Monday, 31 March 2025

A bit more about Peter Mumby

CP London, Ontario. Peter Mumby railfanning with Peter MacCauley during November 2010. Photo by Peter MacCauley. 

Since mentioning the passing of Peter Mumby I got a few nice e-mail...here are two that I would like to share...George Dutka

I remember that Peter always had the first table on the right hand side as you entered Marritt Hall in the old Ancaster Fair Grounds site. Not sure if he requested that spot, but I have to believe that it served him well. Peter always had a great selection of kits, always reasonably priced. I usually found something that I needed, even if it was only a handful of photos. Peter was one of the rare photographers who shot freight cars.
Over the years we would compare notes and I was excited to tell him that I had secured a position working for Procor. I think that Peter was equally proud to tell me that his son worked for Canadian National. I've often wondered if Peter's interest in model railways served as inspiration for his son to pursue the real thing? Certainly true in my family!
I remember the handwritten sale slips he used. If I recall correctly, Peter was somewhat reluctant to embrace digital record keeping and the Internet at first. Being that he was a teacher, this seemed somewhat odd to me. I don't think that he had any interest in eBay.
Hard to believe how much time has gone by. Peter (my son) reminded today me that our first time selling was in 2011 at the then new Ancaster Fair location. For the last couple of years Peter, Mark and I have been helping Rick (the Ancaster show coordinator) set up the tables and clean up afterwards. Even harder to believe that Rick used to let both Peter and later Mark into the shows for free when they were very young. Boy, do I feel old all of a sudden!! Keith MacCauley

Hi George - Thank you for the post and the photos today on WRD about Peter Mumby. My dad and I really miss not seeing him at the shows anymore. Here is a photo I took in London in November 2010 with Peter at CP Quebec street; still one of my favorite days of railfanning.

Dad and I visited Peter at his house last year, I think in August. It was really good to talk with him again, and he had a lot of really cool RR memorabilia he was showing us. He told us that almost all of the HO models he painted he did using a Volkswagen spare tire as the air supply to his airbrush! I thought that was incredibly creative. We had known him for years from the shows, but I didn't realize he was that good a modeler. Cheers, Peter MacCauley.

An oldy goldy of Peter and I. This photo was taken of the Thames Valley Modular Railroad Club that both Peter and I where members of in the early 1980's. I had setup a visit to the CN shops in London, Ontario. We posed for a group photo...I think the shopman took the photo. Peter is in the red jacket under the number 7 and I am in the plaid jacket second from the right side next to the 7 in the number boards. That is Bob Hannah a good friend of ours standing next to me in the red jacket.


Sunday, 30 March 2025

Another March 2025 - Update

May 6, 1996 at Essex, Ct. Bruce Douglas collection.
A mix of what I am up to and photos or just information I thought I could share with you...here it is.

First off Otter Valley Railroad hobby shop in Tillsonburg, Ontario has mentioned they will be carrying Martin Welberg Studio scenery. This is a very nice product to use and I am looking forward to be able to acquire it locally. I normally have to get it at the January Springfield train show...George Dutka

I had purchased my pass and made a plan for  which layouts I would see while attending the Kitchener layout tour yesterday. The weather called for a cold day there with lots of rain and freezing rain later in the day. I did the tour last year in the rain and it was no fun...so I stayed home and took in some of my grandkids events and visited our local hobby shop that I have not been to since before Christmas.
Another cell phone photo from 2019. I played around with the phone settings back then to come up with this view of Don Janes layout.

I picked up this AK wash which is kind of a greenish tone at Broughdale's today. Will have to see what I can do with this shortly. I was at my grand daughter's Volleyball tournament yesterday which was very close by the hobby shop.

My FOS garage is getting done slowly. I get easily side tacked with other projects, but it should be done next week.

I picked up this old 40' gondola at Broughdale's for a few bucks. It is a Crown model from Hong Kong from years ago. I will turn it into a MEC pulpwood car similar to the one I purchased at Springfield this year. I will be modeling this one empty with the wooden flooring the MEC added showing. The flooring had large gaps between the floor boards so the waste can fall through.

All the couplers and trucks are removed and will be replaced. The ladder and grabs are scraped off. The stirrup's were missing which is OK as I would have cut them off.

I cut out the side to the floor using my hobby knife and razor saw. Now to file it down smooth. I got this far with the project in about an hour yesterday once I got home from the volleyball tournament. I guess I was a little motivated yesterday after canceling my trip to the Kitchener layout tour. Will see how today goes and my motivation continues. 


Saturday, 29 March 2025

Phone Photos

This is a section house on Don Janes Green Mountain Division.
My daughter was going through my phone while we were in Florida last week looking for family photos she did not have. These two photos are from a batch I took when I first got my phone in 2019. Actually they are the first on the phone...George Dutka

Another angle of the structure which is a laser kit. 


Friday, 28 March 2025

PROCOR Rock Limestone Covered Hopper Cars

Canadian Rail No. 278 March 1975 Image taken from Canadian Rail Publication March 1975.

By Keith MacCauley

Among the more unfamiliar designs of covered hopper cars (AAR designated ‘LO’) were a series built by Procor beginning in 1969. Most likely inspired by the so called ‘Barrel’ Ore cars constructed by NSC in 1967, the small 2,100 cu. ft. capacity cars, would spend their entire lives in relative obscurity moving limestone minerals two hundred miles from a mine in Cadomin (SE of Hinton, AB) to a cement processing plant located in NW Edmonton (CN Bissell Yard). Similar to the NSC built ore cars, they operated in unit train fashion. Constructed by Procor at their Oakville Ontario plant between 1969 and 1980, the cars were lifetime leased to Inland Cement.

While comparable in appearance to the NSC built cars, the Inland LO’s featured in motion loading and unloading. Copying the NSC roof geometry the Inland cars were equipped with full length rectangular hatches fitted with rubber-tired masts. Scroll assemblies located pre-loading and post loading opened and closed the hatches as the cars moved through the filling operation. Track beneath the loading tipple was on a 2.5% grade. Disconnected from the motive power, the cars moved through the tipple by gravity. Connected to plant air, the cars were advanced manually and positioned using their onboard air brakes. At the destination cement plant, unloading was accomplished by indexing each car over a pit. Horizontal sprockets equipped with cams and levers connected by a chain loop operated full length bottom doors. Placed beneath the center sill the sprocket cams were engaged by angle iron fixtures placed between the rails to open and close the doors. The bottom doors were positioned such that the limestone payload, known as ‘rock limestone’, was dumped outside the rails through grating into a pit.

Initial estimates of the available limestone reserve were that the mine would play out in just over half a century. While this would indicate a ceasing of operations in the early 2020’s, Google earth images show current ongoing activity. Between 1969 and 1980 Procor constructed some 181 so called ‘rock limestone’ cars. Owing to revised bridge loading requirements (known as Cooper E60), cars built post 1976 were made artificially longer while maintaining the same overall capacity. Related to mayhem during unit train operation, a handful of the later built cars were constructed as wreck replacements. The line from Cadomin to Edmonton has portions with severe grades. As a result, Canadian National stipulated that the cars be equipped with a higher braking ratio, i.e. higher braking forces. Nevertheless, on one occasion the unit train ran away uncontrolled and derailed with a handful of cars careening deep into a canyon. In the aftermath some of the derailed cars were repaired and returned to service, while others are, in theory, still in the canyon. At its peak, operation of the unit trains (CN U894/895) involved sixty-car consists, scheduled twice per week. Some four hundred thousand tons of limestone were transported annually.

Initially constructed with UTCX reporting marks, early on the Procor rock limestone cars were remarked UNPX. In the mid to late 1990’s, acknowledging a revised lease structure with Lehigh Hanson, the cars were remarked with PWCX reporting marks. Through mergers and acquisitions, Inland Cement became Lehigh Hanson and today is known as Heidelberg Materials; see https://www.heidelbergmaterials.us/about/history. Simultaneously, in the mid 1990’s the AAR Gross Rail Load (GRL) limit increased from 263,000 lbs to 286,000 lbs. Owing to the forty-year eligible life limit of the initial build of cars (built pre-July 1, 1974) and with no opportunity to increase the capacity of a closed car body, the diminutive covered hopper cars were removed from service 2008/2009. As mentioned, the limestone mineral to cement processing operation continues. The highly specialized LO’s were supplanted by 2,300 cu. ft. Trinity built open top hoppers cars (AAR Class HTS), equipped with rapid discharge outlet gates. Apparently, the need to keep the minerals out of the elements and dry was overcome. For a relatively brief period the two groups of cars were intermixed. Current Google earth images of the Heidelberg Materials installation show several dozen of the HTS’s cued up for off-loading. Photos of both the Procor built (UNPX/PWCX) and Trinity built (PWCX) can be found online at https://canadianfreightcargallery.ca/  and https://www.rrpicturearchives.net/

UTCX 44670a1

Built 10/1969 (first car built); renumbered UNPX 121600


Bottom UTCX 44670b1

gate opened


UTCX 44670c1

Bottom gate closed


UTCX 44670c1

Bottom gate closed


UTCX 44670e1

Bottom gate opening fixture


UTCX 44670f1

Bottom gate closed


UTCX 44670g1

Unloading pit. Note the fixture shown in the top of the photo, I believe employed as a car shaker to dislodge any frozen minerals


Among the more unfamiliar designs of covered hopper cars (AAR designated ‘LO’) were a series built
by Procor beginning in 1969. Most likely inspired by the so called ‘Barrel’ Ore cars constructed by
NSC in 1967, the small 2,100 cu. ft. capacity cars, would spend their entire lives in relative obscurity
moving limestone minerals two hundred miles from a mine in Cadomin (SE of Hinton, AB) to a
cement processing plant located in NW Edmonton (CN Bissell Yard). Similar to the NSC built ore
cars, they operated in unit train fashion. Constructed by Procor at their Oakville Ontario plant between
1969 and 1980, the cars were lifetime leased to Inland Cement.
While comparable in

Thursday, 27 March 2025

March 2024 - Update

Boston and Maine Ry....BAM! Steve Myers found this on Facebook and added it to his collection. Thanks Steve.

Hi all just some views that were sent my way over the past month...enjoy the views...George Dutka

Ian Stronach's son Tom was in Enosburg Falls Vt. recently and took this photo of the caboose that is on display at the museum.

The generic freight house is an Osborn N scale kit that my friend Gary Pembleton is working on.

St. J&LC 2-8-0 engine no. 41 once a B&M engine. Bruce Douglas collection.
Began a FOS garage kit at the WOD/NMRA Craftsman Corner earlier this month at the Kitchener train show.

At the Kitchener Show Roger Chrysler was working on CPR 36' boxcars in company service using Accurail boxcars. I really like the weathering on this one which was done using AK pencils just streaked down. He wet the steaks a bit to blend it all in.

Monday, 24 March 2025

CNR - Georgetown, Ontario


A couple of postcard views of Georgetown, Ont. I have not been there in years. I am thinking maybe a trip might be in order to check out the station area and railfan too as the CN Halton sub can get busy at times. The junction with the Guelph sub is also located just west of the station called Silver...George Dutka          



Sunday, 23 March 2025

Caboose Office


The last of three cars Peter Mumby gave me that needed some work is completed. This MEC Life Like caboose had too many issues to get it back to operating condition. I decided to make it a yard office. I began by adding some graffiti in the form of calk marks which would have been the normal in that era.

I also added a lot of detail to the ground around the caboose and some additional things on the roof. The caboose was missing two steps and some of the handrails which are on the other side of the model which is OK as it will only be viewed from one side...George Dutka   

The caboose has a lot of rust included and trash around the base. All is glued to the model making it a drop-in scene. 

Some ground foam and weeds are also included in the mix.


Saturday, 22 March 2025

ITLA Outhouse - Updated

 


t normally take me some time to get back and add a bit extra to models I just completed. But this one was an easy chore. I added a tarpaper roof made from construction paper and stained the walls brownish with PanPastels...George Dutka  



Friday, 21 March 2025

Peter Mumby

Peter back in 2016 when we visited George's F&SM during the Fine Scale Expo.
Peter Mumby one of my best friends has passed yesterday morning at the age of 75. We have been friend for over 40 years. We have railfanned, modeled and attended family event over the years. His wife and mine have been in sorority and dinner clubs also through the years. I really miss you Peter. 

Peter has also helped me out throughout the years I have been posting on this blog. His Throwback Thursday was a weekly event. We also since I retired in 2009 till Covid in 2020 had our Monday afternoon workshops which where really fun. Sometimes we would work on something, other times we just ran a train or looked at photos on the computer.

I put together some photos I had taken of Peter over the years. Some have been on the blog but nice to visit again as a group telling a story of the fun times we had together...George Dutka

We has setup some scenes to photograph back in 2015.

Our local club layout visit to the WRD in 2019. Peter has his CV tee shirt on for the occasion.

WOD-NMRA "make and take" meet during 2012. We were building a Hunterline tunnel portal.

One of our Monday afternoon workshops back in 2016.

At the 2017 Rapido Dealers BBQ

June 2017 on our way to the Rapido dealers BBQ. We took our time doing a bit of railfanning.

The two of us during the 2016 Expo visiting George's layout.


A visit to Jim Sloan's home and layout during April 2019. We then hit the road railfanning around town and catching the Sperry Car on the spur downtown.

Peter doing some weathering to a boxcar at the Paris train show, we were working the WOD craftsman's corner booth 2020.

This was the last train show Peter's Trains was at before retirement at the end of 2019. It was the Kitchener show in November. Many of you that live in SWO or eastern Ontario would have seen Peter at the shows since the late 1970's. With Covid happening a few months later, and Peter's health being an issue after Covid he was not able to attend any more shows after March 2020.

A visit to Don Janes layout during 2017. Always nice to get a group photo.

Peter is holding up the mile post at Syracuse NY in March 2016.

Peter and I stopped by the Guilford PanAm yard in Portland Maine in March 2016.

Thursday, 20 March 2025

Napierville Junction Cabooses

NJ 36 caboose at Rouses Point NY on July 29 1975 David Hamley photo collection of Gordon Smith.
Gordon Smith a retired CP Dispatcher allowed me to publish his collection of Napierville Junction cabooses. I have a 3-D printed model kit of the view seen above which someday I hope to assemble...George Dutka 

NJ 38 at Rouses Point June 24, 1978. Gordon Smith collection.

NJ 39 at Rouses Point June 23, 1978. Gordon Smith collection.