Vale Railway Explained

Railroad Name:Vale Railway
System Map:Inco Railway open street map.png
Marks:VAEX
Locale:Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
Hq City:Sudbury

The Vale Railway (reporting mark VAEX[1]), formerly the INCO Railway (reporting mark INCX[2]), is an industrial railway operating in the City of Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. It is owned and operated by Vale Limited.An internal, private railway, the line connects Vale's mines and processing plants that dominates the city's skyline. The line serves Copper Cliff North Mine, Copper Cliff South Mine, Creighton Mine, Frood Mine, Stobie Mine, Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter, and Copper Cliff Nickel Refinery. The isolated Levack mine spur in the north end of the city serves Coleman Mine and is operated by the Canadian Pacific Railway.

The line was once entirely electrified along its route. Electrification began in 1926, but ended in 2000 in favour of diesel locomotives.[3]

The following junctions exist with the line:[4]

Locomotive roster

VAEX rosters 8 re-manufactured EMD GP38-4M locomotives for use on ore trains from the mines, slag trains from the smelter, or for local plant switching of various chemicals and products. These locomotives have upgraded electrical systems and are set up for remote operation.

Model Maker Numbers !Build Date Remarks
GP38-4M 2001 Feb-1964 Nee NW GP35 #222 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2002 Jun-1965 Nee SP GP35 #7757 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2003 May-1964 Nee PRR GP35 #2256 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2004 Feb-1964 Nee C&NW GP35 #825 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2005 Apr-1964 Nee C&NW GP35 #836 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2006 Apr-1964 Nee C&NW GP35 #841 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2007 Mar-1965 Nee C&NW GP35 #864 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M
GP38-4M 2008 Apr-1964 Nee C&NW GP35 #843 Rebuilt By MPI to GP38-4M

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Railroad Reporting Marks_V. Pwrr.org. 1 September 2017.
  2. Web site: Railroad Reporting Marks_I. Pwrr.org. 1 September 2017.
  3. Web site: Old Time Trains. Trainweb.org. 1 September 2017.
  4. Web site: Waterloo Region Model Railway Club. Waterloo Region Model Railway Club. 1 September 2017.