Howdy everyone!
Thanks to all who liked my stuff!
Flo - I didn't make it in here for breakfast, so I'll have a fried bologna sandwich, a bowl of vegetable beef soup,
a small side salad with thousand Island dressing and coffee.
Curt - thanks for the comment on the market and Wabco photos
Justin - I like your new avatar. It's good that you got the GP40 up and running. Ahh . . . so that's what C&O did
with their cinders.
Mikey - thanks for the favorable comment on the refrigeration unit and the turntable. I've been in Wabco a
handfull of times. With a lot of the old buildings built in the late 1800's, it's a very interesting, neat place.
George Westinghouse liked architecture and it was prevalent in his buildings. ↓ Look at the photos down below ↓
Sherrel - Thanks for the SD40-2's! My gas grille and chair will fit right in on those porches
Here's a couple of C-46 RV's for you . . . beautiful aircraft!
Willie - the Cutter store is a lot like two in my area. I live midway between two Amish communities and one store
caters to them and the other store owner is into antique, vintage anything from old-time candy to wine barrels. He
even makes birch beer and 25 flavors of ice cream.
Actually the roof unit on the market is the refrigeration condenser for the freezers and I will take the blame for
that, as I didn't properly describe it. I did however, build a roof A/C unit this morning. The glue and paint is drying
and will post some photos later today.
Bob - All the best for your sister.
Here's a pair of photos related to the WABCO turntable I posted yesterday (post #267)
This first one is the same building, 108 years later in 2013. But the turntable is gone.
The second photo is Wabco's old office building. Like I told Mikey above, George Westinghouse incorporated
style in all of his buildings. They don't make them like this anymore.