Grafenwalde - Thüringen
Monday, 30 March 2026
Sunday, 6 July 2025
Gallery
Places of interest
Seekuh Erlangen - Eschenau
A few random images of the trains in Oberfranken -
98 521 runs through Eschenau 'Seku'
On 1 May 1961, 98 855 on the last passenger train ran between Eschenau and Neunkirchen am Brand
64 031 enroute to Leupoldsdorf with exUSRA wagon - Bufe
Bamberg 1954 - Courtesy of Eisenbahnstiftung
Workbench
Upgrading the Piko VT 70, it is an old but accurate model but it needs a modern discrete mechanism, I am using PMT 32401. The hardest job is replacing the windows. This example was in excellent, unbroken condition.
VT 70 942 in Erlangen
The VT 70 was not capable of being used as a multiple unit, it had to run around its trailer at the terminus, as a result the VT 70 was often used as a single unit. These standard railcars were developed in the 1930s by the Deutsche Reichsbahn for passenger transport on branch lines.
Piko Model with PMT mechanism
Projekt
Parallel to the development of the Hamburg design, the three-car Breslau variant, later renamed Leipzig, was being developed for planned use in East Prussia and Silesia. These cars featured, for the first time, third-class seating, a larger kitchen, and a sideboard. Catering was to be provided by Mitropa, as usual. Like the Hamburg design, the three-car train ran on Jacobs bogies. The new Maybach GO 6 diesel engine was chosen as the power unit. While retaining the same basic design principles as the GO 5 engine, it delivered an increased output of 600 hp through exhaust gas turbocharging. This power increase was essential for building the three-car train, which also had a top speed of 160 km/h.
Two SVT railcars were ordered from Linke-Hofmann-Busch in Breslau following the four two-car Hamburg-type vehicles with operating numbers 137 153-154 a/ b/c. The delivery contract 03.077/24.314 was concluded on July 25, 1934. Both vehicles, according to company overview drawing TK 5100 r, were to be delivered with hydrodynamic power transmission, a technology largely developed by Triebwagenbau AG Berlin. A year later, the order was expanded to include two further vehicles with electric transmission, which received the operating numbers 137 233-234. The delivery contract 03.966/24.315 was concluded on June 21, 1935. The railcars largely corresponded to the hydraulically operated version in terms of their structural components, and were therefore included under the same drawing sheet number. Although ordered much later, the diesel-electric cars according to company overview drawing VTe 422 c were delivered before the hydraulic cars; however, their acceptance was delayed until mid-1936






































