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1859 OP t1_iyiings wrote

Further reading:

Why did they decide on nearly-standard gauge (4' 9") instead of standard gauge (4' 8.5")? Much of the American South's rail traffic connected to the Pennsylvania Railroad, which was still using their own 4' 9" gauge. It was deemed close enough, and the South's rail lines were gradually adjusted to true standard gauge over time through regular track maintenance. Cool stuff!

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sintaur t1_iyil2t3 wrote

> Over a period of 36 hours, tens of thousands of workers pulled the spikes from the west rail of all the broad gauge lines in the South, moved them 3 in (76 mm) east and spiked them back in place.[6] The new gauge was close enough that standard gauge equipment could run on it without problem. By June 1886, all major railroads in North America, an estimated 11,500 miles (18,500 km), were using approximately the same gauge. To facilitate the change, the inside spikes had been hammered into place at the new gauge in advance of the change.

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aarhus t1_iyk9x0s wrote

This excerpt would suggest OP's title is misleading. 11,500 is how many miles there were total, not how many the South switched in 36 hours.

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I_am_10_squirrels t1_iykrxpr wrote

From the source, it was started on May 31st 1886, so it should read "after just 36 hours" instead of "by June 1886"

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aarhus t1_iykt1vm wrote

Yes, I see now the article does a poor job of referencing the source.

The source claims in the South they were preparing to change 11,500 miles of track.

The article says all the track in North America, 11,500 miles, was on the new gauge.

Clearly, unless all the track in North America was located in the South, one of these is wrong.

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I_am_10_squirrels t1_iymah81 wrote

>The article says all the track in North America, 11,500 miles, was on the new gauge.

I couldn't find any references with a quick minute of Google fu, so let's assume a five person team could reposition 1 mile of track in an hour. They were moving just one side, so doesn't seem unreasonable given 1886 tools.

That would mean 320 five person teams, 1600 people working 36 hours straight. So, again, surprisingly not unreasonable.

I thought this would help me figure out which source was wrong, but now I still don't know.

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drdrewpschlong t1_iyimxhq wrote

That's why train drivers are called engineers

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Kevin_Wolf t1_iyjq9ks wrote

No, it's not. They're called engineers because they operate an engine car. The engine car is the car at the front or rear of the train that provides the motive force.

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drdrewpschlong t1_iyjxn7k wrote

Look at you here busting with your facts and stuff. Would it be known that I'm a doctor. I know certain things

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SusanForeman t1_iyks28b wrote

I'm also a doctor.

I just call myself that because I fake documents and sell them to college kids

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SimplexStorm t1_iym1fu0 wrote

Super cool seeing an article mentioned from the Discovery Park of America. I live 45 minutes from there!

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