Just so people can see, I'll post the link to the prototype here:
http://bridges.midwestplaces.com/mo/butler/mengo/
FWIW, Atlas neither knows nor cares. I have been in contact with several of their people, and none could identify it or even work up the gumption to try. Thye rely on their own catalog, and anything beyond that is as foggy as a graveyard on Halloween. In a reply to my inquiry about the origins, an Atlas rep wrote:
"The documents that the bridge was based on only had Missouri Pacific bridge noted."
I suspect that someone dug up an old set of engineering plans while simply looking for any RR bridge that sould be used. They did a great job of engineering the model from those plan (as you can see by comparing with the prototype pics)! But no one at Atlas is a bridge engineer or knows a Pratt (/\\//\) from a Warren (/\/\/\) from some of the more exotic (such as whipple or Pennsylvania), and someone in development at Atlas misread an identification chart somewhere. As Chuck notes, it's the angles that count.
chuck wrote:It's a Warren Truss pridge. They sell the same design in HO and N and call it a Warren Truss. The vertical bracing isn't an issue, the direction of the angled bracing is. Warren Truss is easy to spot as the angles look like ....... W'shttp://www.matsuo-bridge.co.jp/english/bridges/basics/truss.shtmThe only thing I can think of is the specific model goes over a body of water called Pratt or the actual engineer that designed the bridge was named Pratt.
As Historic Bridges puts it, "Two-span through truss bridge over Black River on the Iron Mountain mainline between Poplar Bluff and Hilliard."
Thanks for the weblink to the discussion of the truss types.
palallin wrote:FWIW, Atlas neither knows nor cares. I have been in contact with several of their people, and none could identify it or even work up the gumption to try. Thye rely on their own catalog, and anything beyond that is as foggy as a graveyard on Halloween. In a reply to my inquiry about the origins, an Atlas rep wrote: "The documents that the bridge was based on only had Missouri Pacific bridge noted."
Just thought I'd share a reference my son brought home from school last year.
I'm surprised that no one mentioned the Bollman Truss used by the B&O. It is historically significant in U.S. engineering.
http://www.du.edu/~jcalvert/tech/bolltrus.htm
As to warren trusses, this is a double portal warren truss bridge. Look at the top cord of the center truss and you will see that it is significantly larger than the top cords on the exterior trusses. It is designed to carry twice the load.
The Atlas double track bridge to be prototypically correct, should have much larger exterior trusses than its single track counterpart. From my observations, the double track Atlas bridge is just the single track Atlas bridge, widened.
Celebrating 18 years on the CTT Forum.
Buckeye Riveter......... OTTS Charter Member, a Roseyville Raider and a member of the CTT Forum since 2004..
Jelloway Creek, OH - ELV 1,100 - Home of the Baltimore, Ohio & Wabash RR
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Buckeye Riveter wrote: The Atlas double track bridge to be protypically correct, should have much larger exterior trusses than its single track counterpart. From my observations, the double track Atlas bridge is just the single track Atlas bridge, widened.
The Atlas double track bridge to be protypically correct, should have much larger exterior trusses than its single track counterpart. From my observations, the double track Atlas bridge is just the single track Atlas bridge, widened.
You're right: the prototype is a single-track bridge. A double-track would need to have deeper, beefier trusses.
The model does support my die-cast Frisco Mike (about 11 lbs) + train.
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