Conrail's Philly Piers

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  • čas přidán 8. 07. 2008
  • Conrail's coal and ore piers at South Philadelphia, now closed.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 83

  • @njRRtrainer
    @njRRtrainer Před 10 lety +13

    I used to live in South Phila.. This and the Pier action were great when I was growing up!.. Glad you captured this and were able to share this piece of engineering and Railroadia!!! Thanks for the effort..

  • @cuzinitr
    @cuzinitr Před 16 lety +4

    Wow, What an operation! If i could be there all day watching, I'd be a happy man! Thank's for posting this video, 5 star and favorite's, Rich.

  • @Hickler90
    @Hickler90 Před 16 lety +5

    Thank you for posting this. Its amazing something like this even existed down there. I cant imagine it today.

  • @portobellotent
    @portobellotent Před 14 lety +4

    WOW! Fascinating video! Truly Amazing film work! I have found a treasure of industrial history set in beautiful landscapes. Big Thank you for showing how this world works, and I am grateful to You Tube

  • @njRRtrainer
    @njRRtrainer Před 14 lety +2

    This was great, was born and raised in So Phillie.. glad someone captured this and was able to share...

  • @haroldalexis4200
    @haroldalexis4200 Před rokem

    Ah the memories of CONRAIL. This is the first time i've seen the open hopper trains like that. I love it. All trains prior CONRAIL I spotted READING & of course PENN CENTRAL. 😃 Excellent film. 🎥 ✅👍

  • @capnfabu
    @capnfabu Před 9 lety +5

    Man, I docked and sailed a lot of ships there when I was mate and captain on those Moran & McAllister tugboats.

  • @Blueboxtrains
    @Blueboxtrains Před 16 lety +2

    Great video, thanks for posting such a unique record of railroad history.

  • @PennRailVideos
    @PennRailVideos Před 15 lety +7

    That's 7554! The same GP10 that's now on the EPSN's Perk Branch! Holy cow!

  • @roballen5670
    @roballen5670 Před 6 lety +1

    Dang. Thank u for your time and such great videos of history.

  • @donconklin1770
    @donconklin1770 Před 8 lety +1

    once in a lifetime piece of history; thanks for postyuing and filming

  • @rayinpau.s.a.6351
    @rayinpau.s.a.6351 Před 10 lety +3

    these are the things the world never gets a chance to see or witness . I really enjoyed watching this video . it is sad to know that these ways are quickly going away . it seems to be the way of the world ? Thank You for posting this video . Ray in Pa.

  • @treos17
    @treos17 Před 14 lety +2

    thank you so much for posting this, ive been rail fanning greenwich yard practically since i was born and still do since i live a mile from it. I was only 4 when you shot this so never got to see it in action that i can remember. Thank

  • @vettebecker1
    @vettebecker1 Před 3 lety +2

    Would have loved to have had an opportunity to watch the car loader in person, very neat the way they detach car to go through sprung switch/ hit ramp to change direction and go up loader to dumper. I could have put a lawn chair there and watched that all day!!

  • @ronaldstokes4841
    @ronaldstokes4841 Před 3 lety +2

    George Holmes, a Philadelphia photographer, has photos and videos of the piers as they looked in the mid-2000s. Mostly twisted metal, railroad ties without tracks leading to the coalers. Plus a video of the demolition of one of the rail derricks.

  • @UrbanDKaye
    @UrbanDKaye Před 15 lety +2

    Fascinating look at an element of railroading not often seen.

  • @tomp8871
    @tomp8871 Před rokem

    Thanks mate, that was some BIG work.

  • @nonewherelistens1906
    @nonewherelistens1906 Před 8 lety +1

    Amazing technology and engineering from a not to distant past. I drove by this operation many times ans never realized its inner workings until this video.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 8 lety +4

      +Thomas Nixon It was amazing for its time. Remember, when this stuff was invented and built people were still using horses and wagons. A lot of this has been replaced by self-unloading ships. But the materials technology that made them possible didn't exist in the early 20th Century. Don't judge what you see by today's standards.And by the way, I was to China around the time this video was shot and they were using stuff just as primitive if not more so. Beehive coke ovens worked by hand. Open hearth steel mills. Bessemer converters. Steam locomotives. The difference is that they HAVE the capital to make these changes BECAUSE all of our businesses jumped ship and relocated there. That's why the Waltons are all billionaires. Not too many billionaires in the steel, shipping or rail industries any more.

  • @mdonato249
    @mdonato249 Před 7 lety +1

    Terrific video. Thanks for sharing. I always wondered what went on down there.

  • @fmnut
    @fmnut  Před 9 lety +10

    If you watch the video starting at about 06:10, you can see the rotary dumper at the top of the frame going thru its cycle. The top of the car was open and as it was turned upside down the coal fell out into a bin which was then emptied by conveyors onto the ship or barge. There was no need to trigger the hopper doors at the bottom of the car.

    • @BrooklynPerson30000
      @BrooklynPerson30000 Před 8 lety +2

      i first heard of that type of operation just a couple months ago, and i've been trying to find footage of it in action- finally here it is!

    • @ronaldstokes4841
      @ronaldstokes4841 Před 3 lety +1

      But that isn't the end of the show. The now empty coal car runs by gravity down a short slope then up another slope, like a ski jump, which stops the car and it rolls backward on to another track to hump back to the yard. Before automatic switches, a man had to switch the track for each car.

    • @bartertown
      @bartertown Před rokem

      I think they had spring switches for the kick back track.

  • @Northeastern_Railfan
    @Northeastern_Railfan Před rokem

    No way that this is what they looked like, this is amazing!

  • @railroadjim
    @railroadjim Před 13 lety +3

    Neat, I just saw CR 7554 at pier 124 in that video. I think that's the same engine that now exists as the PRL/ESPN 7554 in East Greenville, PA on the ex-Reading Perkiomen Branch.

  • @yaggy9
    @yaggy9 Před 15 lety +3

    awesome video, always wondered about this operation. a shame it's closed up.

  • @thunderstormzlightning
    @thunderstormzlightning Před 13 lety

    great video thanks for shareing

  • @megatrains
    @megatrains Před rokem

    Nice catch!!!!!!!!!

  • @jtunnel
    @jtunnel Před 16 lety +1

    Fantastic video, thank you for sharing. Shame it is all just memories now.

  • @ArchTeryx00
    @ArchTeryx00 Před 6 lety +2

    Love the design of the oscar (the device used to push the cars upslope to the dumper). Basically a little narrow gauge pusher on its own set of rails. I imagine it was cable-driven; the hydraulic motors that it used must have been pretty damn huge to get fully loaded hoppers up that steep a grade.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 6 lety +1

      Archibald Mirenopteryx the proper term is "barney" and yes, it was drawn by cable.

    • @ArchTeryx00
      @ArchTeryx00 Před 6 lety +2

      The barney-drive was a neat idea. It kept workers well clear of the hoppers and the rotary dump frame during operation for the most part. (And BTW, thanks for the correction. I'd heard similar devices referred to as 'oscars' and extrapolated, but I do like to call 'em by their right names. Pays respect to the folks working with them day in and day out).
      Not just that, either. The mule and kickback track in operation was neat to see as well.

  • @NomaDairy
    @NomaDairy Před 12 lety

    Thats really really neat!

  • @bartertown
    @bartertown Před 15 lety +1

    The ore tipple was recently torn down. We can turn power on the loop tracks now.

  • @bartertown
    @bartertown Před 15 lety +1

    The ore tipple is gone. They are cleaning out the ore in between the rails of the loop track. Does anyone know what will be done with the loop? Will they scrap the rails or use this to turn power or something?

  • @onionhat9141
    @onionhat9141 Před 3 lety +2

    i hope to see this in the upcoming Prr route coming to trainz

  • @LADYTRIAXLE
    @LADYTRIAXLE Před 10 lety

    wow the Joe castagna Armand Gerace days in south philly > coal pier #122-24 God bless all those long shoreman who worked on this pier also>great video

  • @boatbound3300
    @boatbound3300 Před rokem

    Amazing

  • @kman-mi7su
    @kman-mi7su Před 6 lety +4

    South Philly? where's the wiseguys? LOL!

  • @miggitymase
    @miggitymase Před 12 lety

    my dad kenny and his brother marc along with a crew of operating engineers cut all 4 cranes apart plus the coal loading apparatus and coal loading crane.

  • @mjb430
    @mjb430 Před 15 lety +7

    Thank you for sharing! Where were these located in South Philly? It is the area directly south of the Walt Whitman bridge where CSX now has their intermodal facility?

  • @railroad9000
    @railroad9000 Před 7 lety

    Well orchestrated operation.

  • @Ben31337l
    @Ben31337l Před 9 lety

    How did they trigger the wagons to unload?

  • @terenceoneill3075
    @terenceoneill3075 Před 4 lety

    I found a photo postcard from 1965 in my father's stuff that shows Captain Faber's ship at the PRR Ore Dock, South Philly (that info is direct from the card, not me). Is there anyone interested?

  • @PaulPeirceFan
    @PaulPeirceFan Před 15 lety

    wat was that ramp thing used for?

  • @BNforever2009
    @BNforever2009 Před 10 lety

    nice video

  • @2READYCRETE
    @2READYCRETE Před 15 lety

    My Dad worked that job, caught that job off the Erie Ave Road Board

  • @alexandergrube6437
    @alexandergrube6437 Před 5 lety +1

    That ramp is interesting. I guess it's more efficient than using a traditional locomotive.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 5 lety

      The ramp is necessary because of the need to reach the height of dumper in a short distance. If a grade suitable for a locomotive was used, the pier would extend halfway out into the river.

  • @royreynolds108
    @royreynolds108 Před 9 lety +2

    Just about any railroad that hauled coal to tidewater used this type of arrangement to empty the cars for loading into ships and barges on a large scale. This was the best technology for the time even though only one car at a time was dumped. There may have been one or two locations where two cars were dumped at a time. These cars seem to be 50-60 ton capacity. Now the cars are 100 ton capacity, have no bottom doors, have rotary couplers, are dumped with rotary dumpers up to three at a time with no uncoupling. Time marches on.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 8 lety

      the hoppers in the video are 100 ton cars.

    • @weekendrailroader
      @weekendrailroader Před 3 lety

      Coal cars today are good for about 140+ tons.

  • @roballen5670
    @roballen5670 Před 6 lety +1

    I was just wondering if this operation is still.in operation? Also really great video.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 6 lety

      Ringman Allen No, the coal dumper shut down a few weeks after the video was shot. The ore operation lasted until the mid 90's when Bethlehem Steel in Bethlehem shut down. Occasional loads of fertilizer were handled for a few more years. The ore cranes were demolished in 2010.

  • @straightto8
    @straightto8 Před 2 lety

    I visited this area in 2010, had no idea any of this existed there. How long ago did this all cease, and was it all turn up and anything put in its place.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 2 lety +1

      The video shows the second to last boatload of coal loaded through Pier 124. The facility was rebuilt by Conrail in the late 1970's to handle primarily hard coal from the Anthracite Region. Bituminous coal was more efficiently handled through Consol's facility at Baltimore. After a successful trial to ensure that the anthracite would not get contaminated by bituminous coal at Consol, Pier 124 was shut down in January 1991 and all east coast rail/water coal was handled through Baltimore.
      Pier 122 lasted a few years longer. After the shutdown of Bethlehem Steel's mills at Bethlehem PA in 1996, insufficient ore traffic remained to justify keeping it in regular operation. It saw occasional use to unload ships carrying fertilizer, but was permanently out of service before the breakup of Conrail. Niether CSX nor NS were interested in the facility, so it was demolished in 2010. The Pier 122 site was recently made over into a roll-on/roll-off facility for imported vehicles.

    • @straightto8
      @straightto8 Před 2 lety

      @@fmnut Appreciate the information, it’s sure changed, I wish I could have seen it all in action back when.

  • @mattsfirewoodvideos738

    Looks very different now in 2021

  • @ekapus
    @ekapus Před 16 lety

    This video is incredible.
    When was it shot?

  • @c.h.s9022
    @c.h.s9022 Před 6 lety

    What’s the narrow locomotive at 1:43? What was it used for?

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 6 lety +2

      Typhlosion 157 it's a car mover that pushes the cars through the tipple with a side arm. It runs on narrow gauge tracks in between the standard gauge ones. See my Hulett videos for a similar setup in more detail.

    • @c.h.s9022
      @c.h.s9022 Před 6 lety

      fmnut thank you for the explanation.

  • @cr1901
    @cr1901 Před 7 lety

    When was this filmed?

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 7 lety +1

      cr1901 1990 and 1991

    • @cr1901
      @cr1901 Před 7 lety

      fmnut Good stuff! I'm from the area and was born in 1990. Interesting glimpse into times I don't remember...

  • @Darthsimpletext
    @Darthsimpletext Před 5 lety

    Ore Dump:Come in little coal car, i want to turn you upside down, make you throw up and spit you out
    Coal car:Why should i come?
    Ore Dump:Because it's my function, and what i do is discreet, other coal cars said it's a wild experience

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 5 lety

      Nice, but it's a coal dump, not an ore dump.

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 Před 8 lety

    Different from the Huletts.

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 8 lety +1

      Yes, these are a beefed up version of the Brownhoist design that was a Hulett precursor.

  • @FrehleyFan3988
    @FrehleyFan3988 Před 3 lety +1

    Featuring a conrail ex penn central GP7

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 3 lety

      7554 was a GP9, not GP7

    • @FrehleyFan3988
      @FrehleyFan3988 Před 3 lety

      @@fmnut oh... it's so hard to tell the difference between the 2

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 3 lety

      @@FrehleyFan3988 look at the louvers on the long hood. GP7 has 2 vertical rows under the radiator grill at the rear end of the hood. GP9 has 3 to 5 clusters of louvers extending forward from just under the dynamic brake. (front and rear above reference a unit set up for short hood forward operation).

    • @FrehleyFan3988
      @FrehleyFan3988 Před 3 lety

      @@fmnut oh, now I can tell the difference. I thought before that gp9s had dynamic brakes and GP7s didnt. I guess that all depended on how the railroads ordered them

    • @fmnut
      @fmnut  Před 3 lety

      @@FrehleyFan3988 correct.