Why no Caboose/guardvan in US???

sravan

New member
Hi all,
My question may be silly, i am new here ,but i just want to know from you ppl, i didnt find any caboose/gaurdvan here in US, why it is? In India we still have gaurdvan/caboose for every passenger or goods train.

If the ques is really silly jus ignore it.
 
We used them for a while, it was a basically the conductors office, now the conductor rides in the locomotive cab and the caboose has been replaced by the EOT (End Of Train device) which is the little rectangular yellow/orange box on the very last car of the train. The EOT sends information about the train to the locomotive, such as length, air pressure, etc. You still see one on a train every now and then depending on where you are, what railroad and so on. I saw a caboose on the end of a short 20 car local train the other day. They are also used as shoving platforms when a train is going in reverse and the engineer can't see all the way behind the train.

Most of the time now, you can only see a caboose on display or on a tourist railroad.
 
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I think Australia uses them, because on certain journeys, there isn't a single town or facility for 2000 miles. I think it looks like a passenger car, and is located close to the engines. I also think that they bring along extra fuel tanks just in case.
 
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There's a UP local job that uses an old CNW bay window caboose and a couple of different yard locos that I see quite often North of Chicago. It's great to see the caboose once in a while.
 
Hi Euphod, yeah i jus saw one caboose in 3 yrs in pittsburg station on a goods train.its nice to see here.but we have a caboose on every train.
 
I wonder any one working in railways in or around pennsylvania,nj,ny, will allow to see the train yards. i never went to any of those.:(
 
Generally, no. I understand they're pretty tough about trespassers here in the Philly/SE Pa area, and I wouldn't try to find out. Maybe you can chat up someone and get an invitation to a yard, but apart from that, I'd stay off any property.
 
Last time I ever saw a caboose on a working train was in 03, That was 7 years ago and I was only 10 but I remember it clearly. We were on the Amtrak Coast Starlight pulling into Seattle, WA. It was a BN center cupola caboose. The train into was pulling into the yard and the car directly in front of the caboose was a tankcar. Then we passed by it. I don't know why but sometimes I still see it in my mind as we passed by the caboose. I do remember being surprised and running to the window when I saw it.
 
Closest you could probably get to walking around a yard is at a museum, say like Strasburg. You can just walk around the yard as long as you don't get in the way. It's kinda neat seeing all the old locos awaiting their turn for restoration.
 
yeah torpedo, i have been to prr museum, its nice n really close to my home.
may b ill go sometime this week.
 
Here in Jonesboro, Arkansas, we have a Union Pacific yard and a BNSF yard, right beside each other actually. The BNSF local crew uses an old caboose--- the UP guys don't.

Here's a shot:

IMG_0307.jpg


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Legolistic
Certain services running here use crew cars and are normally marshalled in behind the locomotives, Not all services have one. The humble Guards van was phased out in the mid 1980s replaced with either a BOG or ETMs.

ghosty
 
"I think Australia uses them, because on certain journeys, there isn't a single town or facility for 2000 miles. I think it looks like a passenger car, and is located close to the engines. I also think that they bring along extra fuel tanks just in case."

2,000 miles is a slight exaggeration.

Some services between Adelaide and Perth across the Nullarbor Plains and up to Darwin have a crew car behind the locomotives to allow relay working - one crew works the train while the other crew sleeps in the crew car.

Some services also have a tank car consisting of two tank containers mounted on a flat car behind the locomotives. This provides on-line fuelling of the locomotives on the longer trips so that the train does not need to stop to refuel.

Here's an example of both a crew car and tank car:

4837291713_9ecc42ca30_z.jpg


Phil
 
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Watching the webcam at Roanoke, I have seen 2 or 3 freight trains with a caboose on the rear, so NS still use them now & again, but not often.
 
Though the questions has been answered, I still want to answer. :D
First, let me welcome you to the United States!

When it comes to cabooses, it's pretty simple. They were as common as cross ties for every engine, there was a caboose. Back in the day (a day Euphod probably remembers :p) the caboose was used to guard the backside of the train and was a home for the conductor and flagman. It included a desk for the conductor to do paper work on and a few seats to sit in and of course a cupola or bay to view the train from. It also included a wood burning stove and usually a toilet. Some cabooses had closets under the cupola to store things like flag, flares and torpedoes. Like another once common railroad piece, the steam engine, cabooses were kicked out the door by technological advances. An item called the FRED replaced the caboose, using computer systems was able to do the cabooses' job and more. It cut crew size from 4 or 6, to only 2 or 3. Now, cabooses are used occasionally for shoving platforms, which usually means they have no windows and the doors are bolted or welded shut. Some companies, like Norfolk Southern have converted some into test cars and Operation Lifesaver cars.

If you would like to view cabooses, there rae many railroad museums across the country that feature restored pieces.


Cheers and Welcome,
Woody
 
Hello Trainz people, thanks a lot for the valuable information u gave me.
hi Ilinoiscentral.thnanks for sharing i saw cabbose when i went to pennsylvania rail road museum in pa,iin usa alot tech is there i guess, so they replaced caboose,but in india,i guess for safety we r still using them on every train,being india as 4th largest network in world.i am really happy to be an member among you.
 
I figured you would probably visit the Pennsylvania RR Museum, excellent place.
Yes, technology has gotten the better of some of our more nostalgic areas of railroading, however I would say we are still a step down from other nations in rail infrastructure, especially our passenger system. However we do have private and shareholder owned freight companies rather than a nationalized railway system, which I like. I believe India's system is nationalized isn't it?


Cheers,
Woody
 
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