USAF 1655 Editors Pick!        
Sacramento Southern Railroad, owned by the California State Railroad Museum serves a number of local industries via an interchange with the Union Pacific Railroad. The diamond was removed years ago, so once a week a crew from UP temporarily place rails over the top of the two UP mainlines and then removes them after making the switch (photo 1 of 5)
Date: 5/7/2008 Location: Sacramento, CA   Map Show Sacramento on a rail map Views: 1097 Collection Of:   Bill Grenchik
Locomotives: USAF 1655(80Tonner)    Author:  Bill Grenchik
USAF 1655
Picture Categories: This picture is part of album:  Sacramento Southern
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User Comments
Name Type Comments Date
B NK General Thats somethin you dont see every day 5/18/2008 11:49:49 PM
Gregg Bartley General Boy, that doesn't seem very cost effective. What was the problem with the diamonds? 7/3/2008 4:54:18 PM
Robert Garton General That seems kinda stupid... 7/4/2008 12:14:54 AM
Zach Pumphery General Good lord, that's kind of dumb. How about they put in a friggen diamond? Although, there's probably some logical explanation for it. 7/4/2008 1:54:28 PM
Joe M General They would put in a Diamond, but it is a tad expensive to maintain for a once a week thing. 7/4/2008 7:00:24 PM
Dave Abeles General Diamonds are a huge maintenance headache, but so is this!! I'll bet UP did the analysis, though, and this is the cheaper option of the two. Must be a pretty important customer to justify this. 7/7/2008 2:59:31 PM
Aaron Coyan General Great, unique shot! 7/8/2008 10:15:18 AM
Virgil Fitzpatrick General Insanity at it's finest. That would drive me nuts on a weekly basis 7/9/2008 6:53:32 PM
David Foxx General I bet that it's not as bad as it looks. The ties probably stay in place, explaining the ends being beveled to avoid dragging equipment on the UP main. Also, with the spring clips, it probably only requires dropping the two short rails into place and bolting the fishplates together. You can see where the spiked rails stop on just the other side of the UP main. Those tracks probably stay in place. The crew probably has it down to a fine art by now. 7/13/2008 5:54:56 PM

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