Transport Fever 2

Transport Fever 2

评价数不足
CSX EMD GP38-2 Skin Pack 2
   
奖励
收藏
已收藏
取消收藏
Scenario: USA
文件大小
发表于
553.558 MB
10 月 30 日 下午 7:27
1 项改动说明 ( 查看 )

订阅以下载
CSX EMD GP38-2 Skin Pack 2

描述
CSX Transportation

CSX Transportation (it’s name deriving with the “C” standing for Chessie, “S” for Seaboard, and “X” an all-encompassing multiplication symbol that “together we are so much more”) is the railroad division of CSX Corporation.

The latter was originally created in 1980 as a holding company for several subsidiaries. Today, its system comprises some 21,000 route miles with more than 36,000 employees.

It ranks third among Class I's with $10.6 billion in annual revenue as of 2020. However, the road has had a somewhat tumultuous history during its past 30+ years of operation.

It has been criticized extensively for various decisions carried out over its network in regards to abandonment of property, cutbacks in other areas, and a general lack of living up to its predecessor's standards.

Historically, the road can trace its roots to America's first common-carrier, the Baltimore & Ohio while other parts of its ancestry include the Chesapeake & Ohio, Western Maryland, Seaboard Air Line, Atlantic Coast Line, Louisville & Nashville, and Clinchfield.

CSX Transportation's corporate history as a stand-alone railroad has only entered its fourth decade, relatively young by industry standards.

Its creation was brought about by the formation of CSX Corporation on November 1, 1980, a holding company which controlled rail and non-rail assets.

As the formal union of what as then Chessie System and Seaboard System slowly came together during the 1980s, CSX Transportation (CSXT) was born on July 1, 1986 to operate the company's railroad division.

While the southern roads were merged into their holding company on December 29, 1982 (Seaboard System, whose name disappeared with CSXT's creation) the Chessie System roads had only operated under the guise of that name since its 1973 creation.

According to Trains Magazine, the Western Maryland was the first to disappear, merged into the B&O on May 1, 1983.

The B&O and C&O survived as "paper" companies for nearly a year into the CSXT era: B&O vanished into the C&O on April 30, 1987 (ironically it had just celebrated its 160th birthday on April 24th).

Finally, the C&O was formally dissolved as a corporate entity on August 31, 1987.

Here we have the CSX Transportation EMD GP38-2's.

Whats included?
  • CSX EMD GP38-2 2530 - 2544 available in 2000
  • CSX EMD GP38-2 2545 & 2546, 2717 - 2731 available in 2002

You will need the Zukzf's GP38-2'sto make this work.

Features:
  • Group listed
  • Model by SD70M & MaikC
  • Custom sounds by Mr. Cheesecake
  • Credit to Pete Willard of railsimstuff.com for Cab Numbers all numberbord font.