File:LiveSteaming at GGLS PopSci Oct1951-6.jpg: Difference between revisions
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(Aluminum rails are spiked down on eight-inch wood ties. Continuous 30-inch-high, 1,331-foot-long trestle is made of old railroad bridge ties, donated by Southern Pacific, resting on 147 peirs. From <i>Popular Science</i>, October 1951) |
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Aluminum rails are spiked down on eight-inch wood ties. Continuous 30-inch-high, 1,331-foot-long trestle is made of old railroad bridge ties, donated by Southern Pacific, resting on 147 peirs. From <i>Popular Science</i>, October 1951 | Vic Shattock and Walter Brown spiking rail. Aluminum rails are spiked down on eight-inch wood ties. Continuous 30-inch-high, 1,331-foot-long trestle is made of old railroad bridge ties, donated by Southern Pacific, resting on 147 peirs. From <i>Popular Science</i>, October 1951 |
Latest revision as of 22:28, 27 March 2016
Vic Shattock and Walter Brown spiking rail. Aluminum rails are spiked down on eight-inch wood ties. Continuous 30-inch-high, 1,331-foot-long trestle is made of old railroad bridge ties, donated by Southern Pacific, resting on 147 peirs. From Popular Science, October 1951
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current | 20:31, 27 March 2016 | 760 × 1,016 (464 KB) | Dnevil (talk | contribs) | Aluminum rails are spiked down on eight-inch wood ties. Continuous 30-inch-high, 1,331-foot-long trestle is made of old railroad bridge ties, donated by Southern Pacific, resting on 147 peirs. From <i>Popular Science</i>, October 1951 |
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