Joined: 09/08/2008(UTC) Posts: 1,919 Location: Auckland,
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Hi Guys,
I don’t suppose anyone has photos they could share of loco depot prototypes with transfer tables similar to the Märklin 7294?
Cheers….
Mike
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Joined: 30/11/2011(UTC) Posts: 126 Location: Seattle area
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The Rottweil lok shed that M says goes along with it is shown in this image; it looks like back in the day, Rottweil had a turntable that fed into the transfer table (in the background): https://archive.rottweil...riebswerk_Um_1975_01.jpg It was a much more impressive yard than currently: https://archive.rottweil...hof_Rottweil_um_1920.jpgI did a search online for "deutsche bahn Schiebebühne" images and there are quite a few. Mannheim, Rosenstein, Osnabrück. Stuttgart-Rosenstein had the catenary arches at both ends like the 7295 so perhaps it was the prototype. A satellite view from today shows 20 incoming tracks and only 7 going into the lok shed on the other side; I'm not quite ready to model that... Thanks for sending me down the rabbit hole on a rainy Saturday! I'm getting closer to installing my 7294 so it was time well spent! Brian
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 2 users liked this useful post by ccranium
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Joined: 23/07/2014(UTC) Posts: 8,464 Location: ENGLAND, Didcot
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Originally Posted by: ccranium  I'm intrigued that the locos in the roundhouse have been driven in frontwards, normal European practice seemed to be to back the loco into the roundhouse. I was under the impression only the Americans put them in front first.
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 1 user liked this useful post by kiwiAlan
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Joined: 04/02/2011(UTC) Posts: 3,555 Location: Paris, France
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Hi Mike For German Locomotive depots I found this  Unfortunately this is a computer-created image In France I have a picture of the old loco depot (La Chapelle) North of Paris gare du nord. This is taken just before its destruction (new locos almost don't need maintenance)  Here is the depot inside for a last exhibition before destruction  Cheers Jean |
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 7 users liked this useful post by JohnjeanB
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Joined: 09/08/2008(UTC) Posts: 1,919 Location: Auckland,
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Thanks Jean, those photos look really nice.
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Joined: 30/11/2011(UTC) Posts: 126 Location: Seattle area
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Hi again, Mike. The Rottweil transfer table is shown at 5:32 and 5:41 in . Here's a color image of the Stuttgart-Rosenstein table. 
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 2 users liked this useful post by ccranium
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Joined: 04/12/2013(UTC) Posts: 2,261 Location: Hobart, Australia
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Hello Mike, I bought my 7294 from German eBay four years ago and have just now begun the project of installing it on my layout. In the interim, like you I was looking for images of the transfer tables in real, mainly to see how the overhead wires are arranged in prototype. So here are some of the images I collected, I hope they are of some use to you :               This article from Stummis forum is also of interest : https://www.stummiforum....-rklin-Schiebeb-hne.html (translates well on my computer) My 7294 came fitted with the double-arch overhead wire supports. This did not suit me since my layout oberleitung is by Sommerfeldt and I removed the arches (I was not aware of the Sommerfeldt set as shown in the Brima video referred to in the Stummis article above). One notes that the older (prototypical to 7294?, which is said to be of Stuttgart) schiebebühnen have the arches and a single overhead wire on the table bridge (interestingly the second and fourth text images in the stummi article above reveal the four powerline wires running on the edge of the transfer table well which make contact with a receiver on the edge of one arch. They can also be seen in the ninth of the images above). The more modern transfer tables instead have overhead wires that span each side of the locomotive yard over the transfer table well (seen as early as the era in the thirteenth image above) and the loco once on the table lowers its pantograph, raising it when the table reaches the required siding. This better suited my setup and I am modelling the overheads in the loco yard as seen in this nice video of the locomotive yard and transfer station at the Port of Hamburg : Regards, PJ
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 6 users liked this useful post by PJMärklin
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Joined: 09/08/2008(UTC) Posts: 1,919 Location: Auckland,
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Wow! Thanks PJ, that is absolutely perfect. And the link through to the Bimo site through stummi is great 👍
Cheers…..
Mike
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 2 users liked this useful post by mvd71
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Joined: 05/12/2008(UTC) Posts: 1,801 Location: Crozet, Virginia
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Thanks from me as well PJ. Those great images of railroad history are priceless to me. Thanks for posting. |
Regards,
Jim
I have almost all Märklin and mostly HO, although I do have a small number of Z gauge trains!
So many trains and so little time. |
 2 users liked this useful post by dickinsonj
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Joined: 09/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 2,969 Location: Somewhere, But Nowhere Near Manchester, England
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Don't look back, your not heading that way. |
 1 user liked this useful post by GlennM
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Joined: 21/12/2012(UTC) Posts: 1,482 Location: Hrvatska
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Zagreb, near the railway vehicle factory Končar  A special measuring vehicle made entirely by us  The train has equipment for recording about 15 different parameters on the infrastructure, and is equipped with a kitchenette, a toilet, a shower cabin and a bedroom with 2 beds.
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 2 users liked this useful post by 1borna
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