Wednesday, November 20, 2024

cars in Main Street, Mesa, Arizona, 1950s




preserved Santa Fe 4-6-2 as a static exhibit

Built by Baldwin, now in Cleburne, Texas.

More info (BNSF photo)


Pacific Electric tunnel opening, Los Angeles downtown, 1926


The ceremony for the opening of the Pacific Electric tunnel under Bunker Hill, from Beverly Boulevard to 5th and Hill Street. It lasted only 29 years; it was shut down in 1955. (LA Public Library collection)

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

cars in Willamette Street, Eugene, Oregon, 1950s




All taken at the same intersection.

Ferrostaal, Essen, Germany, advert for railcars to the world, 1950s(?)

See earlier posts.

DR electric railcar ET 85 model

The prototype was originally built by A.Maffei/München, MAN/Nürnberg in 1905. This is painted in the livery of 1955 with wine red and black with ivory stripes.

"In 1924 the Waggonfabrik Fuchs coach factory in Heidelberg converted four Bavarian MCCi steam railbuses into Class ET 85 electric railbuses with running numbers 01–04. After this conversion an order for 32 new vehicles of this type was delivered to Fuchs and BBC to be built from 1927 to 1933. In 1927 it was still not possible to locate the entire electric engine unter the coach floor. The transformer and the switching (Schaltwerk) was therefore installed in an engine compartment. The nine railbuses were only a little longer than their "prototypes". The doors to the passenger section were recessed like those of their predecessors, however there was only a single door to the engine compartment on the right hand side of the vehicle. All units up to number ET 85 30 originally had front doors and gangways that were later removed."

1959 GMC F Model a.k.a.'Crackerbox' truck


Set back axle version; the model lasted to 1967. "The River City Street Rod Club came to visit the Heartthrob Exhaust facility in Litchfield and the Forbes Family collection. Francis Kalvoda (Honorary Ambassador for the Willmar Car Club) helped guide Gary Goblirsch to some other car related venues in the area. The first day appeared to be a great success. The weather turned beautiful and it was awesome to see some fresh old iron driving around the area. The tour ended at Schwanke's Car & Truck Museum" (Greg Gjerdingen pic)

'I like to get pleasure from a good real book'

Monday, November 18, 2024

SAS DC-7C, circa 1956

 


Guttorm Viking, a Scandinavian Airlines System Douglas DC-7C, LN-MOD, at Stockholm-Arlanda Airport, August 1967. (Lars Söderström pic)

Nollendorfplatz, Berlin, circa 1910

The Hochbahn (elevated railway) is actually part of the U-Bahn and not the S-Bahn.  See the earlier post.