related Articles:


Tehachapi Operations: Part 1 - Mountain Work Train

Freight Symbols Over Tehachapi - Index Page

West Bakersfield: (Part 1) - Laying Out Industries