Tom: Those Ore Jennys look great:thumb:
Larry: Great looking SD9s:thumb:
Local 4828 getting ready to make a pickup.
Larry: Great looking SD9s:thumb:
Local 4828 getting ready to make a pickup.

Val,
THat looks like the Mt Pleasant neighbourhood where my sister-in-law used to live... Nicely done. :thumb:
Andrew
sorry nutbar, but TM-4 never made it to CN:frowns: . i probably have every book on FM's made:winki: , and here's what i DO KNOW:....hey Deano,if i'm not mistaken,i believe that trainmaster demonstrator eventually became cnr #2900---here she is in her new livery while in service on Doctor Wayne's EG&E
g_e_c, i should know the answer to your question:mrgreen: ....but i dontI always wondered why the platforms are so high on FM diesels... what sort of equipment do they keep under there?
Jeffrey, :bravo: , you are correct:thumb: . the engines were commonly called "Opie's":winki: .For years Fairbanks-Morse used opposing piston diesel engines. This configuration had air fuel mixture being compressed and detonated between two pistons instead of between a piston and a cylinder head. The two crankshafts were yoked together to a single output shaft. Perhaps that's what's in there?
THANK YOU Ralph!:mrgreen:Wow! That orange F-M demonstrator sure is pretty! It'd be nice if the Rock
Valley Sub didn't rush to paint that unit too soon.
Ralph