Re: Are these cars being loaded with sawdust?
Armand Premo
Sawdust was also used in great quantities in RR ice houses to provide insulation between layers of ice .Armand Premo ![]()
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Re: WCF&N box cars
Clark Propst
I agree Bruce. Got this from Lloyd Keyser "These were LCL cars used between Cedar Rapids and Waterloo."
CW Propst
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Re: possibly 19-teens or 1920s...
Funny they tried to blank out the railroad names - not too successfully!
Search this collection for lots more good stuff - try "railroad cars." Tom E.
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possibly 19-teens or 1920s...
Claus Schlund \(HGM\)
Hi List Members,
Some nice boxcars, possibly 19-teens or 1920s...
Enjoy!
Claus Schlund
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SP 66094, a truss rod box car
Claus Schlund \(HGM\)
Hi List Members,
Zoom in to check out SP 66094, a truss rod box car. Appears to have ‘wrong
way’ doors, opening to the left.
Enjoy!
Claus Schlund
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Re: SP drop_bottom_gon and an SP flat
vapeurchapelon
Hello Claus,
many thanks for the link - but I have to say that this time the ship is much more interesting than the freight cars...!
Regards
Johannes
Modeling the early post-war years up to about 1953
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 03. Juni 2020 um 17:58 Uhr
Von: "Claus Schlund \(HGM\)" <claus@...> An: "STMFC" <main@RealSTMFC.groups.io> Betreff: [RealSTMFC] SP drop_bottom_gon and an SP flat Hi List Members,
Zoom in to see an SP drop_bottom_gon and an SP flat with lumber loads. Road numbers can be made out on these both
Enjoy!
Claus Schlund
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Re: Are these cars being loaded with sawdust?
Bill Decker
Nolan,
The "Spruce" in Spruce Goose actually is not Spruce. It is Canadian pine. That bird rests within five miles of where I am typing this..... Beyond that, the US Army Spruce Division was a World War One phenomena. Airplanes of that era were built of wood. WW2 saw a few wood aircraft, most notably the British Mosquito. Howard Hughes Spruce Goose attempted to tap into the use of wood, as well. Back to the wood chips coming out of Toledo Oregon in the mid-late 1950s. A further check with local sources indicates the Georgia-Pacific pulp and paper mill at Toledo opened in 1958, obviously after the earlier referenced photo. That makes shipping wood chips out of Toledo a brief phenomena of 1957 and part of 1958. Thereafter, it was long strings of wood chip cars going out to Toledo on the Oregon Coast, passing through the middle of Corvallis (my home town) on their way. As noted previously, all of this took place after SP steam dropped its fires, although G-P may well have had their steam locomotive still working out at the mill at Toledo. Bill Deckder McMinnville, Oregon
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SP drop_bottom_gon and an SP flat
Claus Schlund \(HGM\)
Hi List Members,
Zoom in to see an SP drop_bottom_gon and an SP flat with lumber loads. Road
numbers can be made out on these both
Enjoy!
Claus Schlund
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Re: Are these cars being loaded with sawdust?
Richard Townsend
The SpruceGoose is at the Evergreen Aviation Museum in McMinnville, Oregon. It is in excellent shape and on public display in this excellent museum.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On Jun 3, 2020, at 7:37 AM, Donald B. Valentine via groups.io <riverman_vt@...> wrote:
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Re: Some more good images
Benjamin Hom
Don Valentine asked: "Speaking of watermelon cars did someone other than Sunshine Models offer an ACL Class O-17 as an HO kit? I've not had much luck finding one at a 'reasonable' price from an source." Ambroid or AHM. Pick your poison. Ben Hom
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Re: a bad day for LV 32607
Schuyler Larrabee
It always surprises me in photos like this that the brake rods to the trucks manage to stay attached.
Elden, there’s some damage to the corner, but I’d say the fact that the lengthwise arc to the car body is more serious than the damage to the corner.
Also interesting is the streetcar in the photo.
Schuyler
From: main@RealSTMFC.groups.io <main@RealSTMFC.groups.io> On Behalf Of Gatwood, Elden J SAD
Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2020 8:51 AM To: RealSTMFC@groups.io Subject: [RealSTMFC] a bad day for LV 32607
https://digital.library.temple.edu/digital/collection/p15037coll3/id/67204/rec/8
with serious damage to corner of car
Elden Gatwood
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Re: Some more good images
Donald B. Valentine <riverman_vt@...>
Love the ACL ventilated boxcar in Portland, OR , Claus! Speaking of watermelon cars did someone other than Sunshine Models offer an ACL Class O-17 as an HO kit? I've not had much luck finding one at a "reasonable" price from an source/ Cordially, Don Valentine
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Re: WCF&N box cars
Clark,
It looks like they have interchange data, lower left. The photo quality is such that it is hard to see!
Regards,
Bruce Smith
Auburn, AL
From: main@RealSTMFC.groups.io <main@RealSTMFC.groups.io> on behalf of Clark Propst <cepropst@q.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 3, 2020 9:36 AM To: main@RealSTMFC.groups.io <main@RealSTMFC.groups.io> Subject: [RealSTMFC] WCF&N box cars Attached an interesting photo courtesy of Ron Christensen of WCF&N box cars. They appear to be USRA cars? They also don't appear to have the necessary data for interchange?
CW Propst
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Re: Are these cars being loaded with sawdust?
Donald B. Valentine <riverman_vt@...>
The US Army had a number of sources for the quality of spruce needed for the Spads and other planes built for use in The Great War. To my knowledge all were sold in the 1920's but I don't know about the various forest reserves. Lots of spruce and other commodities were moved by rail to the various aircraft assembly plants during WW I. The Stearman, later Boeing, PT-17 biplane trainer also used a lot of spruce. The fuselage frame is largely of tubular metal construction but the wings are another story, being largely fabric covered spruce that are constructed like a Guillow's model airplanes and then, like the paper covering of the models, is coated with dope. Neat aircraft, The molder for the NERS #250 A/C Duct kit, which is a tricky mold to run, has two of the them nearby and I never turn down an offer for a flight. There are usually a number of them at the Mid-Atlantic Air Show in Reading, PA that was supposed to have been this weekend but has tentatively been rescheduled for 31 July and 1 & 2 August where rides can be purchased. Where is Howard Hughes' "Spruce Goose" now? That thing needs to be reconditioned and flown to Dulles for permanent display at the Smithsonian Aircraft Museum there. The museum is well worth a visit for anyone with a modicum of interest in older aircraft especially with no admission charge. My best, Don Valentine
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WCF&N box cars
Clark Propst
Attached an interesting photo courtesy of Ron Christensen of WCF&N box cars. They appear to be USRA cars? They also don't appear to have the necessary data for interchange?
CW Propst
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a bad day for LV 32607
Gatwood, Elden J SAD
https://digital.library.temple.edu/digital/collection/p15037coll3/id/67204/rec/8
with serious damage to corner of car
Elden Gatwood
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Re: Photo: "Elk" Boxcar
Donald B. Valentine <riverman_vt@...>
Look at the extra height added to the stock pen fence to make sure the elk didn't clear it. An elk farm here in Vermont used and eight foot fence for that reason. My best, Don Valentine
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Re: Paint Booth
Jim Hayes
It depends. I use only Vallejo and I found a nice one on Ebay that folds up into a small case. With Vallejo I can use it indoors with only an open window behind it. I'm not a heavy user and it serves my needs well. I'm not near it so I can't tell you the brand but it was well under $100. JimH
On Tue, Jun 2, 2020 at 7:32 PM Dan <baltimoret4a5661@...> wrote: Looking to purchase a new painting booth. Any recommendations would be helpful.
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Some more good images
Claus Schlund \(HGM\)
Hi List Members,
Some more good images from this site...
ML&T flat
SFRD reefer with map
Great boxcars, no date, but I would say early 1920s
PRR class GR gondola
Great string of SP gondolas with lumber loads
PFE reefer builders photos dated 1920
MP boxcar
SP flat with bulldozer load
Yard with lots of great cars,possibly very early 1920s or even
earlier...
UP 33ft box
NP and SP boxcars
Boxcars and reefers
Enjoy!
Claus Schlund
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Re: Are these cars being loaded with sawdust?
Todd Sullivan
The Spruce Division was part of the U.S.'s WWI effort to increase war material production. In those days, aircraft were made mostly of wood (spruce) and fabric. That's where the majority of the spruce production went. There's a chapter in "Railroads in the Woods" that has photos and a discussion of the Spruce Division,its woods railroads and mills.
Todd Sullivan
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