Intel's Ronler Acres Plant

Silicon Forest
If the type is too small, Ctrl+ is your friend

Showing posts with label Train. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Train. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2024

Cuban Railroad


Cuba's Railways are TOTALLY CRAZY!
Nonstop Eurotrip

The narrator's cheerful demeanor is totally at odds with his environment. 10 hours to get a ticket and then 10 hours to make 5 hour trip?!? Google Maps says you should be able to drive it in three and a half hours. As if. This is Cuba after all.

Note that the pretty 1950's era automobiles shown early on are basically jalopies that are only still running due to the ingenuity and diligence of the Cuban equivalent of redneck engineering. That $10 bribe is likely the equivalent of a month's wages in Cuba.

Cuba runs on crime. People can't survive without it. Everyone has to give a cut of whatever they get to 'the beard' as Castro was known.

Havana to Santa Clara

Cuba is the only island in the Caribbean that has an extensive railroad. The Dominican Republic has some rail lines that serve the sugar mills and Puerto Rico has 10 miles of transit lines in San Juan, but that's about it.

Previous related posts about Cuba:
Note on temperatures at the train station:
  • 35 degrees C = 95 degrees F
  • 45 degrees C = 113 degrees F

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Lusitania

RMS Lusitania departing New York - Ossie Jones

I'm reading a story about the Chinese plan to build a railway across the Andes mountains in South America. Okay, that sounds nuts, but it also sounds like something China might try.

Well, let's see if we can find a map. I found several speculative plans, but nothing definite. I'm reading about one and they mention Lusophones, which is a new term for me. Look it up and it turns out it means people who speak Portuguese and comes from the name of a Roman province which was located where Portugal is now.

Just bugged me that there were so many disparate things that all used the same name.

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Spherical Cow


Giant Train Signal
Chris Boden

I got a chuckle out of his line about brakes on a train.

Saturday, November 9, 2024

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

INSTC - International North–South Transport Corridor


He lays out the problems with the current shipping route from India to Moscow. He spends some time talking about the possibility of shipping across the arctic ocean since it is now possible. And then he talks about the INSTC (International North–South Transport Corridor). It's much shorter and possibly quicker and cheaper as well, except, well, there are a couple of problems they are going to have to deal with:

The average cost of shipping a container from Mumbai to Moscow is around $3,000 via the Suez route but could drop to approximately $2,000 using the INSTC. However, political tensions and regional instability pose risks, and infrastructure development is still needed to fully untap its potential. Huge investments and huge diplomatic efforts are mandatory to make all the INSTC's stops safe, and thus attractive for want-to-be investors and merchants: Azerbaijan and Armenia must settle the Karabakh issue once and for all, India and Pakistan must solve the Kashmir question, and Israel and Iran must find a modus vivendi.

Modus vivendi is a Latin phrase that means "mode of living" or "way of life". In international relations, it often is used to mean an arrangement or agreement that allows conflicting parties to coexist in peace.

So there are only three intractable problems that will need to be solved. Somehow, I don't think that's going to happen, but with enough money I suppose anything is possible.

 

Sunday, May 12, 2024

Furies


Furies | Official Trailer | Netflix
Netflix Phillippines

Comic book style criminal underground fantasy, in Paris. Very entertaining in a John Wick kind of way. A lot of it didn't make much sense, what with every player apparently double crossing every other player. Even when we get to the end we still aren't sure of who's on first. But we have a cute young woman bringing the smack down of box lots of thugs, so it's fun.

In the last episodes we have a secret underground train that runs continuously in the subway tunnels beneath Paris. I think I've seen the same thing in a couple of other movers. In the James Bond film You Only Live Twice, the head of the Japanese secret service, Tanaka, has a secret subway train. The Debt is one and it isn't really a secret train, there are just some secret bits.


Friday, May 10, 2024

Bidenomics

View From The Porch Tam shares New York Times story about modern day train robbery. It's all about thieves breaking into shipping containers traveling on trains and making off with the loot. It's a good story. I picked out a few tidbits.
 
Railroad from Los Angeles to Tucson

“Between L.A. and Tucson is where I know a lot of theft happens,” Hall said.

Quelle suprise. Between L.A. and Tucson there is 500 miles of nothing. Of course, thieves aren't going to be attacking trains high-balling on main lines in the middle of nowhere, they are going to hit them where it is most convienient for them, which will be in towns where the trains slow to a crawl.

Piracy is an age-old occupation, particularly prevalent in places and times when large gaps have separated the rich and the poor. But this modern-day resurgence in cargo theft stems in no small part from the extreme ways the internet has altered the buying and selling of things. When the United States Census Bureau began collecting data on e-commerce, in 1998, online sales amounted to some $5 billion. Now that figure is upward of $958 billion; e-commerce revenue is forecast to exceed $2.5 trillion by 2027.

If you aren't talking about trillions of dollars, you're talking about chump change.

On the website of Operation Boiling Point, which the Department of Homeland Security recently created to go after organized theft groups, the agency states that cargo theft accounts for between $15 billion and $35 billion in annual losses.

Everybody has a website now: Operation Boiling Point, courtesy of Homeland Security.

Ouroboros

We do know that often these hijacked goods are cycled back into the online ecosystem, turning up for sale on places like Amazon, eBay, Etsy and Facebook Marketplace (some e-bikes Chavez watched Llamas and others take from the trains later showed up on OfferUp). Sometimes products stolen out of Amazon containers are resold by third-party sellers back on Amazon in a kind of strange ouroboros, in which the snakehead of capitalism hungrily swallows its piracy tail.

So theft shows up as losses, but sales of stolen goods are contributing to the GDP.

Over the past decade, in a push for greater efficiency, and amid record-breaking profits, the country’s largest railroads have been stringing together longer trains. Some now stretch two or even three miles in length. 

I remember seeing mile long trains when we drove back to Iowa, but two or three miles? That's friggin' nuts.

The human geography of the West is so entangled with the railroad as to be indistinguishable from it: Entire cities and towns exist and persist because people organized themselves around the train.

The area between the Mississippi and the West Coast may as well be on a different planet for all that is has in common with the East Coast.

The entire region has been altered by digital commerce; the inland empire now has in excess of 1.4 billion square feet of warehouse space, with plans for millions more.

1.4 billion square feet = 50 square miles. Fifty square miles of warehouse space? That's mind boggling. You want a double boggle? The United States has 500 square miles of warehouse space.

So now I understand California's lax approach to enforcing laws against theft. Rent has gotten so high that nobody who's working any kind of regular job can afford it, so they're homeless. Without a home, it's pretty hard to hold down a regular job. Some people are not going to happy about their situation and will turn to theft in order to make a little money to pay for their burgers and fries. As long as the Federal government policies are driving the country towards the abyss of economic collapse, there is little California can do.


Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Norfolk Southern Proxy Fight


East Palestine Train Derailment Explained
Practical Engineering

Seems that every year publicly owned companies select people to serve on the board that governs the company. Normally, if the company is making money, these proxy votes, as they are called, are of no interest  to anyone and the election of the board is uncontested.

Every once in a while something comes along to upset the apple cart and then we get a proxy fight. I got a notice of one at Norfolk Southern this morning. I doubt whether my few shares will make any difference, the fight will be between big factions. It might be interesting to see how this one plays out.

Ancora Holdings Group is challenging the board. They wrote a letter to the current chairman that included this line:

We made clear that your current CEO has presided over industry-worst operating results, sustained share price underperformance and an ineffective and tone-deaf response to the preventable derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

You remember the train wreck in East Palestine, Ohio, right? 

A train derailment occurred on February 3, 2023, when 38 cars of a Norfolk Southern freight train carrying hazardous materials derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, United States. Several railcars burned for more than two days, with emergency crews then conducting a controlled burn of several railcars, which released hydrogen chloride and phosgene into the air. As a result, residents within a 1-mile radius were evacuated, and an emergency response was initiated from agencies in Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Virginia.

Phosgene is some nasty shit. 


Friday, January 12, 2024

The IBM 360 Will Roll Right Over You


Reading & Northern 2102 blasts out of Port Clinton
SteamTrainVideos.com

JMSmith points out a post by Richard Cocks - Oh, For a Competent Elite - wherein he bemoans the state of our world and as an example tells us of some trouble he has had with air travel, which prompted me to comment:

Airlines, like Amazon and credit card companies use large computer systems. They mostly work, but when they fail, any attempt to correct the error is going to be an exercise in frustration. Don’t waste your time. Arguing with one of these systems is like arguing with a freight train. You can yell all you want but the train don’t care and if you try to impede them they will roll right over you and crush you flat. I don’t know but I suspect that problems with airlines can be alleviated by buying first class tickets.

 

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Nine Arches Bridge

Nine Arches Bridge

The Nine Arch Bridge . . . is a viaduct bridge in Sri Lanka and is one of the best examples of colonial-era railway construction in the nation. - Wikipedia

This puzzle was pretty tough. The bridge and the train were easy enough, but the trees were almost impossible, probably because there are 300 pieces. Setting the number of pieces to a smaller number would likely have made it easier, but where's the fun in that?



Friday, October 20, 2023

From Russia With Love


From Russia With Love (1963) Official Trailer - Sean Connery James Bond ...
Rotten Tomatoes Classic Trailers

A fine movie with plenty of action, a plausible plot and plenty of pretty girls. Highlights:

Armalite AR-7 Survival Rifle

Armalite AR-7 Survival Rifle, disassembled
  • secret agent briefcase with fifty gold sovereigns, a hidden knife, a booby trap and an AR-1 25 caliber, single shot sniper rifle.
Periscope, Kerim Bey & James Bond
  • periscope into the Russian Embassy in Istanbul

Gypsy Camp Scene - From Russia with Love - James Bond Source Music
Fictional Music
  • gypsy girls, gypsy girl dancing, gypsy girls fighting. Did I mention there are gypsy girls? Oh, that's right I did.
1960 Ford Ranch Wagon
  • Ford Ranch Wagon. Seeing this car really struck a chord with me. My inner ten year old really likes the 1960 Ford Galaxy and the 1961 Thunderbird.
My approximation of Bond's escape route from Istanbul to Venice

Simplon Orient Express

Islands off the coast of Istria near Futana
Possible location of boat chase
  • The flight across the northern end of the Adriatic Sea from Istria to Venice in a power boat with 200 gallons of fuel in 50 gallon drums held in a rack on the back.

Webley Flare Pistol
  • The destruction of the incompetent bad guys by dumping the gasoline in the water and setting it afire with the Very flare gun.
Rosa Klebb's shoe dagger
  • Klebb uses her pointy shoe to fight with Bond.
P. S. The scenes of Bond and the girl in Venice were shot on a green screen. It's pretty obvious they weren't actually in Venice. Someday I need to find out how they did that.

Free on Amazon Prime

Thursday, August 31, 2023

Erwin Böhme - Lucky Man

Albatros C.III flown by Ltn. Erwin Böhme over the Eastern Front in 1916Jerry Boucher

This jigsaw puzzle was not too tough in spite of being 300 pieces. It was easy enough to assemble the edge and the airplane. The fields of cloud and sky were made simpler by having gradations of color that were easy to match.

What about the subject of this painting? Wikipedia knows:

The Albatros C.III was a German two-seat general-purpose biplane of World War I, built by Albatros Flugzeugwerke. The C.III was a refined version of the successful Albatros C.I and was eventually produced in greater numbers than any other C-type Albatros.

The C.III was superseded by the D.I, D.II and D.III.

And the pilot? Well, this guy was like the German Paul Bunyan:

Erwin Böhme (29 July 1879 – 29 November 1917) was a German World War I fighter ace credited with 24 aerial victories. He was born in Holzminden on 28 July 1879. Both studious and athletic, he became a champion swimmer, proficient ice skater, and expert skier, as well as an alpinist. After serving his mandated military service in 1899, and earning a civil engineering degree, he moved to Switzerland for three years of mountaineering.

He became interested in Africa. Walking solo, he crossed the Alps southward to Italy; there he took ship for German East Africa. From 1908 to 1914, Böhme completed a six-year employment contract on a timber plantation in Tanganyika where he oversaw construction of the Usambara Railway to export raw cedar timber to the Hubertus Mill in Germany. In July 1914, contract ended, Böhme sailed to Europe for an alpine holiday. He disembarked into World War I. Despite being 35 years old, he immediately returned to his old infantry unit, then trained as a pilot.

After serving in a bomber unit, he was transferred to Germany's first fighter squadron Jagdstaffel 2. During Böhme's combat career, he was a friend and eventual subordinate to Manfred von Richthofen, the Red Baron. He was also friend, subordinate, and wingman to Germany's leading ace of the time, Oswald Boelcke. Böhme was inadvertently responsible for Boelcke's death on 28 October 1916. Although haunted by guilt, Böhme carried on, becoming a 24 victory ace (and a squadron leader). He also found heart for courtship via correspondence.

Erwin Böhme was killed in action on 29 November 1917, a month after his betrothal, while leading his squadron into combat. He died five days after receiving notice that he had won the German Empire's highest award for valor, the Pour le Merite. In 1930, his edited collected letters were published as Letters From a German Fighter Pilot to a Young Maiden.

Walked across the Alps and built a railroad in Africa before becoming a WW1 Ace. Quit the dude.

Africa Railways - Deutsch Ost Afrika (Usambara Eisenbahn) 0-4-4-0 mallet type steam locomotive (Arnold Jung 414-418 / 1900) and mixed train (vintage postcard)

The Usambara Railway is still in business.

Usambara Railway

Smart, capable and strong, but that didn't save him.
 

Lucky Man (2012 Stereo Mix)
Emerson, Lake and Palmer


Monday, April 10, 2023

The Empress - Netflix Series


The Empress | Official Trailer | Netflix
Netflix

We're talking about:
Duchess Elisabeth in Bavaria (1837 – 1898), nicknamed Sisi, was Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary from her marriage to Emperor Franz Joseph I in 1854 until her assassination in 1898. . . .

In 1897, her sister, Sophie, died in an accidental fire at the Bazar de la Charité charity event in Paris. While travelling in Geneva in 1898, Elisabeth was stabbed in the heart by an Italian anarchist named Luigi Lucheni. Her tenure of 44 years was the longest of any Austrian empress. - Wikipedia

Fabulous wealth, fabulous palaces, fabulous clothes, rigid social protocol, simmering unrest, neighbors threatening war, all the stuff we got in Game of Thrones but this time for real.

There were a couple of odd bits.

Franz's mother gives Elisabeth a necklace. Franz's brother tells her that the necklace was worn by Marie Antoinette at her execution. While there are a zillion pages talking about a fancy diamond necklace that a couple of jewelers tried to sell to Marie, I found nothing about one from her execution.

When the royal doctor conducts the royal purity test he finds Elisabeth's hymen is broken. Now it comes out that this can happen to a girl from horseback riding. Huh, the things nobody ever tells me. Google is no help, some pages say it's true, others say not.

Robert Stephenson, British railway engineer, has an oddly clandestine meeting with Franz Joseph about building a railroad in Austria.  It actually did get built:

Semmering Railway

The Semmering Railway, built over 41 km of high mountains between 1848 and 1854, is one of the greatest feats of civil engineering from this pioneering phase of railway building. The high standard of the tunnels, viaducts and other works has ensured the continuous use of the line up to the present day. - UNESCO

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Iron Gates

I'm reading Blood of Victory by Alan Furst. On page 168 he mentions the Dezvrin Ship Canal on the Danube River, built to bypass the Iron Gates. I go looking for this canal, but Google has never heard of Dezvrin. A little more searching turns up several pages that mention this canal.

SIPS CANAL : Four decades earlier, all the world's press brought the news that on Sunday, September 27, 1896, three sovereigns of the neighboring states, the Austro-Hungarian Emperor Francis Joseph, the Romanian King Carol I and the Serbian King Aleksandar Obrenović, ceremonially opened the Danube Sip Canal in the Iron Gate area. With the thunder of cannons and the applause of those present, the steamship "Franz Joseph I" (with three sovereigns on board) passed through the canal first, cutting the flower ribbon that was strung across the canal exactly at 10 o'clock. Its passage ended the dangerous passage of vessels through the Djerdap gorge, which until then had been done with great effort, avoiding underwater rocks and eddies, by experienced Danube oarsmen, called locs (the name Djerdap comes from the Persian word girdab and the Turkish girdap, which means whirlpool, whirlpool or rapid). On the same day, on the occasion of the opening of the canal, the three sovereigns received congratulations from the Pope of Rome, the German and Russian emperors, and the Italian king.

To regulate the large river, seven canals with a total length of 16.9 km were cut along the bank, the largest of which was Sipski (named after the nearby village), 2,133 m long, 73 m wide and 3.9 m deep, cut along the right bank of the river. Over time, the ships, for upstream navigation through this channel, will receive an additional cable traction, driven first by a powerful tugboat (1899), and then by a locomotive (1916), which moved on rails on the coastal embankment.

After WW1, the ships were towed upstream through the Sip Canal with the help of the locomotive. This practice continued up to 1969 when the Canal was flooded in course of construction of the hydroelectric power plants Iron Gates 1 and 2. Afterwards, the towing was no more needed. - Igor Bačkalov

Iron Gates Museum: 

The Iron Gates is the traditional name for the gorge by which the River Danube passes through the Transylvania Alps, where it now forms the boundary between Romania and Serbia. The ‘cataract region’ extends from Moldova Island, 130 km downstream from Belgrade, for 120 km. Over that distance the natural fall of the river is 30 m, and in places its width contracts from 2 km to less than 100m, while the highest cliffs rise 683 f from the surface. A towing path, partly cut from the rocks and partly cantilevered on wooden beams was cut through the gorge by the Emperor Trajan and his successors between AD28 and 102. The first steamship passed through the Iron Gates in 1834.

From 1878 the river navigation was improved by the Hungarian government under the supervision of the International Danube Commission. A 2.5 km canal with a fall of 3.7 m was built on the southern side of the river in 1895-98, with a railway track alongside. The haulage upstream of heavy barges by steam locomotives being driven at maximum power was spectacular.

After the Second World War the governments of Romania and what was then Yugoslavia built a hydro-electric dam at the Iron Gates with pairs of locks on either side. The scheme was completed in 1972 and the passage of boats along the river is quieter than in the days of steam locomotive haulage.

Second Separate Pontoon Bridge Regiment:

The history of the river and of the communities on its banks is illustrated in the regional museum at Drobeta Jurnu-Severin.The holiday was celebrated on November 7, 1944 by the sixth company on the Danube River raid in the Bulgarian city of Rusa. The march of the company and the battalion in tow to the "Iron Gate" roll was normal. At one time, a channel with a length of 1600 meters and a width of 30-35 meters was built on the right bank of this river for the ships going up the Danube River. The flow velocity in the channel reached 30 meters per second. A railway track was laid along the mainland shore of the channel, along which a steam locomotive plied, designed to tow ships along the channel. The convoy of the sixth company was divided in half, i.e. three ferries, a tow rope from the locomotive was put in tow - and safely passed the channel. But when leaving the canal, when the tow rope was given, one diesel engine on the “Zhiul” stalled, and the whole convoy was pulled back into the channel, which threatened a big accident. The emergency situation was saved by the team servicing the channel. The cable was again put in tow and the locomotive held the convoy in the channel until the launch of the second diesel engine in tow. The second part of the convoy was pulled through the roll by another, more powerful tug of 2,400 horsepower, which carried the remaining ferries. The “Iron Gate” is a very artful  rolling. There due to the confusion of the helmsman, even the armored boat of the Danube flotilla was sunk. The same fate during the passage of one of the companies of the 1st battalion befell a hydroplane with the personal belongings of Battalion Commander Major Falin.

ICON OF IDENTITY: THE ILE DE FRANCE ON THE WORLD STAGE - Christian Roden

Joining two friends in Vienna, Ted ventured on a Danube River journey aboard the Russian riverboat AMUR, built by the Austrians as war reparations, while watching a variety of river traffic including vintage sidewheel towboats and ferries. A highlight of the river trip was his experience at the Iron Gate, a powerful and dangerous stretch of the Danube where steam engines had to tow the riverboats upstream for a few miles due to the treacherous currents. Ted pointed out that the Orient Line’s ORSOVA was named after the town where the Iron Gate is located and included a stylized Iron Gate as part of her bow decoration. All Orient Line ship names started with OR.


Monday, March 6, 2023

Bootlegger Train Tunnel Utah

Potash Evaporation Ponds, Moab, Utah

A view of these ponds showed up in my screensaver, and so I thought I'd see if I could locate it on the map. I found it, but then I notice a portal to a train tunnel, so I go digging some more and I found this on Train Sim World 3:
By American railroad standards, the Cane Creek Branch is a newcomer. In the late 1950s, plans took form to tap massive potash deposits found along the Colorado River in eastern Utah. By 1960, development of what would evolve into today’s sprawling potash mine and processing facility south of Moab and near Cane Creek were rapidly taking form, and the Denver & Rio Grande Western agreed to build a new branch from its main line at Brendel. Grading and construction of the new branch line was contracted to Morrison-Knudsen and work began in August 1961. Morrison-Knudsen completed its work in September 1962 and D&RGW crews moved in to lay the tracks.
The potash mine and facility at the south end of the line began production in late 1964 and the branch was operated by D&RGW as its Cane Creek Branch until the road’s merger into Union Pacific (D&RGW was combined with the Southern Pacific in 1988 and merged into Union Pacific in 1996). While there have been fluctuations in the amounts of potash being moved over the Cane Creek Branch, it has been in nearly continuous use since the 1960s.
Remarkably, the Cane Creek line gained a second purpose – and source of extensive tonnage – in 2008. Moab had long been the site of a Uranium mill which closed in 1984, leaving approximately 12 million tons of dirt tailings behind. While these tailings are only modestly radioactive, the risk of their erosion into the nearby Colorado River required eventually reclamation. Under the auspices of the United States Department of Energy, a burial site for the tailings was developed at Brendel and train loads of the contaminated soil began moving over the length of the Cane Creek Subdivision to Brendel. These unusual rail movements, nicknamed “the dirty dirt trains,” are expected to continue until approximately 2028. Given that both the potash and contaminated soil tonnage involves carrying loads northbound, the climb from Potash and Moab to Brendel requires plenty of horsepower.


Bootlegger Train Tunnel Utah


Train Entering North Portal of Potash Tunnel

Cut near South Portal of Potash Tunnel

Crescent Junction Disposal Cell

Cane Creek Branch from Brendel to Moab


Saturday, January 14, 2023

Modern American Railroads


The One Tiny Law That Keeps Amtrak Terrible
Wendover Productions

This video gives a good overview of the American railroad industry. The business about Amtrak is like icing on the cake, or the derby on the gorilla's head. He might have a point, enforcing the law might improve Amtrak service, but I doubt whether it is ever going to make a significant impact. One percent of Amtrak's $2 billion annual budget is a nit compared to 1% of the trillion dollar defense budget. You just can't buy as much graft with little numbers like that, which means you aren't going to convince Congress to do anything about it.

Just getting the railroads to start maintaining tracks and equipment would be a good thing. If self driving cars (as Tesla is demonstrating) become common, all transportation is liable to suffer. Traffic jams won't matter because you will be able to amuse yourself with work or games or sleep while you are waiting to be delivered to your destination. So what if your commute takes an extra hour? You can play video games while you ride in your pod. Commute in an RV and you will never have to go home, you can just get on the beltway when you get off work and have yourself driven around the beltway a couple of times until it's time to report to your cubicle in the morning.

Since the third world has figured out to make stuff, the only things that make big money in this country now are the defense industry and cutting edge electronics. All the other businesses are scrambling to figure out how to keep making money. A few people are innovating on a small scale, but most are looking to cut costs one way or another. 

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Bullet Train - Netflix Movie


BULLET TRAIN - Official Trailer (HD)
Sony Pictures Entertainment

Very silly, very violent, and pretty funny. The head (the White Death) of the biggest criminal organization in Japan hires a couple of well dressed thugs (Lemon and Tangerine) to bring his wayward son and a briefcase filled with $20 million dollars to Kyoto via the bullet train. To start with (in Tokyo I presume), there are several other passengers on the train, but as time goes by they disappear until there is no one left but our handful of troublemakers.

One guy is there to steal the briefcase (Brad Pitt), one girl (the Hornet) has been hired to kill someone, I'm not sure who, one girl is there to exact revenge on her father (the White Death), one guy is there to exact revenge on the girl, and another guy is there to exact revenge on the person responsible for his wife's death. He thinks it's Brad, but it's actually the Hornet.

Through it all Brad it talking (via cell phone) about his new philosophy of life with his handler (Sandra Bullock). It must be very frustrating for a man who is looking for inner peace to be compelled to violent action to defend himself.

As you might expect, there is a spectacular train crash at the end.

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Notes on Night Soldiers by Alan Furst

I'm reading Night Soldiers by Alan Furst. It is the story of Khristo, a Bulgarian peasant recruited by the Russian NKVD and trained as a spy. He is sent to Madrid to help the Republicans in their war against Franco and his Nationalists. Today toward the end of the section titled Blue Lantern I came across a couple of interesting bits.


Django Reinhardt - In A Sentimental Mood - Paris, 26.04.1937
Heinz Becker

On page 157 Faye is listening to Django Reinhardt & Stéphane Grappelli on an Emerson radio.

1938 Opel Kapitän

One page 165, Khristo and his gang are working with SIM (Republican secret police) to round up nationalists who are hiding out in embassies that have been abandoned because of the ongoing civil war. The SIM thugs are driving an Open Kapitän.

Degtyaryov machine gun

Khristo and Ilya are sitting in the back of a Citroen with Degtyaryov machine guns on their laps.

Port Bou railway station

Khristo and Andres barely manage to avoid arrest in Madrid and are deciding which direction to take to make their escape (p.174). One of their options is head to Port Bou in northeastern Spain. Never heard of this place, but when I look on Google Maps I see a huge railyard. What the heck is this? You see big railyards like this in big cities, but Port Bou is like a little fishing village. Turns out this is a break-of-gauge station. Evidently French trains and Spanish trains use a different gauge for their railroads.
Portbou was a small but important point for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War, as it was one of the few places from where they could get supplies from abroad. - Wikipedia

Monday, March 28, 2022

Acela Corridor

Acela Corridor

I came across this term, Acela Corridor, in David Stockman's Contra Corner. Never heard of it, so I looked it up.
The Acela is Amtrak's flagship high-speed service along the Northeast Corridor (NEC) in the Northeastern United States between Washington, D.C. and Boston via 16 intermediate stops, including Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City, and Providence. Acela trains are the fastest in the Americas, attaining 150 mph, but only on 33.9 miles of the 457-mile route. - Wikipedia

Via ZeroHedge

 

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Dudinka - Norilsk

Norilsk, Russia

A big Chinese nickel producer got caught in a short squeeze that severely disrupted the London Metals Exchange (otherwise known as LME) which, for some reason, is based in Hong Kong. They were trying to make some money by gambling, a time honored tradition amongst gamblers and financial whiz kids. They were betting that the price of nickel was going to drop, but then Russia invaded Ukraine, the US threw up a bunch of sanctions and the price of nickel skyrocketed because, don't you know, Russia is one of the biggest producers of nickel in the world.

Nornickel's Bystrinsky Mine and Concentrator

Rising prices are very bad for someone who is betting that the price is going down, especially when the time for settling the bet is coming due, so they tried to buy up a bunch of nickel to cover their bets, which drove the price up even higher and eventually the London Metals Exchange said this is crazy and shut down all nickel trading. It looks like the Chinese producer is going to be out $8 billion which is no small amount, even for a Chinese oligarch.

Norilsk - Dudinka Railway

Norilsk is the site of Russia's biggest nickel mining and smelting operation. It is pretty well landlocked, so their product is shipped to 50 miles to Dudinka where it is loaded onto ships on the Yenisei River.

Arctic Express loading at Dudinka, Russia

Dudinka is 1.5 degrees north of the Arctic Circle, so the Yenisei River is a river of ice, which makes shipping a challenge, to put it mildly.

Liebherr crane unloads the massive heat exchanger from the ship in Dudinka Seaport

Marine Traffic near Norilsk, Russia

All those colored dots on this map are big ships. Norilsk is near the right hand edge of the map and the green dot about a half of an inch to the left is at Dudinka. Left of center in the image is another river of ice but it has quite a bit more traffic. I wonder what they are doing over there. I imagine more resource extraction, but that's going to have to wait for another time.

MV Federal Yamaska Bulk Carrier
198 piece jigsaw puzzle

I did this puzzle a couple of days ago and I wondered where the photo was taken. Didn't find anything, I suspect it's in Alaska, but who knows. I'm tacking it on here just because it seems to fit.