Who says Cabooses are gone!!!

Palmisano

New Member
I took this photo of a CSX Local in Cincinnati last week. Just the kind of train we like to model. A short local with a caboose.
 

Attachments

  • CSX Caboose.jpg
    CSX Caboose.jpg
    48.6 KB · Views: 209

brakie

Active Member
Brain,Whats so strange about using the term caboose? I still here that term used on my scanner..Some times old terms hang around.

The NS uses a lot of cabooses in the coal fields for long reverse moves to the mines as does CSX..Shoot the CSX Marion switcher uses a caboose..:D
 
Not only do old habits die hard; but new ones don't "hatch" very well. I never even heard the term "shoving platform" until reading this thread.
 

brakie

Active Member
Dave,I have heard that term before in Trains magazine..I think Railfans use these new "catch" words far more then railroaders..A switch is still a switch in railroad speak and not a "turnout" as in model railroad speak.
As far as I am concern a turnout is a group of people at a event or what a fireman wears to a fire.:sign1
 

MasonJar

It's not rocket surgery
Larry,

My ca. 1930s Canadian National Maintenance of Way book lists "switches" as "turnouts". In fact, there are several fold-out illustrations of turnouts and wyes up to #20.

The guys at the local club who have had real-world CN experience also call cabooses "vans" for some reason. Local lingo I guess... ;)

Andrew
 

stump7

New Member
Hey Palmisano
Dispite all the semantics about "vans" and switches that is a great photograph. It's nice to see the prototype still has some
 

brakie

Active Member
Andrew,I will take your word for that my friend since I know zip about Canadian railroads.:D I think the British uses turnout as well.:D
 

who_dat73

Member
Do they call it a caboose or a crummy? Saw that at the local museum posted in the caboose never heard the word crummy before that.sign1
 
I think the term "van" is rather universally used in Great Britain; and, in the US, the PRR called them "Cabin Cars", so there are lots of different words for the same useful little rail vehicle.
 

kf4jqd

Active Member
I even posted a CSX caboose on here! It's somewhere on The Gauge! The caboose runs all the time my my place, between Knoxville and Chattanooga, Tennessee...

Andy
 

Hoghead

Member
Dave Flinn said:
Not only do old habits die hard; but new ones don't "hatch" very well. I never even heard the term "shoving platform" until reading this thread.
"The term "shoving platform" has been around for quite awhile. Many of the older cabooses or way cars have had their windows plated over and in some cases the doors may be welded shut and thus only provides a platform for a trainman toride when making long shoves.

CSX has even taken the term further by as evidence in the link below, a flat car with hand railings and platform to stand on with an easy access emergency dump valve on both ends of the car.

http://mywebpage.netscape.com/OCtrainguy/Csx-platform.jpg
 
Top