





You are right a lot went for export, I think Brazil took quite a few, but BN were still using them in the late 90s if photographers have put the correct dates on their photos. I really should fit some ditch lights to mine, even if they won't work.





Over the weekend I had the urge to do some machining.
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These are massive freight cars, over 18 inches long, but they run on tiny wheels, I think they are 28 inches on the real thing.
For once Atlas have actaully used the right size.
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They look tiny compared to 36 inch wheels. So to convert these to P48 it's a case of reprofiling and thinning the Atlas wheels.
These are the smallest wheels I have had to deal with but all the usual techniques work, the one exception being that the form tool needed grinding down a bit or it would have removed all the support from the back of the wheel.
You need to pull the trucks apart to get the wheels out, including removing the springs from one side so be careful not to lose them.
You will then need an arbour press to remove the wheels from axles as the axles are knurled and they just won't pull off.
Here are the finished wheels, 1.3 mm thinner with a nice P48 flange. The easily go back on the extended axles on the roller bearing caps keep the side play down.
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I forgot to take photos of the finished autorack, so that will have to wait until next week once I'm back from Chicago.
Richard
Hopefully Richard doesn't mind, your photo reminded me I took a photo of similarly painted ALCO looking locos in Havana in March 2000. When I looked at the slides, not C30-7 and I don't know what they are.It's been bugging me since this conversation, that I was sure I had seen locos 'similar' to the C30-7 somewhere......memory finally kicked into gear - Cuba!
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Not my photo, but I'm sure I did take some photos of them in and around the Havana area.....in fact I think I had passenger haulage behind one on an overnight train from Havana to Santiago de Cuba, will have to dig my photos out. There was definitely a loco swap about 30min outside Havana where the original train loco died a death - I'm sure I took a photo of the replacement loco on the buffers at Santiago....
According to Wiki, the Cuban fleet of C30-7s was purchased from the Mexican national railroad, about a similar time as they started importing other second hand GMD1's from Canada...
Cheers,
Stephen



MLW Model MX624 - 50 of them were imported direct to Cuba from Canada in the mid 1970s, which upset Uncle Sam by all accounts.Hopefully Richard doesn't mind, your photo reminded me I took a photo of similarly painted ALCO looking locos in Havana in March 2000. When I looked at the slides, not C30-7 and I don't know what they are.
Twenty of these were purchased direct from CN - interesting part was that they had a mixture of the Bo-Bo and A1A-A1A versions, so in true Cuban style, they did a mix and match of the bogies and the majority of the fleet were converted to A1A-Bo locos. Funnily enough I was in Cuba at pretty much the same time as you in 2000, and filmed one of the GMD1s in CN livery, traversing the long metal bridge outside Havana Central Station one afternoon.Mention of GMD1, this took me a while to realise it wasn't some Soviet relic. Still in worn CN livery. They looked much better later after repainting.
A Russian built TEM-21K - 79 built and supplied to Cuba from 1974 through to 1988.I was trying to photograph the EMD/GMD G8 and G12 locos but didn't get close enough before they zoomed off to western Cuba. This was sitting at a platform and does look Eastern European.
Thanks Stephen. Maybe these should be moved to another thread, although I only took a few diesel shots while waiting for trains so not much more to add. We travelled on one of the few Budds still running as an RDC.MLW Model MX624 - 50 of them were imported direct to Cuba from Canada in the mid 1970s, which upset Uncle Sam by all accounts.
Twenty of these were purchased direct from CN - interesting part was that they had a mixture of the Bo-Bo and A1A-A1A versions, so in true Cuban style, they did a mix and match of the bogies and the majority of the fleet were converted to A1A-Bo locos. Funnily enough I was in Cuba at pretty much the same time as you in 2000, and filmed one of the GMD1s in CN livery, traversing the long metal bridge outside Havana Central Station one afternoon.
A Russian built TEM-21K - 79 built and supplied to Cuba from 1974 through to 1988.
I saw quite a few of the G8's working - mainly around Moron from memory. I'm sure I have a photo of one hauling a local passenger service maybe near Ciro Redondo, with the passenger cars consist made up of a mix of de-motored Budd RDC cars and the usual Cuban home-made box car conversions.
Cheers,
Stephen

I had an HO autorack once, it came as part of a 'bargain pack' offer, something like 5 cars for £25, seller's choice, so it wasn't a car I'd have bought specially, & I soon sold it on.Seeing one of these in the flesh....it is a truly massive piece of kit; HO ones are big but these O gauge ones are enormous and impressive.
