Michael_McCormick
New member
I was surfing the web and found some information that might be useful to anyone who is building routes. You might find them useful in making your routes. The 1st one is the Canadian National Railroad or CN railroad website, and the 2nd is Burlington Northern Santa Fe(BNSF) railroad website.
http://www.cn.ca/en/shipping-maps.htm
http://www.bnsf.com/tools/reference/division_maps/?menu=5&submenu=0
These are the websites that I found. I hope these will be useful. Please let me know what you think.
When you go to the CN web site. Click on rail stations and terminals and that is where the maps are (they use googlemaps) what I like about it is that they color code the first-class rail lines of all the railroad companies. So you know, which rail line belongs to a certain rail company. When you go to the webpage zoom in and you will see triangles on tracks if you do not see them follow the track and you will come up to them . Click on the triangle, and it will tell you what railroad company runs on that line. In the Burlington Northern Santa Fe website. when you click on a state it gives you the division routes, and also the Union Pacific routes and short line railroad routes, and also gives you the mileage. The mileage is right next to the name of the towns that the branch lines runs through. I hope this will be useful I don't know let me know
http://www.cn.ca/en/shipping-maps.htm
http://www.bnsf.com/tools/reference/division_maps/?menu=5&submenu=0
These are the websites that I found. I hope these will be useful. Please let me know what you think.
When you go to the CN web site. Click on rail stations and terminals and that is where the maps are (they use googlemaps) what I like about it is that they color code the first-class rail lines of all the railroad companies. So you know, which rail line belongs to a certain rail company. When you go to the webpage zoom in and you will see triangles on tracks if you do not see them follow the track and you will come up to them . Click on the triangle, and it will tell you what railroad company runs on that line. In the Burlington Northern Santa Fe website. when you click on a state it gives you the division routes, and also the Union Pacific routes and short line railroad routes, and also gives you the mileage. The mileage is right next to the name of the towns that the branch lines runs through. I hope this will be useful I don't know let me know


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