Ryan
Court Jester
Yeah, Halethorpe has high platforms going in. West Baltimore looks like a dump, though.
To permit freight trains, which can be wider than passenger trains, to clear the high-level platforms.Why was the gauntlet track needed?
But why aren't they used at other high-level stations outside the NEC?To permit freight trains, which can be wider than passenger trains, to clear the high-level platforms.Why was the gauntlet track needed?
Wow! Great pics! Thanks! This is exactly what I was looking for.I found this picture of the platforms:
The signal bridge you can see looks like it is about 800 yards north of the current platform, right next to the MDoT salt dome. I think that the salt dome area is where the parking for the station was located.
Here's a picture from the north end of the platform, where you can see the Beltway overpass in the background (and a bonus E60 with ghetto bars!).
Wow, I had no idea there used to be so many commuter stops. Do you have any pictures of these? It seems like even the slightest remnant of these is impossible to find.In the first years of operation I believe some Amtrak trains used to call at Rahway too.
Other abandoned station between Newark and Trenton that were never served by Amtrak include Adams, Deans, North Rahway, Colonia, Elmora, South Street and maybe I am forgetting one or two more. Don't quite remember if Monmouth Jct. had a real station at some point. Maybe it did.
Their used at Union, NJBut why aren't they used at other high-level stations outside the NEC?To permit freight trains, which can be wider than passenger trains, to clear the high-level platforms.Why was the gauntlet track needed?
And what are ghetto bars?
Once you get off the NEC, there aren't too many high level platforms to be found. But where they exist, it could be that the platform is on a siding, or that it's a two track main and the platform is only on one side of one track so freight uses the other, or they could have gauntlet track installed.But why aren't they used at other high-level stations outside the NEC?To permit freight trains, which can be wider than passenger trains, to clear the high-level platforms.Why was the gauntlet track needed?
So they're supposed to prevent damage from vandals? I guess the engineer can still see through them easily.Their used at Union, NJBut why aren't they used at other high-level stations outside the NEC?To permit freight trains, which can be wider than passenger trains, to clear the high-level platforms.Why was the gauntlet track needed?
And what are ghetto bars?
It's a term for the bars covering the cab windows.
No, it was to prevent the engineers from getting hurt during a time period where people seemed to be throwing large rocks at the engines which would shatter and hurt the engineer.So they're supposed to prevent damage from vandals? I guess the engineer can still see through them easily.
This is likely the abandoned station on the western side of Baltimore that was mentioned earlier in this thread. IIRC, there are some hints there of a one time platform or access. It is just north of the West Baltimore MARC stop which is undergoing parking expansion and some upgrades as the early stage of a much longer term project (project website) to rebuild the area around the station.4. Edmondson Station Map
Station building still exists, it is the red roofed building just to the west of the tracks. It is now a pizza place or something.
Almost all locomotives on Indian Railways have the windshield grills even today, to protect from vandalism since for some reason a lot of folks in India believe that throwing rocks at trains and bringing them to a stop is a valid way to protest against any issue that's troubling them, it may not have anything to do with trains or railways.No, it was to prevent the engineers from getting hurt during a time period where people seemed to be throwing large rocks at the engines which would shatter and hurt the engineer.So they're supposed to prevent damage from vandals? I guess the engineer can still see through them easily.
I believe that some of the MBTA locomotives in Boston still have those guards on.
I also had no clue about most of these. Thanks for the research ChrisBaltimore has a number of old stations on the NEC. I compiled this info a while ago and it is in a .kmz file (google earth), so its really just a map and I don't have record of where I found this info. There are also mentions of some of these around the internet, I have compiled the ones that were easy to find. One of the sites that used to host some info and pictures has unfortunately disappeared.
I'll look for it next time I'm heading north.To elaborate on the Capitol Beltway/New Carrollton station, it was located a few hundred yards north of the current New Carrollton platform. If you look at aerial photos, you can see the concrete cap on the east side that blocks the stairs that went to an underpass to access the southbound platform.
I had forgotten that, but you jogged my memory of still stopping at Cap. Beltway after the Orange Line was open.The New Carrollton WMATA Orange Line station opened in 1978. The New Carrollton Amtrak station did not open until 1983. There was a 5 year period when WMATA served New Carrollton but Amtrak was still serving Capitol Beltway.
Sure makes sense.I read somewhere that the reason the easternmost track swings so far out from the current island platform at New Carrollton was so it was straight when it went through the Capitol Beltway station, and that appears to be accurate from looking at the aerial photos.
Isn't West Baltimore still in use. I believe it is completely being rebuilt, I thought it was still open to MARC traffic.Yeah, Halethorpe has high platforms going in. West Baltimore looks like a dump, though.
I never said that it wasn't in use, just that it looked like a dump.Isn't West Baltimore still in use. I believe it is completely being rebuilt, I thought it was still open to MARC traffic.Yeah, Halethorpe has high platforms going in. West Baltimore looks like a dump, though.
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