any other railroaders, besides me, on the forum?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
any other railroaders, besides me, on the forum?
Just wondering?...I myself work in the BNSF Structures(B&B) dept. Started the railroad in the summer 05, Kansas division. Been learning to play the PSG since April this year.
I thought it would be interesting to get to know some of you, if you are willing to do so
I thought it would be interesting to get to know some of you, if you are willing to do so
“TONESNOBâ€
- Bent Romnes
- Posts: 5985
- Joined: 28 Feb 2007 2:35 pm
- Location: London,Ontario, Canada
- Contact:
Edward, I am not a railroader but I might be drawn into the hobby by my grandson (3 yrs old) who seems to have more than a passing interest in trains. Maybe we could get together on email and you could tell me what the best way would be to get a little tyke started on model railroad?
BenRom Pedal Steel Guitars
https://www.facebook.com/groups/212050572323614/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/212050572323614/
- Jerry Van Hoose
- Posts: 1667
- Joined: 8 Aug 2003 12:01 am
- Location: Wears Valley, Tennessee
Railroaders
Engineer for the SPRR and then the UPRR after they bought the SP.Been retired since 2000...jr
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
- John Faulkinbury
- Posts: 65
- Joined: 6 Oct 2011 12:43 pm
- Location: Topeka, Kansas
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
- John Faulkinbury
- Posts: 65
- Joined: 6 Oct 2011 12:43 pm
- Location: Topeka, Kansas
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- Posts: 655
- Joined: 26 Nov 2003 1:01 am
- Location: Mansfield, Ohio, USA
Engineer for CSX Railroad, 2 years to go. . would I ever do it over again? Hell NO. Would I recommend it to anyone? Not in todays railroad. Don't get me wrong, I love what I do, but unless you work for a railroad you have no idea what you miss out on and how much it controls your life. I can't wait till I can retire.
Last edited by Mike Wilson on 23 Nov 2013 10:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Jack Hanson
- Posts: 5024
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- Location: San Luis Valley, USA
- John LeMaster
- Posts: 772
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: North Florida
R.r.
I started on the B&O/C&O when I was a teenager - 18. B&O/C&O name was later changed to Chessie System, and still later, it became CSX. Worked a bunch of jobs in several cities. Retired a few years ago.
Began playing steel guitar about 4 years after I began working for the railroad...still learning to play steel.
John L.
Began playing steel guitar about 4 years after I began working for the railroad...still learning to play steel.
John L.
Magnum D10, Emmons D10 push-pull
- Jerry Van Hoose
- Posts: 1667
- Joined: 8 Aug 2003 12:01 am
- Location: Wears Valley, Tennessee
John, same here. I began on the C&O as a fireman, then it became Chessie, and eventually, CSX. I also had the privilege of training many engineers during my tenure. I spent a year working on the Clinchfield R.R.(CSX) in conjunction with the Electro Motive Division of GM, operating & testing new designs of locomotives.
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
Railroaders
Hey Edward,
I remember when the ATSF and SPRR almost merged. After that merger failed the D&RGW then bought the SPRR and stripped it of almost all land, timber and real estate the SP owned and then sold off the railroad to the UPRR. We used to gripe about the SPRR policies until the D&RGW bought us and we griped even more, but when the UPRR took us over we felt we should wash our mouths out the way they treated us. I was bad ordered in Sept. of 2000 and received my pension in March 2001. I've always missed the people I worked with but not the UPRR.I started my effort to play the psg 7 years ago and love it. Hang in there Mike...2 years will buy you a good pension....jr
I remember when the ATSF and SPRR almost merged. After that merger failed the D&RGW then bought the SPRR and stripped it of almost all land, timber and real estate the SP owned and then sold off the railroad to the UPRR. We used to gripe about the SPRR policies until the D&RGW bought us and we griped even more, but when the UPRR took us over we felt we should wash our mouths out the way they treated us. I was bad ordered in Sept. of 2000 and received my pension in March 2001. I've always missed the people I worked with but not the UPRR.I started my effort to play the psg 7 years ago and love it. Hang in there Mike...2 years will buy you a good pension....jr
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Yeah Joe, my dad's old Santa Fe. He looked forward to the at&sf-sprr merge, when it didn't happen, it was a kick in the groin for them too! Then in came the BN, sure they got the NW coal route, but all these little branch lines were abandoned and inherited a lot of bad management and outdated railroad. I've never known anything different, since I hired on post-merger. The fellas I've met from the BN side are good folks and some can-do boys. I don't imagine anything different with your experiences.
“TONESNOBâ€
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- Posts: 1181
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- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
Railroaders
Edward,
Please don't get me wrong about the working people on the UPRR. They were working people just like us and mostly really good people. In any merger or take over there will always be a few disgruntled no matter how they benefited from the marriage. The UPRR employees didnt want the merge anymore than the SPRR employees. The Robber Barons(railroads) were all about the stock showing good and not much for the infrastructure, locomotive maintenance etc....still the job paid well and I have a good pension so life goes on....jr
Please don't get me wrong about the working people on the UPRR. They were working people just like us and mostly really good people. In any merger or take over there will always be a few disgruntled no matter how they benefited from the marriage. The UPRR employees didnt want the merge anymore than the SPRR employees. The Robber Barons(railroads) were all about the stock showing good and not much for the infrastructure, locomotive maintenance etc....still the job paid well and I have a good pension so life goes on....jr
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
Joe, you're absolutely right. I'm glad to see that so many of you are enjoying your well earned/deserved retirement and enjoying the hardest instrument I've ever attempted to play!
Also I am extremely grateful to find so many chose to post on this thread. It's really given me a more sense of belonging to find that we've got a little more in-comman than just the instrument. Not my intention to start a "click", just get to know more of you guys.
I'm on the road with my steel because I choose not to move closer to my career. I'm (MOW) or maintenance in the way to you trainmen, ha! There are some talented pickers where I work, but haven't met a single steel player working on the railroad, until now.
Also I am extremely grateful to find so many chose to post on this thread. It's really given me a more sense of belonging to find that we've got a little more in-comman than just the instrument. Not my intention to start a "click", just get to know more of you guys.
I'm on the road with my steel because I choose not to move closer to my career. I'm (MOW) or maintenance in the way to you trainmen, ha! There are some talented pickers where I work, but haven't met a single steel player working on the railroad, until now.
“TONESNOBâ€
- John LeMaster
- Posts: 772
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: North Florida
Magnum
Edward, the Magnum is a Bud Carter design. They were built by the same folks who built the Carter steel guitars. Since the untimely passing of John Fabian, neither Carter nor Magnum steel guitars are being built, as I understand it.
Instead of polished aluminum end plates, pedal bar, etc., the Magnum has powder coated parts. I have owned Carters, also. Both are very fine guitars. *Edit* Oops, failed to answer your other question. The Magnum is an all pull changer.
Jerry, I started back in the late 1960s in West Virginia on the Baltimore and Ohio part of the company.
John L.
Instead of polished aluminum end plates, pedal bar, etc., the Magnum has powder coated parts. I have owned Carters, also. Both are very fine guitars. *Edit* Oops, failed to answer your other question. The Magnum is an all pull changer.
Jerry, I started back in the late 1960s in West Virginia on the Baltimore and Ohio part of the company.
John L.
Last edited by John LeMaster on 23 Nov 2013 5:26 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Magnum D10, Emmons D10 push-pull
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
I'm currently playing a MARLEN D-10. I rescued this guitar from a music store in Wichita for $400! It only has enough parts to make the A,B, &C pedals function. I've trusted a buddy of mine with the only knee lever. He's going to duplicate it so that I will have at least 5 when he is done. My e/9 neck will be ready then. Hopefully he can help me reverse engineer some lowering system. If not, I'll hit up James Morehead for advice.
I aim to restore this MARLEN and take it to its previous owner so that he could play it,
if he's inclined to do so.
I've learned a little, and have a ways to go, but my goal is to play steel in a band. I've had it apart for some much needed cleaning and had no problems putting it back together. Very fascinating the pull/release system. The guitar itself is pretty stable and all the little things I've done have helped it considerably.
I aim to restore this MARLEN and take it to its previous owner so that he could play it,
if he's inclined to do so.
I've learned a little, and have a ways to go, but my goal is to play steel in a band. I've had it apart for some much needed cleaning and had no problems putting it back together. Very fascinating the pull/release system. The guitar itself is pretty stable and all the little things I've done have helped it considerably.
“TONESNOBâ€
- Lee Baucum
- Posts: 10326
- Joined: 11 Apr 1999 12:01 am
- Location: McAllen, Texas (Extreme South) The Final Frontier
Railroaders
Hey Lee, Where was your grandfathers seniority at, here in Texas?....jr
- Don R Brown
- Posts: 2789
- Joined: 27 Dec 2011 9:20 am
- Location: Rochester, New York, USA
Edward, I started with New York Central in 1967. Went through Penn Central and Conrail, then left in 1979 to work for shortline (smaller) railroads. Less money but far less BS and more job satisfaction. If you count NYC/PC/CR as only one railroad, altogether I worked for 18 different railroads in 7 states doing everything from manual labor to president.
I retired in July 2011, and got my Stage One in February 2012. Having a ball with it, just wish I had started the steel back about the time I went railroading.
BTW - if you can stick it out to retirement you'll be way better off under Railroad Retirement than Social Security. I get my benefit, which is more than SS would be, and my wife gets the Spouse Benefit which is 47% of what I get. And since my wife worked 15 years in railroading, she gets HER benefit and I get a Spouse Benefit which is 47% of HERS.
Remember safety - playing steel is easier if you have all the hands and feet you were born with.
I retired in July 2011, and got my Stage One in February 2012. Having a ball with it, just wish I had started the steel back about the time I went railroading.
BTW - if you can stick it out to retirement you'll be way better off under Railroad Retirement than Social Security. I get my benefit, which is more than SS would be, and my wife gets the Spouse Benefit which is 47% of what I get. And since my wife worked 15 years in railroading, she gets HER benefit and I get a Spouse Benefit which is 47% of HERS.
Remember safety - playing steel is easier if you have all the hands and feet you were born with.
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- Posts: 1181
- Joined: 14 Mar 2013 6:36 pm
- Location: Medford Oklahoma, USA
Thanks Don,
Not a task or day goes by that I don't think about the consequences or the dangers in my line of work. I'm injury free and intend on staying that way. I've got 4 daughters, a son and wife all depending on me to come home every Thursday night the way I left Sunday night, tired,broke,& hungry:-)
Haven't let'em down yet.
My dad & uncle are both retired from the BNSF,track dept. I have a twin who is a track welder, rarely work on the same territory. He's been out here ten years longer than I.
Not a task or day goes by that I don't think about the consequences or the dangers in my line of work. I'm injury free and intend on staying that way. I've got 4 daughters, a son and wife all depending on me to come home every Thursday night the way I left Sunday night, tired,broke,& hungry:-)
Haven't let'em down yet.
My dad & uncle are both retired from the BNSF,track dept. I have a twin who is a track welder, rarely work on the same territory. He's been out here ten years longer than I.
“TONESNOBâ€