I hope the bicycle pump reference didn't skin your scalp as it zipped over your head...:hehe:Well your "wagons" are much smaller then ours probably. If you tried to use a bicycle pump to charge brakes you might as well jump off a cliff.
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I hope the bicycle pump reference didn't skin your scalp as it zipped over your head...:hehe:Well your "wagons" are much smaller then ours probably. If you tried to use a bicycle pump to charge brakes you might as well jump off a cliff.
My guess at Q2:
4ft 81/2 inch. In other words, standard gauge.
I think this is wrong but do not have time to look it up.The most common streetcar gauge was the 4'3" gauge.
For Evan123's question #2 - you need a train order (order form 19 on the B&M in 1980) I can still hear the dispatcher now... "To C & E, Extra 309 west, has permission to pass the stop indication westward to westward at Ayer, in accordance to rule 629. Sign that xyz" (dispatchers initials).
magickmaker,
Could you not remove answered questions?
Partly because it is hard to see what people answered without the question.
Partly because answers with no questions look like Jeopardy and you wonder if you are playing against the Watson computer.
Where did you find this:
I think this is wrong but do not have time to look it up.
It is a car that helps maintain air pressure in extreme cold weather in a long train. BN inherited from GN eight air repeater cars which had been built from box cars. BN made their own ARCs that where made out of U28Bs and U30Bs by plating over the Front cab glass.14.) What is an Air Repeater car and why is it used?