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Real Train Caboose

C_J_J_C

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So RDP ... how much effort and money is this worth?

Ever since I was a kid going to Knotts Berry Farm I have wanted a train caboose for a whiskey, cigar, sports bar, poker room, & man cave. Recently I found a Southern Pacific Train Caboose in Sacramento but I live in Orange County.

I have the room for it on my property but logistics and costs are adding up fast. Cranes at both locations, one lowboy truck for the caboose and a second truck for the wheels and tracks and then the legality issue of the the County of Orange can't even figure out if permits are even needed and if so what permits.
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Ultra...Good

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that is flipping cool. good luck wit it.

have been to this place a few times. maybe someday there can help you.

 

dread Pirate

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Very cool and good luck!

Along the same topic, if anyone wants a unique getaway on Clear Lake...

 

C_J_J_C

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Very cool and good luck!

Along the same topic, if anyone wants a unique getaway on Clear Lake...


These are the problem I am having with the County of Orange. The county does not believe me when I say I'm not making a tiny house. I will not have plumbing or a bed.
A tiny house is classified as a residencial structure and has different setbacks and permitting process. I offered to do a shed permit but I was told since it is on wheels it doesn't need a permit.
 

monkeyswrench

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This will sound odd, but I actually knew a guy that lived in Orange, and moved one to his business there for some resto work, then hauled it to Fallbrook. I believe he used Marco to haul it, and I think it was a lowboy RGN? It still had the trucks attached, rolled of and on I believe. I don't know how old he'd be now, but his name was Robert "Bobby" Babcock. The business was RWB party props. He was a Horseless Carriage Club guy, but owned a 14ton narrow gage steam engine...like the ones from Knott's.
 

monkeyswrench

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If anyone is near Georgetown Ca 95634 and knows how to use a tape measure they could save me a 7 hour drive.
Is the one still in Needles? Someone probably close to that. Maybe a RR guy knows where to find stats?
 

Meaney77

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I have a buddy who did something similar and it's also a VRBO

 

outboard_256

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I guess my thought would be how much is going to cost door to door and how much would it cost to make a replica look alike. Wouldn't have to be functional as a train so a lot of shortcuts can be made in building it. Might be cheaper to build a mancave to look like a train than to transport that one over.
 

TonyFanelli

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These are the problem I am having with the County of Orange. The county does not believe me when I say I'm not making a tiny house. I will not have plumbing or a bed.
A tiny house is classified as a residencial structure and has different setbacks and permitting process. I offered to do a shed permit but I was told since it is on wheels it doesn't need a permit.
They'll probably try to tax the shit out of you for something ..
 

arch stanton

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There are some lowbed guys that have rails they install on their trailer to haul rail equipment the caboose may be to tall to haul with the wheels on but if not rolling it on and off could save a bunch
14 foot tall is easy and can be done under most guys yearly permit taller than that requires a one way and routing up to 15’ is not to bad most lowbed trailers are 2’ high and a landall style are about 3’ high it looks like a caboose is between 10’ and 14’ tall if the cupola could be removed I bet the move would be in the 14’ tall range but the. What is the length and wheel base the weight is not a big deal looks to be 50 to 60 Thousand pounds
My grandfather spent 38 years working for southern pacific mostly living in a caboose
 

Eliminator21vdrive

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These are the problem I am having with the County of Orange. The county does not believe me when I say I'm not making a tiny house. I will not have plumbing or a bed.
A tiny house is classified as a residencial structure and has different setbacks and permitting process. I offered to do a shed permit but I was told since it is on wheels it doesn't need a permit.
I may be able to help you
 

zhandfull

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This may give you some insight on what is required for moving it.

 

sprintcvx

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I'm a freshly retired residential nail bender. One of our long-time customers has a caboose he had brought in and he rebuilt it from the trucks up. We helped him with some things when time aloud. It's been a 20 project. It's going to be used as a cocktail bar for him and his railroad buddies. As of last summer, it still needed to have all the interior installed(floor, walls, ceiling). We asked him multiple times to hire us to come and finish it, but he turned us down or we were to busy at the time. He's a retired longshoreman and wanted to do it all himself. Dec. '22 he fell off a ladder hanging Christmas lights and bonked his head pretty good so the project has stalled for now(he's late 70's). Kind of a bummer as I would really like to see this finished.
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Sparky

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If anyone is near Georgetown Ca 95634 and knows how to use a tape measure they could save me a 7 hour drive.
I believe that is actually in Placerville, right around the corner from my house. I see that thing every morning and think how cool that would be to have that on my property. Let me know if I can help if this is the same one.
 

Flying_Lavey

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These are the problem I am having with the County of Orange. The county does not believe me when I say I'm not making a tiny house. I will not have plumbing or a bed.
A tiny house is classified as a residencial structure and has different setbacks and permitting process. I offered to do a shed permit but I was told since it is on wheels it doesn't need a permit.
It may be too large to be classified as a shed (i'd be willing to be there are height restrictions on that) and being on wheels may get it a temporary classification resulting in limited time it could be in 1 spot? You couldn't do a permit for a general outbuilding?
 

monkeyswrench

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With the Cali laws, would it actually be easier to list it as an "ADU"? I don't know how that has changed things and if it's county by county and such.
 

bonesfab

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I so want one for a guest house. I wanted to live in one when I was a kid. Always wanted one. Very cool.
 

Livewire Fabworks

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My ex brother in laws parents had an old caboose they restored at their house in Yucca. They turned it into a guest house. I was always awesome to go out and stay in it during holiday get togethers.
 

timstoy

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Bragg Crane / Heavy Transport has rail car trailers. Would be an over sized load with special permits and pilot cars needed. A route survey would be needed for height and width for transport. A crane would be needed for loading and unloading.Be prepared for a very expensive move!
 

timstoy

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Very cool and good luck!

Along the same topic, if anyone wants a unique getaway on Clear Lake...

Friends of ours stayed there and said it was a great experience!
 

RVRKID

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That would be such a cool man cave.. A friend of mines husband worked in the caboose, his job was to drink and play cards with the people paying to ride..
 

C_J_J_C

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I woke up to way more messages and offers of help than I ever thought. PMs sent to anyone offering advise or help. THANK YOU ALL.

Project status....
Caboose purchase price negotiated.
Crane in Orange county quoted.

Trucking out for bid
Crane at pick-up out for bid.

Confirmed ZERO chance of shipping with wheels OR CUPPOLA for height issues down canyon roads (Trees).
Wheels were one thing but cutting off the top might be the straw that breaks my back.
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But.... it is doable. Pressing on.
 

traquer

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If you go out there and supervise a crew to cut the top off cleanly I can't imagine it would be too difficult to weld back? You're doing a full paint and restoration anyway after I assume.

Very cool project
 

monkeyswrench

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The lid may not be as bad as you think. Most things of that era and type were very simplistic. I wouldn't doubt you'd cut or grind the exterior skin rivets around the base, remove the interior wood around the opening and remove some square nuts and bolts. Depending on the structure, you may be able to lower it into the coach itself for the ride down. Removing the trucks isn't hard, but it's also where I heard the term "work smarter, not harder" the first time. It's all nuts and bolts, just heavier.
 

C_J_J_C

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I have a buddy who did something similar and it's also a VRBO


Thank you for the connection... Brian called me... HUGE HELP.
 

C_J_J_C

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The lid may not be as bad as you think. Most things of that era and type were very simplistic. I wouldn't doubt you'd cut or grind the exterior skin rivets around the base, remove the interior wood around the opening and remove some square nuts and bolts. Depending on the structure, you may be able to lower it into the coach itself for the ride down. Removing the trucks isn't hard, but it's also where I heard the term "work smarter, not harder" the first time. It's all nuts and bolts, just heavier.

I went to a The Fullerton Train Museum today and started counting rivets on a similar Cuppalla top... I stopped counting after 20 rivets and not being even 1/5th of the way down one side. Even that didn't bother me but each side is less than 1/3 of the barrel top which also has rivets. Just a rough guess but 800 ish of 5/16th rivet each with a bubble head. Not impossible but for me with a 4" cutoff wheel it may be the insurmountable issue. The re-installation, assuming everything stays square, is not the issue. I have time at the delivery location. If lucky maybe 30 good years left.
 

monkeyswrench

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I went to a The Fullerton Train Museum today and started counting rivets on a similar Cuppalla top... I stopped counting after 20 rivets and not being even 1/5th of the way down one side. Even that didn't bother me but each side is less than 1/3 of the barrel top which also has rivets. Just a rough guess but 800 ish of 5/16th rivet each with a bubble head. Not impossible but for me with a 4" cutoff wheel it may be the insurmountable issue. The re-installation, assuming everything stays square, is not the issue. I have time at the delivery location. If lucky maybe 30 good years left.
I don't know much about the construction of a "late model"...the only one I was ever really in and out of was Bobby's, and his was turn of the century. It was mostly wood with iron bracketry. I wonder if this one could be cut above the rivet flange, and then welded back together. Much like chopping a top, but just reattaching when in place. If you were going to repaint, it may be an option.

Bucking 800+ rivets would suck, and require another person to help swedge them. On a few hot rod projects, I shortened some 3/16th and 1/4" rivets, put them in a hole, and tack welded them on the backside. This gave the appearance of being factory, but the factory used some type of hydraulic C-clamp on steroids...I don't have one.
 

C_J_J_C

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I don't know much about the construction of a "late model"...the only one I was ever really in and out of was Bobby's, and his was turn of the century. It was mostly wood with iron bracketry. I wonder if this one could be cut above the rivet flange, and then welded back together. Much like chopping a top, but just reattaching when in place. If you were going to repaint, it may be an option.

Bucking 800+ rivets would suck, and require another person to help swedge them. On a few hot rod projects, I shortened some 3/16th and 1/4" rivets, put them in a hole, and tack welded them on the backside. This gave the appearance of being factory, but the factory used some type of hydraulic C-clamp on steroids...I don't have one.

I watched the 2nd video @zhandfull posted on link 19 and that is exactly what they did. They ground off the side rivets but cut the curve above the roof. It seems much easier except.....
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The one I want is all metal but has already been wood paneled exactly as I want. If I cut it I will 100% catch it on fire.
 

HBCraig

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So RDP ... how much effort and money is this worth?

Ever since I was a kid going to Knotts Berry Farm I have wanted a train caboose for a whiskey, cigar, sports bar, poker room, & man cave. Recently I found a Southern Pacific Train Caboose in Sacramento but I live in Orange County.

I have the room for it on my property but logistics and costs are adding up fast. Cranes at both locations, one lowboy truck for the caboose and a second truck for the wheels and tracks and then the legality issue of the the County of Orange can't even figure out if permits are even needed and if so what permits.
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Dad always told me, it's not a train unless it has a caboose. If no caboose, it's a string of cars
 

monkeyswrench

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I watched the 2nd video @zhandfull posted on link 19 and that is exactly what they did. They ground off the side rivets but cut the curve above the roof. It seems much easier except.....
View attachment 1333240 View attachment 1333241
The one I want is all metal but has already been wood paneled exactly as I want. If I cut it I will 100% catch it on fire.
A body saw and patience....as in automotive body work, not "Goodfellas" type body saw. Basically a small jigsaw. That may do the trick with no sparks.
 
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