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I was out doing some night shots in Hamilton and saw the Bunge critter working to bring empty meal hoppers into the plant for loading. After they'd dropped some loads in the yard, they stopped on Victoria Ave to throw one of the switches on either side of the road long enough for me to grab a couple of shots from the corner at Burlington Street. It was a fun evening for night shots, as later on I came across 555 at NSC.
Copyright Notice: This image ©James Knott all rights reserved.



Caption: I was out doing some night shots in Hamilton and saw the Bunge critter working to bring empty meal hoppers into the plant for loading. After they'd dropped some loads in the yard, they stopped on Victoria Ave to throw one of the switches on either side of the road long enough for me to grab a couple of shots from the corner at Burlington Street. It was a fun evening for night shots, as later on I came across 555 at NSC.

Photographer:
James Knott [534] (more) (contact)
Date: 05/31/2019 (search)
Railway: Industrial (search)
Reporting Marks: Not Provided
Train Symbol: Not Provided
Subdivision/SNS: CVO Lead (search)
City/Town: Hamilton (search)
Province: Ontario (search)
Share Link: http://www.railpictures.ca/?attachment_id=38141
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Photo ID: 36948

Map courtesy of Open Street Map

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10 Comments
  1. Is it just me or is there no knuckle in the west end coupler? Guessing they may never pull cars from that end lol

  2. Yeah they just pull the cars from the one end into the plant then shove them back to the yard. Just back and forth between the plant and the meal yard, so I guess they would only need the one. These are the kinds of things I never even notice without someone pointing them out.

  3. Good design feature to always carry a second set of coupler components haha. Awesome shot btw, industrial Hamilton at its finest.

  4. It also has the ‘ Link and Pin ‘ drawhead below the standard coupler, from it’s original owner, Dominion Steel & Coal/ DOSCO. That would be for pulling spacer buggies in/out of the furnace areas.

  5. I’ve never seen this unit in operation but I’m hoping it will come out from behind the fence again.

  6. The next time it moves will be to be scrapped.

  7. Hoisted by crane onto truck today for a second life in an electric arc furnace.

  8. Maybe it will come back as a knuckle for a coupler.

  9. Great night photo Jamie. Did the critter even have a #?

  10. It did not. They are identified in the TSG by serial number. A large number of critters do not have numbers.

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