Welcome Visitor. First time here? Like what you see? Bookmark us for when you are bored, and check out 'top shots' and 'fantastic (editors choice)' in the menu above, you won't be dissapointed. Join our community! click here to sign up for an account today. Sick of this message? Get rid of it by logging-in here.



IC 6250 made for an unlikely yet welcome leader on Z122 as it cruised through the countryside between Princeton and Paris.  Issues with the trailing GE's meant that the IC got to go along for the trip all the way to Montreal.
Copyright Notice: This image ©Joseph Bishop all rights reserved.



Caption: IC 6250 made for an unlikely yet welcome leader on Z122 as it cruised through the countryside between Princeton and Paris. Issues with the trailing GE's meant that the IC got to go along for the trip all the way to Montreal.

Photographer:
Joseph Bishop [717] (more) (contact)
Date: 03/16/2024 (search)
Railway: Canadian National (search)
Reporting Marks: IC 6250 (search)
Train Symbol: CN Z122 (search)
Subdivision/SNS: CN Dundas Subdivision (search)
City/Town: Princeton (search)
Province: Ontario (search)
Share Link: http://www.railpictures.ca/?attachment_id=54089
Click here to Log-in or Register and add your vote.

19 Favourites
Photographers like Gold.Log-in or Register to show appreciation
View count: 699 Views

Share this image on Facebook, Twitter or email using the icons below
Photo ID: 52774

Sorry, there is no map for this photo. Photographer did not add GPS co-ordinates. Please add next time or ask for a correction to this photo.



All comments must be positive in nature and abide by site rules. Anything else may be removed without warning.

12 Comments
  1. Fantastic catch! I think we know what the odds of that ever happening again is.

  2. Rare these days!

    It seemed like those were trailing on literally every third manifest freight back in 2006-2008, before the big SD40 purge. Those few 6200′s, the 6000′s, and the 6100′s (mostly repainted CN) were all regulars.

  3. @MrDan: I remember that. Never got one leading though. I only was able to get a clear shot of one trailing when the power pulled ahead. Adds to the rarity of this event. The black SD70s led a few times however.

  4. Most foreign power would either change at battle creek or Sarnia before it got through. Especially the IC SD40-2s but they did lead.

    Edit: these are the only examples on the site before this weekends foam fest:

    Jason Noe:

    http://www.railpictures.ca/?attachment_id=28329

    James Gardiner:

    http://www.railpictures.ca/?attachment_id=10879

    As Dan stated, there would have been a couple a week or a few a month at least back in this era, and even if they did lead…. nobody really cared as it was kinda normal back then. IC wasn’t as interesting as some of the other types were (ATSF of all kinds, BN, TFM, DRGW, CR, UP, anything, we had tonnes – it just happened all the time in the mid 2000′s)

  5. There’s a strong chance you’ll see one of these on the Toronto hump jobs too. Just wait :)

  6. In all honesty though Steve, both Jason’s and James’ photos are of the trailing units uncoupled from their trains doing work. Technically not the same as a full blown leader. That’d be like saying I shot a light power move with a British engine trailing and calling it the leader lol.

  7. @MrDan: Certainly saw those IC SD40s trail a lot too in that time period in Montreal.

  8. Joe, let’s not take away from Jason or James’ shots – it’s leading the movement. It’s uncoupled, photographically it makes no difference. My point is it happened, and even more so, as Dan and I are saying, since we were there then, it absolutely led, just not often. Usually in trail.

    There were so many IC’s floating around, while they didn’t often lead in Canada, they did, and you’ll just have to wait to see if someone will share their photos of it. I’m confident they led all the way to Toronto a couple times, to Sarnia a few more times, and to Battle Creek or Port Huron much more.

    Here’s some OS’s from back then – 2006 to 2009 on a quick search. Note that 6250 has led before in 2007.

    392 by Blue Island 22:30, IC 6250, CN 56??, CN 5706, CN 5322

    356 by Blue Island 08:30, IC 6201, CN 5625, 101 cars.

    (356 may have terminated in Sarnia)

    X392 departed Blue Island 17:45, IC 6256, CN 5562

    Train 390 by Harvey 23:10, IC 6112, GTW 5949, CSX 8756, IC 6203, 102 car

  9. I don’t recall an IC SD40-2 leading in Southern Ontario before, so this is a truly rare catch. Reverse moves are a great opportunity to get an open photo of trailing locomotives, but I don’t consider that leading a train. For example, I once photographed a former Erie Mining C-420 trailing on a consist backing into CP’s Welland Yard; I don’t consider that leading a CP train on the Hamilton Sub.!

  10. The youtube video is clearly not a reversing movement and it’s in Southern Ontario.

    Yes it’s been quite rare, the two photos posted are what we had on the site and posted for information. They are still very nice photos and shouldn’t be discounted just because of railfan’s convention. They’re also nicely sun lit too!

    The youtube video shows and proves they did lead in the era Dan and I are talking about though.

    Still very rare.

  11. Steve forgot CN #454 on 02-24-2007 with IC 6256 leading CP 5720! Lead all the way to Mac Yard!

    Most of the time, those trailed CN power. But they were like cockroaches at a sketchy 3rd rate food diner: all over the place. Even IC 6071, the original 645-powered EMD demonstrator SD40 (now preserved), made it into Canada trailing CN power.

Railpictures.ca © 2006-2024 all rights reserved. Photographs are copyright of the photographer and used with permission
Terms and conditions | About us