Oregon Rail Heritage Center

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After visiting OMSI, Nathan and I walked over to the new Oregon Rail Heritage Center where the SP4449 Daylight, the SP&S 700, and the OR&N 197 (among other engines) now live.  The 700 is in the photo above.  If you’ve never walked around a large steam engine, it is hard to comprehend just how large these beautiful pieces of machinery truly are.  Were I born 100 years earlier, I no doubt would have been a locomotive engineer.

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The 700 slumbering in her new engine shed.

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The SP4449 work list.

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Running gear on an old GE Diesel Electric locomotive that also lives in the new Oregon Rail Heritage Center.

 

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A little diesel switcher sitting out in the yard.

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The OR&N 197 is in the middle of a full restoration job.

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The SP4449 Daylight is in the middle of an overhaul.  Every rivet and every weld has to be inspected.  All of the metal that holds in the mighty pressure of her boilers has to be checked for signs of wear and aging.  The last thing anyone would want would be a boiler explosion on this grand old locomotive.

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The space in the front of the engine is big enough to live inside!

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Drive wheels on the SP&S 700.

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SP4449 drive wheels.

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Looking into the cab of the SP&S 700.

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The booster engine lives in the rear wheels of the SP4449.

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A picture of the booster engine outside of the SP4449.

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The text from the above image:

4449 Booster Engine

This booster engine is a small two-cylinder steam engine back-gear-connected to the trailing truck axle on the locomotive. A rocking ilder gear permits it to be put into operation by the engineer.  The tractive effort of the 4449 booster engine is 11,500 lbs. It has been used 3 or 4 times since the 4449 was restored to service in 1974 as it uses a lot of steam and water.  Engineer McCormack recalls using the booster in 1975 pulling out of Chicago Union station and in 1984 pulling Vincent Hill in Tigard. This may be the only remaining booster engine on an operating steam locomotive.

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Some of the SP4449 and SP&S 700 rolling stock out in the yard.

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Another diesel engine sitting in the yard.  Several people appear to have their hobby engines stored at the facility.

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The National Register of Historic Places dedication plaque on the SP&S 700.

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Old machine tools that remind me of the tools at Steph’s work in Sydney.  Heather and I saw similar tools at the B&O Railroad Museum.

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IMG_6770One last look at the SP&S 700’s drive wheels.

 

OMSI with Nathan to see the Myth Busters Exhibit

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While waiting for a flight delay in Portland, Nathan and I went to the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry to kill a few hours.  There was a Myth Busters exhibit that we visited.  It was okay but not great.  I think it was more aimed at kids rather than adult engineers.  I think that this was a champagne bottle machine gun.

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An Electric Eel on the upper floor in the permanent exhibits.

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A cow in the mezzanine.

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Please DO NOT plug in the cow.  It runs all over the building and no one can catch it.

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Myth Busters shark.

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The old overhead crane in the power house.

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Another Myth Busters machine.

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A duct tape canoe.

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Rocket car motors.

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Beaver Dam Sabotage in Corvallis?

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The Dunawi Creek Wetlands behind Heather’s apartment has been full of water the last few weeks.  Today when we walked through the wetland we noticed that the water was much lower than normal.  At the upstream end of Starker Arts Park we found the beaver dam.  It appeared that someone had busted the dam open.

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Among the beaver and duck tracks, there were also a couple of human boot prints.

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This pile of sticks next to the hole in the beaver dam doesn’t strike me as something that a beaver would do when opening up their own dam to lower water levels.  Especially the shovel scoops of mud on top… that looks a bit suspicious.

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Did someone break apart this beaver dam or did the beavers do it themselves?  Is it a crime to destroy beaver building projects and hurt protected wetlands?

IMG_6683The scene of the dam breach.