Speaking of scrap (was Something old, reborn - plastic Freight Car Builders list)
Eric Hansmann wrote:Here’s a guest blog post on scrap loads from a few years ago. It’s a nice combination of prototype and modeling info.Thanks for the link, Eric. Good post, and sound information about scrap grades, as I learned when I lived in Pittsburgh. If only more modelers would both read it, and act on it.
Here’s a guest blog post on scrap loads from a few years ago. It’s a nice combination of prototype and modeling info.
In 1940 and 1941, the period that brought the Depression to a close here in the US, what kind of scrap loads were feeding "the Arsenal of Democracy"?
Thanks!
Irv Thomae
modeling north-central Vermont in 1940-41
In 1940 and 1941, the period that brought the Depression to a close here in the US, what kind of scrap loads were feeding "the Arsenal of Democracy"?
Thanks!
Irv Thomae
modeling north-central Vermont in 1940-41
Good analysis, but unless you want a “conversation piece” gondola I think its scrap load should be pretty generic. If you can find a machine shop they might give you some metal shavings from drill presses or milling machines. Wet them and allow rusting to occur, then form into a block and soak with white glue.
Shipping large items, such as cars, intact means you don’t get full value from carload rates.
Think of your layout like a movie. There are a handful of stars and the rest of the cast and extras aren’t allowed to “steal the scene” from them. They should be costumed appropriately for their roles and the era, but if they are conspicuous something is probably wrong.
Alex Schneider
From: main@RealSTMFC.groups.io [mailto:main@RealSTMFC.groups.io] On Behalf Of O Fenton Wells
Sent: Saturday, November 5, 2022 4:17 PM
To: main@realstmfc.groups.io
Subject: Re: [RealSTMFC] Speaking of scrap (was Something old, reborn - plastic Freight Car Builders list)
My feeling and I could be way off on this but scrap was in relatively large sizes up though the early 1960's then shredders and compacting machines began to make a difference. Remember the movie Goldfinger in the mid 60's when the car was crushed and compacted, Also I've seen cars flattened and stacked and covered in netting to keep debris from falling. I have photos I have taken in the 80's in the midwest where scrap is sorted by metal type and in very small pieces.
As I said this is just conjecture based on my observations.
Fenton
On Sat, Nov 5, 2022 at 4:41 PM Robert kirkham <rdkirkham@...> wrote:
Fenton Wells posted some photos of modified Athearn gons with some very nice scrap loads. It got me to wondering about where to fill in some gaps in my knowledge. I model post WWII (Summer '46).
The reason i ask: For example, i’ve found some photos (a couple included here) by Lee Russel (in Albuquerque c1942) in the LoC collection showing old model “A"s, pot belly stoves, bed springs and a hundred other model railroad cliche’s. Nut i am wary of taking that as a base line for what scrap should show up in a gon. i have the impression that anything in a scrap heap in 1941/early 42’ will have been turned into planes, ships, tracks or bayonets by 1945, leaving the scrap yards of N. America kind of empty of that earlier era “stuff”.
Then the war ends, and there would be a lot of unnecessary war supplies to be stored, scrapped or sold as war surplus. Not necessarily shipped in scrap gons?? Much of it still in Europe or on some beach in the Pacific, never to travel N.American rails again. I also have a 1946 photo (no permission to copy tho) of a junk yard in Vancouver BC where the heap includes gleaming stainless steel aircraft wings (with markings). Kind of different!
I can imagine that the resumption of the “peace time” economy kicks in to change the mix after that, so your average late ‘40s to mid 50’s modeller has a different mix to deal with.
So a basic theory emerges that the kind of scrap in gons - and maybe the likelihood of seeing scrap gons in trains - could be different pre, mid, immediately post war and a half decade or more later.
I’m thinking the other obvious element is geographic location of the steel industry and industry manufacturing in steel. The closer to such centres, the more the mix of cars includes scrap gons? But I doubt that changes significantly with the depression and WWII. Or No?
I wonder if any of you have more insight or resources that point in a different direction or could flesh this out in a little more detail? Especially interested in any other sources that would describe most scrap immediately post WWII.
Rob
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--
Fenton Wells
250 Frye RdPinehurst NC 28374
910-420-8106
srrfan1401@...
Good analysis, but unless you want a “conversation piece” gondola I think its scrap load should be pretty generic. If you can find a machine shop they might give you some metal shavings from drill presses or milling machines. Wet them and allow rusting to occur, then form into a block and soak with white glue.
Shipping large items, such as cars, intact means you don’t get full value from carload rates.
Think of your layout like a movie. There are a handful of stars and the rest of the cast and extras aren’t allowed to “steal the scene” from them. They should be costumed appropriately for their roles and the era, but if they are conspicuous something is probably wrong.
Alex Schneider
From: main@RealSTMFC.groups.io [mailto:main@RealSTMFC.groups.io] On Behalf Of O Fenton Wells
Sent: Saturday, November 5, 2022 4:17 PM
To: main@realstmfc.groups.io
Subject: Re: [RealSTMFC] Speaking of scrap (was Something old, reborn - plastic Freight Car Builders list)
My feeling and I could be way off on this but scrap was in relatively large sizes up though the early 1960's then shredders and compacting machines began to make a difference. Remember the movie Goldfinger in the mid 60's when the car was crushed and compacted, Also I've seen cars flattened and stacked and covered in netting to keep debris from falling. I have photos I have taken in the 80's in the midwest where scrap is sorted by metal type and in very small pieces.
As I said this is just conjecture based on my observations.
Fenton
On Sat, Nov 5, 2022 at 4:41 PM Robert kirkham <rdkirkham@...> wrote:
Fenton Wells posted some photos of modified Athearn gons with some very nice scrap loads. It got me to wondering about where to fill in some gaps in my knowledge. I model post WWII (Summer '46).
The reason i ask: For example, i’ve found some photos (a couple included here) by Lee Russel (in Albuquerque c1942) in the LoC collection showing old model “A"s, pot belly stoves, bed springs and a hundred other model railroad cliche’s. Nut i am wary of taking that as a base line for what scrap should show up in a gon. i have the impression that anything in a scrap heap in 1941/early 42’ will have been turned into planes, ships, tracks or bayonets by 1945, leaving the scrap yards of N. America kind of empty of that earlier era “stuff”.
Then the war ends, and there would be a lot of unnecessary war supplies to be stored, scrapped or sold as war surplus. Not necessarily shipped in scrap gons?? Much of it still in Europe or on some beach in the Pacific, never to travel N.American rails again. I also have a 1946 photo (no permission to copy tho) of a junk yard in Vancouver BC where the heap includes gleaming stainless steel aircraft wings (with markings). Kind of different!
I can imagine that the resumption of the “peace time” economy kicks in to change the mix after that, so your average late ‘40s to mid 50’s modeller has a different mix to deal with.
So a basic theory emerges that the kind of scrap in gons - and maybe the likelihood of seeing scrap gons in trains - could be different pre, mid, immediately post war and a half decade or more later.
I’m thinking the other obvious element is geographic location of the steel industry and industry manufacturing in steel. The closer to such centres, the more the mix of cars includes scrap gons? But I doubt that changes significantly with the depression and WWII. Or No?
I wonder if any of you have more insight or resources that point in a different direction or could flesh this out in a little more detail? Especially interested in any other sources that would describe most scrap immediately post WWII.
Rob
--
Fenton Wells
250 Frye RdPinehurst NC 28374
910-420-8106
srrfan1401@...
Good analysis, but unless you want a “conversation piece” gondola I think its scrap load should be pretty generic. If you can find a machine shop they might give you some metal shavings from drill presses or milling machines. Wet them and allow rusting to occur, then form into a block and soak with white glue.
Shipping large items, such as cars, intact means you don’t get full value from carload rates.
Think of your layout like a movie. There are a handful of stars and the rest of the cast and extras aren’t allowed to “steal the scene” from them. They should be costumed appropriately for their roles and the era, but if they are conspicuous something is probably wrong.
Alex Schneider
Sent: Saturday, November 5, 2022 4:17 PM
To: main@realstmfc.groups.io
Subject: Re: [RealSTMFC] Speaking of scrap (was Something old, reborn - plastic Freight Car Builders list)
My feeling and I could be way off on this but scrap was in relatively large sizes up though the early 1960's then shredders and compacting machines began to make a difference. Remember the movie Goldfinger in the mid 60's when the car was crushed and compacted, Also I've seen cars flattened and stacked and covered in netting to keep debris from falling. I have photos I have taken in the 80's in the midwest where scrap is sorted by metal type and in very small pieces.
As I said this is just conjecture based on my observations.
Fenton
On Sat, Nov 5, 2022 at 4:41 PM Robert kirkham <rdkirkham@...> wrote:
Fenton Wells posted some photos of modified Athearn gons with some very nice scrap loads. It got me to wondering about where to fill in some gaps in my knowledge. I model post WWII (Summer '46).
The reason i ask: For example, i’ve found some photos (a couple included here) by Lee Russel (in Albuquerque c1942) in the LoC collection showing old model “A"s, pot belly stoves, bed springs and a hundred other model railroad cliche’s. Nut i am wary of taking that as a base line for what scrap should show up in a gon. i have the impression that anything in a scrap heap in 1941/early 42’ will have been turned into planes, ships, tracks or bayonets by 1945, leaving the scrap yards of N. America kind of empty of that earlier era “stuff”.
Then the war ends, and there would be a lot of unnecessary war supplies to be stored, scrapped or sold as war surplus. Not necessarily shipped in scrap gons?? Much of it still in Europe or on some beach in the Pacific, never to travel N.American rails again. I also have a 1946 photo (no permission to copy tho) of a junk yard in Vancouver BC where the heap includes gleaming stainless steel aircraft wings (with markings). Kind of different!
I can imagine that the resumption of the “peace time” economy kicks in to change the mix after that, so your average late ‘40s to mid 50’s modeller has a different mix to deal with.
So a basic theory emerges that the kind of scrap in gons - and maybe the likelihood of seeing scrap gons in trains - could be different pre, mid, immediately post war and a half decade or more later.
I’m thinking the other obvious element is geographic location of the steel industry and industry manufacturing in steel. The closer to such centres, the more the mix of cars includes scrap gons? But I doubt that changes significantly with the depression and WWII. Or No?
I wonder if any of you have more insight or resources that point in a different direction or could flesh this out in a little more detail? Especially interested in any other sources that would describe most scrap immediately post WWII.
Rob
--
Fenton Wells
250 Frye Rd
Pinehurst NC 28374
910-420-8106
srrfan1401@...
Fenton Wells posted some photos of modified Athearn gons with some very nice scrap loads. It got me to wondering about where to fill in some gaps in my knowledge. I model post WWII (Summer '46).The reason i ask: For example, i’ve found some photos (a couple included here) by Lee Russel (in Albuquerque c1942) in the LoC collection showing old model “A"s, pot belly stoves, bed springs and a hundred other model railroad cliche’s. Nut i am wary of taking that as a base line for what scrap should show up in a gon. i have the impression that anything in a scrap heap in 1941/early 42’ will have been turned into planes, ships, tracks or bayonets by 1945, leaving the scrap yards of N. America kind of empty of that earlier era “stuff”.Then the war ends, and there would be a lot of unnecessary war supplies to be stored, scrapped or sold as war surplus. Not necessarily shipped in scrap gons?? Much of it still in Europe or on some beach in the Pacific, never to travel N.American rails again. I also have a 1946 photo (no permission to copy tho) of a junk yard in Vancouver BC where the heap includes gleaming stainless steel aircraft wings (with markings). Kind of different!I can imagine that the resumption of the “peace time” economy kicks in to change the mix after that, so your average late ‘40s to mid 50’s modeller has a different mix to deal with.So a basic theory emerges that the kind of scrap in gons - and maybe the likelihood of seeing scrap gons in trains - could be different pre, mid, immediately post war and a half decade or more later.I’m thinking the other obvious element is geographic location of the steel industry and industry manufacturing in steel. The closer to such centres, the more the mix of cars includes scrap gons? But I doubt that changes significantly with the depression and WWII. Or No?I wonder if any of you have more insight or resources that point in a different direction or could flesh this out in a little more detail? Especially interested in any other sources that would describe most scrap immediately post WWII.Rob