In a message dated 7/7/2006 7:21:44 AM Eastern Daylight Time, pontiac_@_dreamscape.com writes: Just FWIW - Rotting hulks are a fact of preservation life. Doesn't the one preserved U34CH still run? If it suffered a major failure, or even a minor one of a fairly unique part, the same part might be able to be robbed from the unit in the photo link a lot more easily if it were stuffed and mounted as a "rotting hulk" somewhere. GE units of the U-series in particular are extremely rare in operation - I've read there was no support for them when old, like there is for EMD units or even ALCo's - it's along the lines of owning a '55 Packard. You can't go down to Pep Boys and get many parts for one of those, nor can you go to many salvage yards and find parts for one. This unit appears to have suffered an electrical fire in the battery compartment. But it looks like it was serviceable recently, the paint appears fresh. It may be a bargian figured at around $100 per ton scrap price. One example of keeping hulks around, the Adarondack RR has had four operational EMDs, F units and a GP7, but also has or has had at least three FL9s as parts sources - they came in unservicable, but provided parts for the other units. How many remain I am not sure. Any unit like that can be stuffed and mounted as a display and still used as a parts source. It will always be worth the scrap value, which is likely only to go up as China becomes more industrialized. A few excellent points there!!! I don't know how much it would cost to repair or purchase, but there was another U-34CH (the 4180) that was recently retired in April of this year... Anyone know the status of this one?? Thanks, Steve The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List Sponsored by the ELH&TS http://www.elhts.org ------------------------------
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