Interesting 10 second clip from a local maryland radio station about csx relaying infrustructure in the yard at Cumberland. Now take this information as you like.
https://www.wcbcradio.com/?news=the-hum ... cumberland
radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
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radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
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Re: radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
Reconfiguring yard lead to have slight grade to facilitate faster flat switching vs. a full hump. Not sure if they plan to do like at Walbridge where the switches are all powered and are controlled by computer based on switch lists.
Not that obvious
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Re: radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
Some interesting commentary from Railway Age about CSX’s efforts to demolish the humps at Cumberland, Willard, and Hamlet.
Worth the read.
https://www.railwayage.com/freight/clas ... the-humps/
Worth the read.
https://www.railwayage.com/freight/clas ... the-humps/
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Re: radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
I'd really like to see the data on daily car classification counts across the entire system. At least theoretically, the number of classifications post-PSR should be significantly lower. If it is, and thus there has been a reduction in cars to classify, then it would make sense to close the humps permanently. The number often thrown around is 800-1200 cars a day to make a hump operationally worth it.GP30M4216 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 30, 2024 10:54 pmSome interesting commentary from Railway Age about CSX’s efforts to demolish the humps at Cumberland, Willard, and Hamlet.
Worth the read.
https://www.railwayage.com/freight/clas ... the-humps/
But take Willard - lots of stuff bypasses the yard that used to go through it via smarter blocking - a key pillar of PSR that was a significant positive change from the maelstrom of changes. Therefore, the traffic there to be processed is much lower and may no longer, and probably never, justify the hump.
Another factor is that the Big Class ones are still only 25-30 years old in their present form. A lot of the major humps were misplaced in present operations. With operations now firmly established, and the coal traffic no longer printing enough money to cover the gremlins in the carload network, it was high time to re-evaluate the networks.
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Re: radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
Cumberland Yard improvements will enable CSX to reroute traffic to the former B&O main line
By Bill Stephens | November 11, 2024
Trains Magazkn
Source with some photos: https://www.trains.com/trn/news-reviews ... main-line/
A pair of trains operating between the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic will return to their natural routing instead of going around the horn via Selkirk, N.Y.
Email Newsletter Get the newest photos, videos, stories, and more from Trains.com brands. Sign-up for email today!
CSX is nearing completion of improvements at Cumberland Yard in Maryland that include new yard leads and ladders. CSX
AMELIA ISLAND, Fla.— CSX is wrapping up work at Cumberland Yard in Maryland that will enable the former Baltimore & Ohio main line to handle merchandise traffic moving between the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest that’s currently routed the long way around via Selkirk, N.Y., on the former New York Central Water Level Route.
CSX has been running the carload freight via the hump yard at Selkirk because Cumberland has lacked the necessary switching capacity due to a combination of being converted to a flat-switching facility and the subsequent removal of yard tracks, says Chief Operating Officer Mike Cory, who joined the railroad in September 2023.
CSX will reroute a pair of merchandise trains to the former Baltimore & Ohio route via Cumberland, Md., that currently run via Selkirk, N.Y. CSX
Shifting the freight to its natural routing via Cumberland will eliminate 29 million out-of-route miles per year, reduce car handlings by 59,000 annually, cut transit time, and produce $15 million in direct operational cost savings, Cory said at the railroad’s investor day last week.
The yard reconfiguration included demolishing the hump and hump tower. Three new switching leads and an additional 4,600-foot classification track were added. The switching leads, equipped with automated hydraulic switches, access 30 classification tracks.
Cumberland currently handles about 350 cars per day. Once the improvements are complete next month, the yard’s switching capacity will rise to more than 850 cars per day.
And then CSX will be able to shift a daily merchandise train pair to a Mid-Atlantic-Midwest routing via Cumberland. This will free up capacity at Selkirk, which will then be able to handle growth in paper, forest products, and waste traffic from former Pan Am Railways territory in New England.
Cumberland also will regain switching work that had been parceled out among smaller yards along the B&O, including Connellsville, Pa., and Brunswick, Md. Bringing the work back to Cumberland will save an average of 16 hours of transit time per car, Cory says, while reducing the number of local jobs operating at the outlying yards. Currently merchandise trains set out traffic that needs to be switched at the smaller yards, and the following day’s train then picks it up.
The return of a pair of merchandise trains to the former B&O also means CSX will be able to more efficiently take locomotives to and from the shop at Cumberland. Currently CSX often uses premium intermodal trains to deliver locomotives to the shop.
In May, CSX announced that it was making improvements at its former hump yards in Cumberland, Hamlet, N.C., and Willard, Ohio, which began operating as flat-switching facilities in 2017 as part of the railroad’s shift to a Precision Scheduled Railroading operating model.
None of the yards had the volume required to support classification via their humps and outdated retarder systems, which are expensive to maintain. Later on some tracks in the classification bowls in all three yards were crudely stub-ended, with piles of dirt and rocks serving as makeshift bumper posts. The changes limited the yards’ switching capacity, Cory says, while also making operations inefficient.
The railroad spent about $40 million on the yard improvements without increasing its capital budget for this year. CSX was able to free up funding for the work two ways, Cory says. First, giving track gangs longer work blocks has improved maintenance of way productivity across the system. Second, CSX has been able to postpone some capacity projects by making operational changes.
The biggest of the three yard projects, by far, is at Cumberland. “We’re completely remaking the yard,” Cory says.
CSX Chief Operating Officer Mike Cory speaks at the railroad’s investor day on Nov. 7, 2024. CSX
Cumberland is one of the places where CSX continued to shove traffic over the hump while flat switching. “It’s something I’m not a big fan of,” Cory says, noting that blind shoves over and down a hump pose a derailment risk as well as a safety hazard for yard crews.
At Willard, CSX connected the pulldown to the departure yard. Previously yard crews had to spend 15 to 20 minutes performing run-around moves in order to get traffic from one side of the yard to the other. “We had to run around ourselves about three times,” Cory says.
The changes allowed CSX to boost Willard’s switching volume by a couple hundred cars.
Yard productivity has been hampered at Hamlet, where bowl tracks were severed at the hump, forcing switching to be done at the pulldown end of the yard. Plus, control of Hamlet’s switches had been transferred to the yardmaster in Charlotte, N.C., which sometimes resulted in switching delays at Hamlet.
Improvements at Hamlet include automating switches — returning control to local crews — and reconfiguring the lead, Cory says.
CSX is considering making similar efficiency improvements at yards in Indianapolis, Ind.; Louisville, Ky.; Atlanta; Montgomery, Ala.; Richmond, Va.; and Waycross, Ga.
At a time when it’s hard to hire and retain train crews, Cory says boosting yard productivity is essential so that CSX can get the most out of each yard crew.
Cory says he and Casey Albright, the railroad’s senior vice president of network operations and service design, have taken a collaborative approach with local operations leaders regarding yard improvements.
“It sounds simple, but when you bring people together and you include them and you allow them to say what they think – wow,” Cory said during an investor day presentation.
In Cumberland, this led to a revelation: A yard track, hidden behind a line of trees and used to store locomotives, could instead be freed up for live switching operations.
“Why were they storing them there?” CEO Joe Hinrichs asked Cory on the investor day stage.
“They were storing them there because they were afraid someone was going to rip the track up even more,” Cory says, adding that new rail had been installed on the yard track just three years ago.
By Bill Stephens | November 11, 2024
Trains Magazkn
Source with some photos: https://www.trains.com/trn/news-reviews ... main-line/
A pair of trains operating between the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic will return to their natural routing instead of going around the horn via Selkirk, N.Y.
Email Newsletter Get the newest photos, videos, stories, and more from Trains.com brands. Sign-up for email today!
CSX is nearing completion of improvements at Cumberland Yard in Maryland that include new yard leads and ladders. CSX
AMELIA ISLAND, Fla.— CSX is wrapping up work at Cumberland Yard in Maryland that will enable the former Baltimore & Ohio main line to handle merchandise traffic moving between the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest that’s currently routed the long way around via Selkirk, N.Y., on the former New York Central Water Level Route.
CSX has been running the carload freight via the hump yard at Selkirk because Cumberland has lacked the necessary switching capacity due to a combination of being converted to a flat-switching facility and the subsequent removal of yard tracks, says Chief Operating Officer Mike Cory, who joined the railroad in September 2023.
CSX will reroute a pair of merchandise trains to the former Baltimore & Ohio route via Cumberland, Md., that currently run via Selkirk, N.Y. CSX
Shifting the freight to its natural routing via Cumberland will eliminate 29 million out-of-route miles per year, reduce car handlings by 59,000 annually, cut transit time, and produce $15 million in direct operational cost savings, Cory said at the railroad’s investor day last week.
The yard reconfiguration included demolishing the hump and hump tower. Three new switching leads and an additional 4,600-foot classification track were added. The switching leads, equipped with automated hydraulic switches, access 30 classification tracks.
Cumberland currently handles about 350 cars per day. Once the improvements are complete next month, the yard’s switching capacity will rise to more than 850 cars per day.
And then CSX will be able to shift a daily merchandise train pair to a Mid-Atlantic-Midwest routing via Cumberland. This will free up capacity at Selkirk, which will then be able to handle growth in paper, forest products, and waste traffic from former Pan Am Railways territory in New England.
Cumberland also will regain switching work that had been parceled out among smaller yards along the B&O, including Connellsville, Pa., and Brunswick, Md. Bringing the work back to Cumberland will save an average of 16 hours of transit time per car, Cory says, while reducing the number of local jobs operating at the outlying yards. Currently merchandise trains set out traffic that needs to be switched at the smaller yards, and the following day’s train then picks it up.
The return of a pair of merchandise trains to the former B&O also means CSX will be able to more efficiently take locomotives to and from the shop at Cumberland. Currently CSX often uses premium intermodal trains to deliver locomotives to the shop.
In May, CSX announced that it was making improvements at its former hump yards in Cumberland, Hamlet, N.C., and Willard, Ohio, which began operating as flat-switching facilities in 2017 as part of the railroad’s shift to a Precision Scheduled Railroading operating model.
None of the yards had the volume required to support classification via their humps and outdated retarder systems, which are expensive to maintain. Later on some tracks in the classification bowls in all three yards were crudely stub-ended, with piles of dirt and rocks serving as makeshift bumper posts. The changes limited the yards’ switching capacity, Cory says, while also making operations inefficient.
The railroad spent about $40 million on the yard improvements without increasing its capital budget for this year. CSX was able to free up funding for the work two ways, Cory says. First, giving track gangs longer work blocks has improved maintenance of way productivity across the system. Second, CSX has been able to postpone some capacity projects by making operational changes.
The biggest of the three yard projects, by far, is at Cumberland. “We’re completely remaking the yard,” Cory says.
CSX Chief Operating Officer Mike Cory speaks at the railroad’s investor day on Nov. 7, 2024. CSX
Cumberland is one of the places where CSX continued to shove traffic over the hump while flat switching. “It’s something I’m not a big fan of,” Cory says, noting that blind shoves over and down a hump pose a derailment risk as well as a safety hazard for yard crews.
At Willard, CSX connected the pulldown to the departure yard. Previously yard crews had to spend 15 to 20 minutes performing run-around moves in order to get traffic from one side of the yard to the other. “We had to run around ourselves about three times,” Cory says.
The changes allowed CSX to boost Willard’s switching volume by a couple hundred cars.
Yard productivity has been hampered at Hamlet, where bowl tracks were severed at the hump, forcing switching to be done at the pulldown end of the yard. Plus, control of Hamlet’s switches had been transferred to the yardmaster in Charlotte, N.C., which sometimes resulted in switching delays at Hamlet.
Improvements at Hamlet include automating switches — returning control to local crews — and reconfiguring the lead, Cory says.
CSX is considering making similar efficiency improvements at yards in Indianapolis, Ind.; Louisville, Ky.; Atlanta; Montgomery, Ala.; Richmond, Va.; and Waycross, Ga.
At a time when it’s hard to hire and retain train crews, Cory says boosting yard productivity is essential so that CSX can get the most out of each yard crew.
Cory says he and Casey Albright, the railroad’s senior vice president of network operations and service design, have taken a collaborative approach with local operations leaders regarding yard improvements.
“It sounds simple, but when you bring people together and you include them and you allow them to say what they think – wow,” Cory said during an investor day presentation.
In Cumberland, this led to a revelation: A yard track, hidden behind a line of trees and used to store locomotives, could instead be freed up for live switching operations.
“Why were they storing them there?” CEO Joe Hinrichs asked Cory on the investor day stage.
“They were storing them there because they were afraid someone was going to rip the track up even more,” Cory says, adding that new rail had been installed on the yard track just three years ago.
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Re: radio station and csx in cumberland maryland.
Yup, Ive been chatting with a couple of posters in some New England Railfanning facebook groups and they tell me that up to two pairs, maybe more could be rerouted away from Selkirk to make room there to avoid having trains backhaul to Rigby Yard in Portland Maine. Sounds like the original csx main between Willard-Cumberland-Philly-Baltimore could get busier with manifests and such.
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