vtsnowedin
Elite Member
Nope!! Not New Mexico or Oklahoma but good guesses.Naw. Had to be New Mexico...Hobbs maybe?
More info. They had to fly in 60-60 conditions.
Nope!! Not New Mexico or Oklahoma but good guesses.Naw. Had to be New Mexico...Hobbs maybe?
I remember reading about the first steam train that broke 100 mph. They used a flat straight stretch of track out in the plains somewhere, probably Kansas and a stop watch as they passed the mile posts.
What about 999 in 1891?
Empire State Express No. 999: First Locomotive to Reach 100 mph
New York Central & Hudson River 4-4-0 No. 999 continued
Background
NYC #999 is one of the world's most famous steam locos. Built in 1893 for New York Central's "Manhattan-Albany-Buffalo Empire State Express" it was one of 62 locos at Chicago's Columbian Exposition. It's claim to fame and the reason it has been preserved, (Chicago Science & Transportation Museum), was because of a May 1893 run between Rochester and Buffalo, NY. On that run it is said to have become the fastest machine of it's time, reaching 112.5 mph between Batavia and Corfu.
What are the facts concerning this high speed journey?
It is over a 100 years since this run, and no detailed timing details have been found. However such details must have been made as a 1976 article by John F Clay states there were 2 experienced observers on board. The practice of taking detailed passing times to the nearest second and stopwatching between quarter mile posts had started around a decade earlier, and formed the basis of accurate train timing that has survived from the late 19th Century, through the 20th Century and into the 21st Century.
But back in May 1893 there was another group of "train timers" travelling behind No. 999. Railway Officials and Newspaper Reporters. Not two groups of people who are likely to have studied or understood the mechanics of putting together a very detailed and accurate log of a train journey, including recording it's maximum speed. It must certainly have been this group of people, probably taking random times without any other detailed substantiation, who recorded the 112.5 mph. It certainly wasn't the two experienced train timers who recorded such a high maximum speed. They recorded a maximum of 81.5 mph, which is almost certainly very close to what was reached that day. It is reported that some time later the high speed attempt was repeated to prove it was possible, and the maximum speed recorded on this second run was again near to 81 mph.
Did NYC 4-4-0 No. 999 reach or exceed 100 mph?
The reality of that day in May 1893 was that the 4-4-0 went no faster than around 82 mph. No expert on steam locomotive performance recording has ever given any credence to a higher maximum speed. Only massive errors by people on the day who may well have had no experience at all of proper train timing, (or speed timing of any type), lead to the over 100 mph claim being made. And those people included newspaper reporters, so the highly inaccurate speed would have been given immediate widespread publicity, creating the "legend", and eventually leading to the preservation of NYC No. 999.
Nope!! Not New Mexico or Oklahoma but good guesses.
More info. They had to fly in 60-60 conditions.
I'll have to reflect on that question.
Bruce