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Friday, March 21, 2014

Berne, Washington

East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1998
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 1998.

Berne is the site of the east end of the current Cascade Tunnel.  It is fairly easy to find, as Highway 2 passes almost directly over the tunnel entrance, and the current portal is visible from the highway.

The new Cascade Tunnel opened for service on January 12, 1929. When the tunnel first opened, the east portal looked identical to the west portal at Scenic, and electric locomotives were used in the tunnel. 

Historical Photos:
East Portal during construction, 1927 (UW)
Workers in Mill Creek Bunkhouse at Berne, 1928 (WSHS)
Electric Locomotive #5011, 1928 (UW)
Officials prepare to open tunnel, January 12, 1929 (UW)
Officials opening the new tunnel, January 12, 1929 (UW)
Officials throw a switch for the first Oriental Limited through the tunnel, January 12, 1929 (UW)
First Oriental Limited through tunnel, Jan. 12, 1929 (UW)
Officials in front of new tunnel, January 12, 1929 (UW)
Empire Builder, circa 1929 (UW)

By late 1947, the Great Northern was using diesel locomotives on its passenger trains through the Cascade Tunnel, including the Empire Builder, Oriental Limited, and Fast Mail, eliminating the change of motive power at Wenatchee and Skykomish. Test trips had shown that diesel locomotives could pull fast-moving passenger trains through the tunnel, but with heavy freight trains, the heat generated by the exhaust gases raised the air temperature inside the tunnel enough to cause engine shutdowns. This is because the train acts as a piston in the tunnel, pushing the cooler air in front of it and leaving the locomotives surrounded by the hot air from their own exhaust. By 1952, the Cascade Division was effectively completely dieselized, with the last steam run taking place from March 23-30, 1953 when a stored 4-8-2 pulled a weed burner train from Seattle.

In the early 1950s, the Great Northern tested a pair of new General Electric experimental E2b electric locomotives. Built in 1951, these 2,500-horsepower units were copies of four units sold to the Pennsylvania Railroad. They had B-B trucks, painted black, and assigned numbers 5020 and 5021. The Great Northern decided they lacked adequate pulling power at the low speeds that were typical on the 2.2% grades. They were returned to GE and sold to the Pennsylvania in March 1953.

The Great Northern had studied extending the electrification east to Spokane in 1930, and west to Seattle in the early 1950s. Both times they found no economic justification for an extension. In 1955, further studies concluded that the electrics cost half as much to operate as steam power, but twice as much as diesels. The Great Northern determined that diesel locomotives could pull freight trains through the Cascade Tunnel if the tunnel was equipped with a ventilation system, and in 1956 the Morrison-Knudsen Company of Boise, Idaho, was hired to install such a system at a cost of $650,000.

East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 1994. Photo by Cliff West.

At the east end of the tunnel, a new portal with a vertical lift steel door and a pair of 6-foot fans driven by 800-horsepower electric motors turning at 1,150 rpm were installed. With the door closed, this system supplied a fresh air flow of 220,000 cfm. When a train was in the tunnel, only one fan was used; the second fan came on once the train exited the tunnel. With eastbound trains, the door closed when the train entered the west portal with one fan running and opened when the train came within 3,200 feet of the east portal, then closed again when the train cleared and both fans ran for 28 minutes to clear the exhaust from the tunnel.

The ventilation system was placed in service on July 31, 1956, and diesel locomotives took over all operations over Stevens Pass. The Z-1 class electrics were sold for scrap and the Y-1 and Y-1a electrics were sold to the Pennsylvania Railroad; the Y-1s became PRR Nos. 1-7 and the Y-1A was used for parts. W-1 No. 5018 was sold to the Union Pacific Railroad for conversion to a coal turbine locomotive, and No. 5019 was scrapped.

Historical Photos:
Diesel at East Portal, Apr 1958 (gngoat.org)
Diesel at East Portal, July 27, 1973
(rrpicturearchives.net)

The Great Northern was merged into the Burlington Northern Railroad on March 2, 1970. Between July 1989 and May 1990 the Burlington Northern undertook a $4.8 million project to cut parallel notches in the tunnel lining to provide clearance for new double-stack container trains.

East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2000
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2000.

In 1997, the tunnel's ventilation system was rebuilt, with this result. Where the original door opened vertically, like a garage door, the new door opens to the side. In any event, operations have remained essentially the same over the years. If a train enters the tunnel from the west, the door closes and the fans turn on, forcing the exhaust out behind the train. The door remains closed until the train is a quarter-mile from the east end, when the door opens automatically to let the train out. If a train enters from the east, the fans come on immediately and the door closes once the train is fully inside. The exhaust is forced out ahead of the train, and the door at the east end reopens when the train has cleared the tunnel. In either case, the fans continue to run for 30 minutes after a train has left the tunnel to fully clear the tunnel of diesel exhaust fumes.

Here are some pictures of the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel and trains at Berne.

East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 1994.

East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 1994.

Door Opening at the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
Door opening on the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 1994.

Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound freight train in 1994. Photo by Cliff West.

Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound freight train in 1994.

Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 1994
Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound freight train in 1994. Photo by Cliff West.

Burlington Northern GP40M #3518 at Berne, Washington in 1994
BN GP40M #3518 with an eastbound freight train at Berne in 1994.

BNSF C44-9W #4699 at Berne, Washington in 2000
BNSF C44-9W #4699 at Berne with a westbound freight train in 2000.

BNSF C44-9W #4699 entering the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2000
BNSF C44-9W #4699 heading into the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with a westbound freight train in 2000.

BNSF C44-9W #4629 entering the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2000
BNSF C44-9W #4629 as a helper in a westbound freight train at Berne in 2000.

Door Closing at the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2000
Door closing on the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2000.

Burlington Northern SD40-2 #7130 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2000
Burlington Northern SD40-2 #7130 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound freight train in 2000.

Burlington Northern SD40-2 #7130 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2000
Burlington Northern SD40-2 #7130 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound freight train in 2000.

259159608 East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

259159747 East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

259159872 Door Opening at the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
Door opening on the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2002.
Photo by Cliff West.

259159912 Door Opening at the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
Door opening on the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2002.
Photo by Cliff West.

259159955 Door Opening at the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
Door opening on the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel in 2002.
Photo by Cliff West.

259160024 Eastbound Train inside the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
Eastbound Train inside the Cascade Tunnel in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

259160115 BNSF SD75M #8229 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
BNSF SD75M #8229 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound intermodal train in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

259160219 BNSF SD75M #8229 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
BNFS SD75M #8229 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound intermodal train in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

259160270 BNSF C44-9W #756 at Berne, Washington in 2002
BNSF C44-9W #756 in an eastbound intermodal train at Berne in 2002.
Photo by Cliff West.

259160363 Norfolk Southern C40-9W #9585 at Berne, Washington in 2002
Norfolk Southern C40-9W #9585 in an eastbound intermodal train at Berne in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

259160543 BNSF C44-9W #4917 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel at Berne, Washington in 2002
BNSF C44-9W #4917 emerging from the East Portal of the Cascade Tunnel with an eastbound intermodal train in 2002. Photo by Cliff West.

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