QUOTE: Originally posted by passengerfan I may be wrong but I don't think the car is a 24 roomette car but could it be a 24 duplex roomette car. The only two railroads that owned these cars were AT&SF and CN. Both sides of these cars have staggered windows and the Santa Fe cars were P/S built between June and August 1947 and were Indian prefix names for the twelve cars. Hope this helps.
QUOTE: Originally posted by passengerfan Easy to tell if the car you are talking about is former Canadian National or AT&SF. If CN they had six wheel trucks and Santa Fe 24-duplex roomette cars had four wheel trucks. This might be a little more help.
QUOTE: Originally posted by psngrtrn Tonatiuh, I have the Pullman library book with this car in it. If you post your e-mail address, I will attempt to scan in and send you info. Ch
The CN cars had plain sides, the ATSF had fluted sides.
In the spring of 1942, Pullman out-shopped a unique streamlined sleeping car having 24 duplex roomettes as Plan 4100. The objective was to see if such a car would be accepted by the traveling public and the railroads as a possible replacement for dated, heavy-weight 14 and 12 section sleeping cars. The war ensured it was not repeated
After spending time on NYC, PRR, GN, ATSF, and B&O named 'L.S. Hungerford', it too was eventually 'sold south' to N de M.
Tonatiuh will appreciate this info. Oh wait, he hasn't visited the forum in 5 years and this thread is 16 years old.
Rich
Alton Junction
You never know when someone might find these 4100-plan cars interesting... I sure did!
Here's a guy who built the B&O version of the Hungerford -- and modeled the interior carefully. All he needs is a few Mel-style women and he'd be all set...
This car is available from Laser Horizons (car sides only, you supply core kit) through Pro-Custom Hobbies. Special order $21.25 USD
http://www.procustomhobbies.com/catpages/LAH.shtml
The car was a one off, 1943 build, leased to GN 1949-51 as they had a shortage of roomette space on the Empire Builder before the 1950 add-on cars for the 47 EB (to become the Western Star later) arrived, and the 1951 total replacement 'Mid Century Empire Builder' was delivered.
Similar but not identical to the CN 'I' class and the ATSF 'Indian' cars. The ATSF cars as noted above had fluted sides.
Ed