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Ft. Worth & Western - Coe Rail's Bondo Flyer (or the Texas Star Clipper) |
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Click here to go directly to the photos.
Mention the name "Bondo Flyer" to the average North Texas railfan, and there's a good chance he'll know what you're talking about. Mention the name "Texas Star Clipper", and he might not.
Please click on any of the following pictures to see a larger image:
In April 1999, Ft Worth & Western turned over the operation of its Tarantula passenger trains to Coe Rail, Inc., a dinner train and excursion train operator based in Wixom, Michigan. Coe was seeking to establish a presence in north Texas first by operating the already-established Tarantula train, and planned to implement dinner train service at a later date.
In September 1999, two F7 locomotives and three cars, last in service on Coe's Iowa Star Clipper dinner train, arrived in Ft. Worth for Coe to begin the process of restoring them for its new dinner train, the Texas Star Clipper
Coe's operations in the D-FW metroplex were surrounded by controversy and plagued with
criticism from the very beginning. FWWR employees who had worked on the Tarantula train
prior to the change in operators were offered the chance to continue working for the passenger
train under Coe. Those who stayed on took a pay cut and lost some of the employment benefits
they had enjoyed under FWWR. Those who elected not to do so lost their jobs. In at least two
Ft. Worth Star-Telegram articles ("Tarantula Train Changes Spin Web of Discontent",
September 24, 1999; "Sidetracked Tarantula", April 24, 2000), several former and present
Tarantula employees openly criticized Coe Rail,
claiming that the new operator had removed first aid kits and drinking water
(previously provided by FWWR) and stated that Coe provided employees with only an outdoor
garden hose for their drinking water. The changes resulted in the resignations of several
employees, leaving Coe short of qualified personnel.
In a second Star-Telegram article ("Dinner Train Still off the Track", November 13,
1999), the owner of the warehouse that housed the Star Clipper during its restoration
complained that Coe Rail had fallen behind on its rent payments, and would soon be facing
eviction. The same
article mentioned that some of Coe's employees who had been performing the restoration work
had begun referring to the train as the "Bondo Flyer", a name that north Texas railfans,
particularly those on the Railspot list, immediately adopted. (The "Bondo Flyer" name
was a reference to Coe's use of Bondo body putty to patch dents and holes on the dinner
train's locomotives and cars during their renovation.)
The restored dinner train finally departed the warehouse early in January 2000, and made its way to Grapevine, where Coe workers completed the finishing touches. Dinner train service began in January and lasted through March. After Coe sidelined FWWR's 4-6-0 steam locomotive at Grapevine, it began using its F7 locomotives on the Grapevine-Ft. Worth Tarantula trains.
The controversy surrounding Coe and its relationship with the Ft. Worth & Western reached its peak on March 15, 2000, when a Tarantula passenger train, operated by a Coe crew running one of the F7 locomotives backwards, collided with a Ft. Worth & Western train near the Ft. Worth Stockyards, sending more than a dozen passengers to area hospitals for treatment of minor injuries. At issue in the accident were the facts that both trains should have been moving at restricted speed, and that the FRA had reportedly previously instructed Coe not to run their locomotives backwards. Also at issue, according to Star-Telegram reports, were the facts that Dennis Larson, Coe's general manager, was at the controls of the train and may not have been a certified engineer, and that Coe had been cited by the FRA the previous fall for violations in its engineer training program.
Shortly after the accident, Ft Worth & Western obtained a restraining order to effectively
kick Coe Rail, its employees, and the Texas Star Clipper dinner train off FWWR
property. The order allowed FWWR to resume operation of the Tarantula train; by the end of May,
all Coe equipment had left the area. Although FWWR continues to operate
the Tarantula, an article appearing in the Ft. Worth Star-Telegram on September 6, 2000
mentioned that the City of Grapevine was considering taking over the operation after
receiving an offer from FWWR owner Bill Davis.
Regardless of one's opinion of Coe Rail and the damage it caused to the Tarantula name and the public image of
host railroad Ft. Worth & Western, one cannot deny that Coe's brief presence in the D-FW area certainly
resulted in some colorful and interesting operations. Presented below are 15 images featuring the Bondo Flyer, er,
Texas Star Clipper.
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All images on Wes Carr's Southwest Shorts © 2000 by Wes Carr. All rights reserved.
Wes Carr claims no affiliation with the Ft. Worth & Western, Coe Rail Inc., or any other shortline railroad.