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nyrailfan 202's video: Engines of Metro North General Electric U34CH

@Engines of Metro North General Electric U34CH
In 1970 the Erie Lackawanna Railroad was doing it’s federally mandated duty running commuter services out of Hoboken Terminal to northern New Jersey and southern New York. Given the fact that the Erie Lackawanna and most other railroads were almost always on the brink of bankruptcy at the time, the service was unreliable, infrequent, and outdated. The New Jersey State government recognized the problem and began subsidizing the Erie Lackawanna and other commuter operations in the state. The subsidy included the purchase of state of the art locomotives and coaches to replace the railroads older fleet of EMD E and F units and steam-heated coaches in commuter services. The government of New Jersey noted the efficient and modern commuter operations of the Chicago and Northwestern railroad out of Chicago. The railroad had gotten rid of steam heating on their commuter trains, replacing the steam generators on EMD E and F units with diesel generators. These generators could then supply electrical power for heat and lighting directly to a new fleet of Pullman standard galley bi-level railcars. Some of these new Pullman Standard Bilevel cars had been ordered as cab control cars by the Chicago and northwestern railway, which means that a train could operate in both directions without the need to turn trains or use extra locomotives. With cab control cars, the engineer switches from the locomotives to the control cab of a cab car to turn the train around. In new jersey, the head-end power system would provide efficient heating during the cold northeast winters and push-pull operation would significantly increase the efficiency of commuter services. At the time when a train reached the end of the line, there was no way to turn the train around with all turntables, wye, and loop tracks removed as lines were cut back to save costs. Crews would have to uncouple the locomotive from the consist and run it around the train and couple it to the other end. This necessitated the need for dual cab locomotives such as the E60 and alp44 or to have two diesel locomotives coupled rear to rear and run that whole set around the train.

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This video was published on 2020-08-22 00:30:00 GMT by @nyrailfan-202 on Youtube. nyrailfan 202 has total 2.4K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 65 video.This video has received 113 Likes which are higher than the average likes that nyrailfan 202 gets . @nyrailfan-202 receives an average views of 3.6K per video on Youtube.This video has received 68 comments which are higher than the average comments that nyrailfan 202 gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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