Dave glad I could be of some help. As I indicated the information came from
messages posted several years ago to another io groups forum, not the CBQ
group. I tried some of the links included and they no longer work, so that
website must no longer exist. Unfortunately it appears the departure and the
arrival were of concern to most news outlets, not the brief trip on the Q. And
you are right, news reporters often do not know specific details about subjects
you and I may know well, they are simply reporting what they have been told.
Doug Harding
www.iowacentralrr.org
-----Original Message-----
From: CBQ@groups.io [mailto:CBQ@groups.io] On Behalf Of David
Sent: Monday, January 28, 2019 6:12 PM
To: CBQ@groups.io
Subject: Re: [CBQ] 1936 “Glass Train”
Thanks, Doug, for the information on the Glass Train, especially that
article reference for the Santa Fe Warbonnet- hadn't turned that one up
to date! I had searched the Q forum but those references must have been
on another forum you belong to. In any case, appreciate the notes.
Scouring the newspapers at newspapers.com I've not turned up anything
else that mentions a passenger car or coach. I'm chalking that up to
just an error of interpretation on the part of the reporters. (The story
did appear April 1st so maybe... nahhh, they just didn't know what they
were talking about.) Still wish I could nail down a loco number for the
Burlington's tour of duty from St. Louis to KC.
One interesting tidbit I noticed was that a No. 14 passenger train out
of Hannibal bound for St. Louis was involved in a mishap- a fellow piled
up rock on the track in an effort, as it states, to hijack it for a ride
east. It suffered minor damage but did not derail and the hapless
miscreant was sentence to 10 years in prison. The article states that
the westbound Glass Train had passed Hannibal, along the same line, less
than two hours ahead of the eastbound No. 14, so...
As for the springs, not knowing anything about this at all, my guess is
that they didn't want to allow the wellcar to start swaying with a
relatively top heavy center of gravity. The disc was packed in several
inches of cork, rubber and felt and its crate was anchored to the
wellcar with a boat load of 2" bolts each employing compression springs
and torqued down to some specification. I'm sure you're right and then
some saying that they thought long and hard on it. I couldn't see the
pic you referred to about noticing the absence of the usual springs, so
I don't know exactly what you meant, as I'm sure I would not have
noticed this to begin with. So, thank you, again...
Dave Ross
North Canton, OH
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