Tuesday, March 8, 2016

DuPont SCLAIR Covered Hoppers

DuPont Canada's St Clair River site in Corunna, ON produced SCLAIR polyethylene resin, a revolutionary product developed in the late 1960's. A very visible, outwardly orange and winter white covered hopper car fleet plied the rails of North America publicizing the product for nearly forty years, such as NCLX 46548 on CN No 369 at Kingston on December 12, 2015 (above). According to a recent online report, there are only three cars from this formerly 140+ car fleet still seeing service: 46544, 46548 and 46551. Slightly smaller ones in 44600-series have been gone for a few years now, though fellow blogger Michael Hammond snapped one in Corunna, ON in 1993. Another online report places a line of Sclair cars in Norfolk Southern's Etna yard, near Pittsburgh's Azcon Scrap in 2006. Dead line!

DuPont Canada Inc rostered two series of cars of the same length, though the smaller cubic foot cars were of a lower external height and shorter internal length. Both series were built by American Car & Foundry:
  • DOCX 44601-44680 with an external length of 53'2" and capacity of 4460 cu ft. blt 1965.
  • DOCX 46501-46564 with an external length of 54'7" and a capacity of 4650 cu ft. blt 1969-72.
The 44600's may have extended into the 44700's. I noted 44747, plus 44761 also reported in orange.
The fleet was sold to Nova Chemicals, receiving NCLX reporting marks in 1995-1997 after the patented SCLAIRTECH line was acquired from DuPont Canada Inc. in mid-1994, significantly enhancing Nova's production while DuPont reshuffled their non-strategic product lines.

Way back in 1981, DOCX 44627 was off-spot for the Northern Telecom plant, which was served by CN's Industrial Spur and could have one to three Sclair cars spotted at any one time. Shown at the siding at the top end of the Cataraqui Spur, this photo usually engenders lots of interest due to these cars being equipped with friction bearing trucks:
In November 1980, friction bearing-equipped DOCX 44613 was also off-spot, held on Queens track 4, about four miles east of the Industrial Spur:
NCLX 44673 taken in  March, 2001 (online auction site photo):
NCLX 44608 off-spot at Kingston's Industrial Spur which served the 1971-built Northern Telecom (later Nortel and Nordx/CDT) plant on Gardiners Road, June 2000:
Before the plant closed in mid-2003, CN 4115-4118 are ready to leave the plant and re-enter the CN Kingston Sub, on August 9, 2000 (below). Sclair car NCLX 44612 is behind the units, having just been pulled. NCLX 44627, 44603, 44622 and 44623 were still on the plant's three tracks.
The Avens facility in Brockville still received shipments in occasional Sclair cars, like NCLX 46548 on October 9, 2012:

Here's another view of the Axens facility from the Development Drive side, taken in July, 2018. CP's trackage serving the plant is at rear:
This undated train show-acquired photo shows NCLX 44674:
My Sclair car observations: date, car number, CN train on, remarks:
Jan 20/80 DOCX 44611
Jun 7/83 DOCX 44623 on CN's Industrial Spur
Jun 22/84 DOCX 44605
Jul 6/84 DOCX 44623
Mar 30/92 DOCX 44612 to CN's Industrial Spur (with VIA 6312 in consist of local freight)
Jan 24/94 DOCX 44613 from Industrial Spur
Aug 9/87 NCLX 44687
Dec 6/97 NCLX 46556 on tailend of No 363
May 31/98 NCLX 44658 on No 318
Sep 12/98 NCLX 46527-46515
Apr 30/99 NCLX 44674 plus two more on No 306
Sep 28/99 NCLX 44675 in Don Yard, Toronto
May 17/00 NCLX 44601 to Industrial Spur
May 20/00 NCLX 44732 (could be Sclair?) on No 308 dest Moncton NB
Apr 29/01 NCLX 46557-44714 on No 306
Oct 2/01 NCLX 44604 for Industrial Spur
Nov 30/01 NCLX 44627 on Industrial Spur
Sep 6/03 NCLX 44747(sic) on No 369
Nov 22/03 NCLX 44644 on No 308 (from here on, only the three survivors)
Jun 15/06 NCLX 46548 on No 309
Jun 23/06 NCLX 46548 on No 369
Aug 11/11 NCLX 46544 at Belleville
Sep 2/11 NCLX 46xxx at Avens, Brockville
Dec 3/16 NCLX 46544 on No 376

One more...NCLX 46551 eastbound at Kingston on CN No 376 on August 6, 2016:
Eye-catching SCLAIR covered hopper models were produced in O scale by Weaver. 
Lots o' links;
Check out these retro video captures, kindly shared by Pierre Fournier, of a SCLAIR pair:
Might they represent one car from each series of SCLAIRS? Their heights seems to differ. The two cars were on CN No 307 in Quebec on October 21, 1998.
DOCX 46512, photographed by Bill Grandin in 1975, shared by Jim Parker:
DOCX 46563 photographed by Bill Grandin in July, 1979 and shared by Jim Parker:
NCLX 44611 with two fleetmates, from the Bill Grandin collection via Jim Parker:
Undated and uncredited nice photo of DOCX 44644:
SCLAIR fun fact: Alberta's Ben Alain passed along the location of an extant SCLAIR car - NCLX 46558 at the Joffre, AB (not Quebec!) NOVA refinery. Ben notes that the car is filled with a defined amount of concrete and used as a scale test car. Found it from my satellite! Pan around if you like.
More satellite view research! Google map view of the NOVA St Clair River site reveals two SCLAIR hoppers in the yard and one within the plant (all circled):
NOVEMBER 2016 update: NCLX 46548 four cars in on CN No 369 at Kingston. Thanks, Logan! 
JANUARY 2017 update: Logan had an eye for Sclair again and Jake Earle snapped this Sclair (most likely NCLX 46544) in Brockville yard with CN SD70M-2 8938, noting that Sclair cars are often handled by CN Nos 585/586:
April 2017 Update**** Paul Hunter kindly shared this photo of NCLX 46548 at the head-end of CN No 369 at Queens East:
January 2018 Update**** NCLX 46548 eastbound at Belleville during the free Railstream railcam preview period.
March 1, 2018 Update****  NCLX 46551 eastbound at Napanee on CN No 368 reported by Malcolm Peakman.
April 2018 Update**** NCLX 46544 link sent by Chris de Vries through Brockville on April 8 and Logan Cadue snapped NCLX 46548 eastbound at Kingston on April 20:
More SCLAIR OS's:
JUNE 2018: NCLX 46548 by Malcolm Peakman on CN No 368 June 14, back west on No 369 on June 24.
JULY 2018: NCLX 46551 video capture by Logan Cadue on CN No 369: 
Here's NCLX 46544 entering Belleville yard near the head-end of CN No 369 on May 10, 2019, in company of HPJX aluminum-ingot cars:
JUNE 26, 2019: David Thompson's video capture on CN No 369 at Coronation Boulevard:
JANUARY 2020: NCLX 46544 observed on CN No 369.
JANUARY 2021: NCLX 46548 on CN No 369.
MARCH 23, 2021 UPDATE: NCLX 46544 in Brockville on CN No 532, shared by Jake Earle:
MARCH 31, 2021: NCLX 46544 heads back west (image courtesy Railstream, LLC):
APRIL 9, 2021 UPDATE: NCLX 46551 on CN No 517 at Belleville (image courtesy RailStream, LLC) 
DECEMBER 2, 2021 FINAL UPDATE: All three in-service Sclairs were marshalled together on CN No 509, photographed by Marc Dease:

Billed for set-out to Zubick's Scrap in London via MDC:
An homage of sorts, CBFX 310368? covered hopper in full Sclair graffiti, eastbound on CN No 368 on December 18, 2024 (grainy zoom cellphone image from five storeys up!):
Running extra...

Graphics guru Randy O'Brien shared his version of the NOTROPHY trophy. Lost the thread there...but noticed the spikes!

On the buses! Facebook friend Richard Sun snapped Kingston Transit 1502 - unique! The only KT-scheme NOVA bus in the fleet - all others in the 1500-series wear the beautiful blue Kingston Express livery.
How to spot trains. British version. 

Winnipeg's Isaac Raymond snapped a perfectly mundane CN intermodal train photo this week. Unique angle, eh? 
RDC-1 RPDX (ex-VIA) 6133 travelled from Moncton, NB to Toronto's MacMillan Yard on March 2 second-last in the consist of CN No 305. Snapped along its route by many including Michael Delic in Whitby. On its way to preservation, the redolent RDC shared the train with a Canadian Forces Leopard 2 tank!

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

NOTROPHY - NoTrain Photography!

Morningstar Road, Trenton in August 2002, now overgrown
Yonder stands a telegraph pole,
Standing stately in the grass.
Its wood all weathered,
Its long arms outstretched
toward me, yon unsuccessful failfan.
Its wires insulated from cold and wet,
Shrouded in sun, mist and the gathering gloam.
Since there's no train in my path,
I snapped it, went home, and had a bath.

NoTrophy* (a short form of NOTRainphotOgraPHY) is a recognized trackside syndrome characterized by train photography completely unfettered by trains. Don't worry, it happens to everyone at some point. If it lasts more than four hours, don't consult your doctor. Just go home and come back tomorrow.

What NoTrophy is:
  • taking photos of everything in your trackside surroundings except trains
  • a product of a low level of distraction coupled with a high degree of boredom
  • successful continued operation of your camera in the complete absence of trains
  • experienced during a lull, unexpected event, derailment or simply stinking bad luck
What NoTrophy is not:
  • a substitute for train photography
  • something you should share online unless you're looking for empathy
  • art - though it is artful albeit in a trainless sort of way
  • something to be proud of - you got skunked!
I'd like to present some of my best NoTrophy (or if you prefer, my worst railfanning) photos along with some examples of NoTrophy poetry I came up with to describe the bleak and desperate futility of NoTrophy:

There once was a fan of NoTrophy
Whose railfanning was one big catastrophe
after another. Each day,
No trains got in the way
Of his cameras len's, (oops, wrong apostrophe)
No trains at Napanee West
Silence
See no train
On horizon either way
Home for good
Airhorns
Zero trains at Portage, 1985
Why
Am I here
No trains to be seen
Point and shoot
Birds
Rail anchor at Belleville
Ballast is grey
Coal is black,
Shooting NoTrophy
Tomorrow come back!
Lull on CN's Rivers Sub west of Portage, 1984
I brought my camera, look at me,
While trackside, not a train I see.
Does that deter me? No, not I,
What's that, grey ballast that I spy?
A groundhog brown, geese flying by?
Images to my camera card now fly.
When I get home, downcast and sad,
My NoTrophy photos don't look half-bad!
No trains - mouse on a pile of cut up ties, 1979
There once was a railfan most daffy
Who dabbled in no-train photography
Every pastoral scene
Without trains to be seen
Hung in frames on his wall, kinda laughy.
No trains - beautifully bucolic barn, 2015
Sunrise, sunset's siren call,
Winter spring, summer, fall..
Every season gives me reason
To photograph no trains at all.
Notrophy supplies with silent scanner, 2015
Boxes of donuts, cups of coffee all past,
Book all read, magazines don't last.
Scanner's as quiet as a tomb,
Batteries charged, camera card still has room.
A foreman calls for track and time,
My fortunes spiral on a dime.
I snap a bush, a creek, a tree.
Hey, I'm engaging in NoTrophy!

If you know someone who may be experiencing NoTrophy, encourage them to seek help before it's too late. Consult a knowledgeable railfan source, become familiar with train times in your area, and learn when to cut your losses when nothing's rolling. NoTrophy can be eradicated. But it's up to all of us.
American NoTrophy in the Land of the Free and the Home of No Trains Virginia, 2015

Running extra...

Sharp-eyed Trackside Treasure reader Max Palinski found the two "400"s in the last, 400th post. Congratulations and enjoy your prize on its way to you. Honourable mentions to Malcolm Peakman , JP and phoenix'ed!

Check out Steve Boyko's "10 Questions" series on his Confessions of a Train Geek blog, to learn more about some of Canada's foremost railfans. Now there are way more than ten railfans in the list!

CN has now run two eastbound potash unit trains in the past week from Alwinsal SK to Saint John NB. On Saturday, February 27 I caught No 730 at 1630 hours as it ripped through Kingston with CN 2921-2809 on the head-end and DPU 3005 pushing on the tail end of 22,810 tons in 151 cars! All at over 50 mph. Youtube video here ends after 25 seconds when my camera battery dies. You didn't really want to see all 151 cars anyway...

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Kingston-Toronto Return Trip, January 2016

We arrived in Toronto a little early on January 22 aboard VIA No 651: 905-4003-4113-4119-4104. Getting permission from the VIA crew to grab a quick photo of the head-end, I made sure to grab a photo of Amtrak's head-end too - on the adjacent track!
At the same time, an eastbound Lakeshore West GO train was inbound, including Metrolinx-scheme bilevels. Oh, old baggage cart, if only you could speak...
Amtrak's Maple Leaf, train No 64 usually departs five minutes before VIA No 651 arrives. Since we arrived early, I had to time to grab a quick head-end photo before the train left on its way to arrival in The Big Apple at 2150. Engine, engine number 9:
VIA HEP2 meet Amtrak I:
A last, lingering look at the signal line-equipped, snow-covered rear door and marker lights showed that the Amtrak crew was aboard and departure was imminent. Gone in 60 seconds!
Since 651's passengers had hurried off the now-reversed escalator to the TTC subway, concourse, Starbucks or wherever, I had to go to the next exit, which was a good, old-fashioned staircase. Some artist's renderings were propped up against the tarnished trainshed supports. Like a translucent plastic takeout container held up by chopsticks:
In the Great Hall, the unfluttering flags were still as gossamer-shrouded glasswork:
Amtrak has departed and slid off the Departures board:
Afraid of heights?
 Street level at Dundas and University: Kit & Ace is technical performance clothing.
Clara Hughes and friends' mental health ALRV:
Not the Flatiron building, but close - the Gooderham building - Church Street at Wellington/Front Streets with the Cathedrals of Capitalism in the background:
I was good. I promised myself I would not photograph any of the 20 GO consists and 4 UP Express trains that entered or left the west end of Union Station between 1600 and 1700. But if a VIA or two entered the scene...VIA 913 is leaving as 915 stays behind:
VIA 913 departs westward as No 83 to London with a 50/50 seating consist: 3472-3464-3371-3304-3367-3305:
Then it was aboard VIA No 48 for return to Kingston: 920-4009-4108-4116-4111. Gotta post this before the next trip, marching ever closer in March! Four-hundredth Trackside Treasure post! Feeling sharp-eyed? Find two "400" 's in this post, email or comment to win a prize! 

Running extra...

Spring is on the way. Some are planning their gardens. Some are wishing the snow would melt. Some are planning the 2016 Front Porch Layout. Me! It involves a 14x28 box, a transfer plate/cassette, my plethoric panoply of two-bay cement hoppers and tons o'fun!

Thanks to brother Dave for scanning some vintage slides taken by my Dad. Transcontinental trip in 1968 began with...can you guess? Head-end photo - I'm the glum no-fun son!
Tonight on Jeopardy...two railway-related clues. Created in 1971, it took over from bankrupt railroads like Penn Central...? Amtrak. This ballistically-named Japanese train...? Bullet train. What is...a one-track mind?