times since the counter was installed.
NOTE: It would appear that my pages are limited by AT&T, without warning, to 30kB! Thus, I am forced to add a new page just for Z-Scale articles.
(edited from an article, written 18 Apr 96, which appeared in Vol. 2, No. 6, the March/April issue of Ztrack Magazine, page 14; see also the letter to the Editor which follows the article)
The Hell Gate Bridge is a vital link in the New York Connecting Railroad. It crosses the tidal race known as the Hell Gate (old Dutch "Hellegat"), where the East River, the Harlem River, and Long Island Sound meet. The NYCRR ties the old New Haven to Pennsylvania Station and the old Pennsylvania Railroad via a long viaduct on either side of the bridge and trackage across Long Island. The Hell Gate Bridge was erected in 1916 and was for many years the longest steel arch bridge in the world. It is still the most heavily loaded long-span bridge ever built.
As a modeler, especially in HO and Z, I have always been fascinated by the Hell Gate Bridge. Ron Parisi's early HO module with the undersized Hell Gate outline on Plexiglas first caught my eye. The bridge's dimensions are so formidable (except in N or Z); in HO or TT, you'd need to split it in half, perhaps with a removable center panel. In N, you'd have a workable but slightly over-sized module, but in Z it makes a really neat model on a single module. How 'bout that bottom chord rise in Z scale?
The accompanying illustration (from F. C. Kunz's 1915 treatise on steel bridges) gives an idea of how the bridge looks. Bill Mangahas's photo taken on October 16, 1993 of the Dover Plains "Cannonball", an LIRR train en route to home rails from a L. I. Sunrise Trail/National Railway Historical Society excursion which went up the former New York Central's Harlem Division to the end of passenger-carrying territory in Dover Plains, NY, shows the six 80' cars plus the lead FA-2 power car and two trailing MP-15AC's all within the arch!. This stunning color photo was in the LIST/NRHS 1995 calender (out of print).
It shouldn't be too hard to blow the illustration up to exact scale on clear MYLAR and bond two copies to 1/16" acrylic sheet. Then, cut the trusses, hangers, and deck outline from the sheet, paint the edges black, and build up four reasonably-accurate masonry piers with two transverse masonry arches to connect each pair of piers (the piers and transverse arches are granite-faced).
The construction of the piers and transverse arches is shown best in a photo from David Steinman's 1941/57 Bridges and Their Builders (showing the steam side-wheeler "Priscilla" passing underneath).
The 60' width of the bridge (3-17/64" in Z) gives ample clearance for four tracks abreast (not an adequate fit for Märklin's 25mm track spacing (63/64") but fine for 9mm (3/8") spacing x 3, with 4.5mm (3/16") left over for clearance on each side). This, of course assumes a free 60' width (unlikely - it's probably 60' from chord centerline to chord centerline). So, just fudge a bit and build it 60' free. Regardless, the 42' 6" (2-5/16") panel spacing would allow reaching in between hangers to rerail or remove accidents if the bridge were built up but the Plexi sides will necessitate using a padded grabber or 30" long stick to reach in from either end.
Another neat way to build a Z-scale Hell Gate Bridge is to make only one truss, two piers, and one transverse arch. Cut the latter in half and mount each half to one pier. Then mount the whole half bridge, with only two tracks, to a mirror, thus giving a virtual whole four-track bridge! Of course, there would two identical trains traversing the arch each time you cross it. A clever way to avoid that is to coat the mirror with Dullcote at the track level, but only to train height. Another trick is to use a first surface mirror or thin MYLAR mirror to minimize the gap caused by the thickness of the glass.
Who will be the first to have a scale Hell Gate on their layout? How about building it up from scratch, in metal? There are only 1,174,000 rivets to detail - a simple week-end project! If this story caught your attention, watch for Robert C. Sturm's forthcoming book on the New York Connecting Railroad and the Hell Gate Bridge.
[For further reference, the length over hinges is also:
That 60' width (3-31/64") is in fact from chord centerline to centerline. The bridge is actually 93' (5-5/64") wide outside the railing girders, but the inside clearance is only 53' (2-57/64")! The actual track centers are 13' (23/32"). The clearance inside the masonry of the end piers is also exactly 53'. Since Z equipment is actually a ½" wide, this leaves 7/32" between cars and 1/8" clearance between the cars and the inner sides of the bridge. That's really tight by Märklin's standards but really quite workable on tangent (straight) track where you don't have to squeeze your finger in between the rolling stock (and if your track doesn't woggle too much).
Another interesting (?) and staggering dimension: the bottom chord measures a full 7' (3/8") wide at the floor! Just for your further edification, the maximum grades on the approaches are 1.2% southbound (north or west) of the bridge and 0.72% grade northbound (south or east) of the bridge.
Also, the reference to "LIST/NRHS" is to the Long Island-Sunrise Trail Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society, which will be producing the Hell Gate book mentioned, and can be reached at P. O. Box 507, Babylon, New York 11702-0507. The 1995 calendar is no longer available.
So, which one of you is actually gonna build this monster?
NOTE: There is now The New York Connecting Railroad Society, an all-volunteer organization started in 1993 and recently incorporated to preserve the history of the joint venture between the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New Haven; they publish a newsletter, "The Connecting".
For tall tales of the BW and its equipment and such, visit the Berlinerwerke Apocrypha page.
To contact S. Berliner, III, please click here.
BUILDING THE
HELL GATE BRIDGE IN Z SCALE
by S. (Sam) Berliner, III
1:1 1:87.1 1:120 1:160 1:220
Prototype HO TT N Z
Total span 1,000' 11'5-25/32" 8'4" 6'3" 4'6-33/64"
Length over hinges 977'6" 11'2½" 8'1-3/4" 6'1¼" 4'5-5/16"
Length of panel (x23) 42'6" 5-27/32" 4'3" 33/16" 25/16"
Truss depth at end 140' 1'7-9/32" 1'2" 10½" 7-5/8"
Truss depth at center 40' 5-33/64" 4" 3" 23/16"
Rise of bottom chord 220' 2'6-5/16" 1'10" 1'4½" 1'
Width (truss to truss) 60' 8-17/64" 6" 4½" 3-17/64"
{Height above water *}
HELL GATE BRIDGE DIMENSIONS
(HO, TT, and N shown for reference)
43' 5" in #1/G (1:22.5), 20' 4-5/8" in O (1:48), and 15' 3-1/4" in S (1:64).]
Hell Gate Bridge
(from a later letter to the Editor - slightly edited and updated)
Z Scale Clearance Drawing (oversize)
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