The thrid slab train has a little more power than the first two; a UP AC44W, SD9043MAC and a WE SD40-3 up front and two Geeps on the back.
7355 leads his train of slabs into Rook where he'll wait for an empty coke train to arrive before continuing west on the old P&WV.
The only WE train I've ever seen.... isn't even really a WE train.
Special high and wide test train to check for clearances of double stack containers.
I wonder if the "hogger" is laughing at the herald directly below him?
Before the handsome black and orange paint scheme was introduced, the W&LE presented a rather threadbare appearance, as evidenced by this pair of secondhand units.
A very light frosting of snow dusts two W&LE units at the railroad's Rook Yard in suburban Pittsburgh.
392's power idles outside the Rook yard office.
Finding two engines in Rio Grande paint is becoming rare, but who would think that they'd be sitting side-by-side in Western Pennsylvania! Two ex-D&RGW units sit in the W&LE's Rook Yard.
Right after 392 departed Rook, this pair of light engines arrived from the west.
Dispatching the Pittsburgh East Desk
Loads west, empties east summarizes the movement of coke on the east end of the W&LE.
W&LE 107 in AC&Y paint sits at the west end of the ex-P&WV Rook Yard
W&LE's attractive paint scheme stands out nicely against the barren winter landscape.
This scene at Rook clearly illustrates what the east end of the W&LE is all about, coke. Empty coke hoppers are behind the 303, while the 102 is attached to a string of loads.