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A LIFE SPENT CHASING TRAINS

  1. Trains
  2. 2012

Chile 2012 - F cab and box cabs 🇨🇱

Since my last visit to Chile in 2004 I've been planning to return, and this year all the pieces fell into place. And these are the results, which I hope you will enjoy. I think the two railways featured in this gallery, the Antofagasta and Bolivia (FCAB) and the Ferrocarril Tocopilla al Toco (FCTT) of mining company Soqumich are possibly among the most interesting operations anywhere in the world. The FCAB is a heavy haul metre gauge railway, on which Chile and Bolivia's mining industries rely. In Chile copper mining has enjoyed a boom over the past decade, hence the power hungry FCAB's acquisition of second hand power from Australia, Colombia and Canada.
North of Antofagasta SQM's nitrate extraction and processing operation, the last in Chile, continues at Maria Elena and Pedro de Valdivia in the harsh conditions of the nitrate pampa. The finished product is shipped over the former FCTT to Tocopilla for export, which despite the acquisition of modern electric power still relies on their 85 year old 1500v GE box cabs over the difficult ascent/descent of the coast range, on which the gradient is never less than 1 in 25 (4%). But the box cabs days probably are numbered, so long as the railway and their locomotive builder - Casa Grande Motori in Santiago - can iron out the bugs in the new locomotives, which were assembled locally from imported components (from Siemens?). We shall see. The final few pictures were taken in the rain on Saturday with Santiago resident Alan Miller during my stopover on the way home, we chased two trains carrying domestic waste from Santiago to a land fill site at Montenegro, a Chilean bin-liner. Results were mixed thanks to a greasy rail (no Railhead Treatment Trains here).

Finally, Chile is a great place to visit whether you are in to trains or not. The country is endlessly fascinating, the geography amazingly varied and the people are extremely welcoming. A knowledge of Spanish is useful but not essential. Driving standards are not too dissimilar to Europe, although minor roads are often unsurfaced. I had no problems at all taking pictures, just a few curious stares but no more than one gets at home. Chilean railwaymen are also extremely friendly, never was I told that I could not take pictures.

So here is a snapshot of a week in Chile in October 2012.

My thanks to Mel Turner for an up to date FCAB roster which has enabled me to identify the variety of motive power, both indigenous and second hand that the FCAB employs.

Update: sadly, following an exceptional weather event in 2014, the FCTT has ceased operations. Torrential rain, almost unknown in Tocopilla, washed the railway out near Reverso. Given the reduction in mining operations at Pedro de Valdivia Soquimich are now trucking nitrate from Maria Elena to Tocopilla..
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Off to Cumbre, a 40 minute drive from Central Antofagasta at the summit of the Cordillera de la Costa, which trains from Mejillones (to the west) and Estacion Prat (to the east) have to climb. No red kites up here, only vultures.
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Off to Cumbre, a 40 minute drive from Central Antofagasta at the summit of the Cordillera de la Costa, which trains from Mejillones (to the west) and Estacion Prat (to the east) have to climb. No red kites up here, only vultures.

wildlifeChile

  • Off to Cumbre, a 40 minute drive from Central Antofagasta at the summit of the Cordillera de la Costa, which trains from Mejillones (to the west) and Estacion Prat (to the east) have to climb. No red kites up here, only vultures.
  • Climbing to Cumbre
  • The train, of loaded sulphuric acid, climbs round the second of the two horseshoe curves west of Cumbre
  • Two helpers were pushing
  • Led by Clyde-built Australian imports G22Cs 1453 (ex Queensland) and 1432 (ex WAGR) the train grinds up hill.
  • Cumbre
  • It drifts down over the summit...
  • ...and stops at the east end of the passing siding where the brakeman changes the switch to the loop, which means a meet is about to take place.
  • It was 30 minutes before the westbound appeared, it was the train from the San Cristobal mine in Bolivia to Mejillones.
  • 2008 and 2005 creep into the loop, passing the brakeman of the sulphuric acid train.
  • The train carries zinc, silver and lead concentrates in giant tubs fixed to flat cars. San Cristobal is owned by the Japanese Sumitomo Corporation.
  • This is one of the FCAB's longest train, the brakeman watches the final few cars and the helpers into the passing loop. The helpers are cut off at Cumbres and return to Estacion Prat to the east of the coast range
  • Crew change. 2008 and 2005, the second unit, are Clyde built GL26C from Queensland. Both 2008 and 2005 returned on the empties to San Cristobal, which I saw on Wednesday north of Calama, and again on Thursday with the loaded train returning to Mejillones.
  • Descending from Cumbre
  • The train emerges from the first horseshoe curve...
  • ...entering the second horseshoe curve. Cumbre is a truly great location to watch trains.
  • Baquedano
  • ...in reality a steam round house with a few derelict steam locomotives around a turntable. I first visited in 1998, nothing has changed, and in the dry desert air there is little decay.
  • The nationalised Longitudinal Railway was privatised in the 1980s as Ferronor. Ferronor continue to operate but not through Baquedano, the line being embargoed. Still at Baquedano are some of the extraordinary propane gas tank cars, which were built for service between Argentina and Chile over the Northern Transandine line through Socompa. Although there were reports in 2010 of the service restarting there is no sign that it has. Problems with the Argentine metre gauge operator Belgrano Cargas, which has an unenviable reputation for poor service and unreliability.
  • Elsewhere at Baquedano there are remnants of Ferronor locomotives and rolling stock.
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