Goat Getting It Done Amidst the Glamour
For all the sleek lines of a high-speed Amtrak Northeast Regional train, there has to be some un-glamorous staging, and that's what Switcher No. 796 is attending to on this late afternoon as it backs a cut of freshly cleaned Amfleet carriages from the Ivy City Coachyard up to a platform at Washington's Union Station.
Once that task is completed, the "goat" will uncouple and head off for its next "behind the scenes" yet critical role,
and the "star" of the show, an Amtrak Siemens ACS-64 "Sprinter" electric locomotive (*) will back up to the train.
Couplers will lock; air and head-end electrical power connections will be made and tested, and another Amtrak
Northeast Regional will depart the station, bound for New York or Boston, its passengers (with the possible exception
of railfans) unaware of all the un-glam proceedings that have made their trip possible, as the train smoothly glides away from the platform for its sprint up the Northeast Corridor.
Just beyond the Amtrak equipment can be seen a bi-level commuter train consist of the MARC Penn Line and, in the tele-compressed perspective, some of the modern buildings of Washington's NoMa (**) district reflect architecture on the opposite side of the wide expanse of station trackage in Northeast Washington, D.C.
About the title...
I'm not sure I know the reason, but one of the nicknames
(at least in the U.S.) for switch engines or shunter locomotives is "goat."
The scene, shot on a late afternoon last June with a Zeiss Milvus ZE 135mm
f/2 APO Sonnar T* lens on a Canon 6D, makes its first appearance today.
©2022 Steve Ember
(*)
(**)
Twin O Caulin 06/03/2022 8:50
A strong portrait! And your annotations are very interesting.Regards Twin
Basi70 27/02/2022 10:59
Hey, my Friend! A very intressting Picture for this Locomotive. Great!Bw Michael
rail66 26/02/2022 22:15
Very nice and interesting photo. Thanks for the great explication!