Jason
Modeling the Fort Worth & Denver of the early 1970's in N scale
QUOTE: Originally posted by jh3449 I worked for PennCentral in Chicago in the mid '70s. By that time we were only shipping a few cattle cars per week east. It was almost always two of the 89 foot cars at a time and they always went on the head end of a Truc Train right behind the power.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Ken Wood BTW, the advent of "unit trains" is not a relatively recent phenomena. A P.F.E. (Pacific Fruit Express) 'reefer block' was a unit train, often consisting of a hundred cars or more... all decked out in PFE SP/UP (jointly owned) reefer orange... and reefer blocks were run from late in the 19th century. The SP also ran their one-time famous "Overnight" express trains on the coastline back in the 1930s between L..A.. and S.F., all painted black or silver cars heralded as such in the consist but consisting of drygoods transport rather than perishables. Both of these were types of unit trains, though the vernacular of the times didn't know of the 'word' as we use it today. There were, of course, other examples, too, from other roads. :)
Ray Breyer
Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943
QUOTE: A lot of cars of the same type running on the same train in the same general direction isn't a unit train, it's a block of cars.
QUOTE: A steam-era train full of reefers is nothing more than a coincidence, or maybe scheduled planning. In the good old days, many freight trains were scheduled by timetable as second or third class trains, and had specific scheduled times to (try to) meet.
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!