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#2
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http://www.tvrail.com/pages/our-collection-of-equipment
Tennessee Valley Railway has operated several engines, 3 of them steam-fired, for many years, including the period covered by the Twilight War.
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"Let's roll." Todd Beamer, aboard United Flight 93 over western Pennsylvania, September 11, 2001. |
#3
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Of course the UK is filled with a large number of preserved steam locomotives and also an increasing number of preserved diesels, a number of these engaging in RL mainline railtours.
Although you'd have a problem with lines cut as a result of the nukes in any T2K game. |
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Swaghauler's mentioning of improvised "rail service" make me look for pics.
Here are some i found. ![]() ![]() I expect a lot of these rail runners would pop up in areas where the military did not destroy the rail lines. |
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The bonus with these lightweights is that they are a lot more forgiving and don't need to have the heavy duty steel rails in use today. They can reliably function on rails made from timber such as those used for mining carts in the 16th & 17th century and even for rail into the 19th century as witnessed in the photo below from New Zealand.
![]() Source of image: http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/schol...6Rail029a.html For more info, there's a decent report of early rail lines at the following wiki link. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permanent_way_(history) |
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They are a bit fancier than the one in Africa, but the concept is spot on. It's amazing how resourceful the "third world" can be. NOTHING is wasted. Not even rusty metal, plastic or old cloth.
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Twilight Today or Twilight 2009 if you will... | General Pain | Twilight 2000 Forum | 17 | 06-27-2009 03:22 PM |