In addtion to the steam era freightcars, I enjoy looking at Shorpy:
http://www.shorpy.com
You can search for railroads, freightcars, locomotives, etc., and all sorts of interesting picures will pop up, like this picture:
http://www.shorpy.com/node/47?size=_original#caption
Gary
Some useful books:
Car and Locomotive Cyclopedia of American Practice - Published yearly for professionals in the railroad industry. Photos and drawings, advertising. Used copies can be found on Ebay, Amazon and other places. Prices $40.00-$100.00
Train Shed Cyclopedia - This series reprinted pages from Car and Locomotive Cyclopedia Used prices about $10.00
Railway Prototype Cyclopedia http://rpcycpub.com/ Each volume has extensive information on specific railroad cars including railroads that operated them, with photos.
I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
ORER's are certainly a great source of information. If you find an available model, or a photo of a car that interests you, you can look it up in the appropriate ORER to see whether that group of cars was in service at the time that particular ORER was published. It will tell you how many cars of that series were in service, and sometimes tell you about the kind of purpose the car served. A modeler who wants to focus on 1950, for example, can get a lot of good, useful information from a 1950 ORER.
The ORER's do not include photos or detailed information about such things as type of trucks, brake rigging, type of doors, etc. For that, you need photos, official railroad equipment diagrams, or detailed descriptions and car histories in books or articles. The various railroad historical societies can be a big help. Unfortunately, some of the best books on these subjects are a little too esoteric to enjoy wide distribution and availability, so you have to snap them up when you can get them.
I highly recommend The Postwar Freight Car Fleet by Larry Kline and Ted Culotta, published by the NMRA, 2006. Also, Ted Culotta's "Focus on Freight Cars" series from Speedwitch Media is a great resource.
Most of us build our roster by balancing what we can afford against what we think fits our theme. As our knowledge increases, we sometimes discover that something doesn't really fit. If we really like the item, we usually just squint our eyes and gloss over the discrepancy. If the incorrect item offends your sensibilities, then it's time to junk it, sell it, trade it, give it to a friend, or convert it. Whatever you decide to do, the Prototype Police won't haul you off to the slammer.
Tom
cuyama DSchmitt Westerfield Models http://www.westerfieldmodels.com/ I should have mentioned them as well. I don't know if the ORER CD ROMs appear on their website, but they are at the very bottom of the .pdf price list linked from this page.
DSchmitt Westerfield Models http://www.westerfieldmodels.com/
I should have mentioned them as well. I don't know if the ORER CD ROMs appear on their website, but they are at the very bottom of the .pdf price list linked from this page.
Can by purchased on-line in their "secure store" Link is on left side of store page.
DSchmittWesterfield Models http://www.westerfieldmodels.com/
Layout Design GalleryLayout Design Special Interest Group
olson185 7j43k gdelmoro Hi all, I'm trying to find out what freight rolling stock is appropriate for the Steam - Diesel transition...but its Freight cars I need a resource for. There is a list of every freight car in interchange for any quarter of any year during that time. It is called the "Official Railway Equipment Register". Ed As far as I have found, digital scans of the Register are available up to 1917 and search term indicies only are avail. after that year. There are also a smattering of copies being sold on eBay for about $50-100. Is there a source I'm not finding?
7j43k gdelmoro Hi all, I'm trying to find out what freight rolling stock is appropriate for the Steam - Diesel transition...but its Freight cars I need a resource for. There is a list of every freight car in interchange for any quarter of any year during that time. It is called the "Official Railway Equipment Register". Ed
gdelmoro Hi all, I'm trying to find out what freight rolling stock is appropriate for the Steam - Diesel transition...but its Freight cars I need a resource for.
Hi all, I'm trying to find out what freight rolling stock is appropriate for the Steam - Diesel transition...but its Freight cars I need a resource for.
There is a list of every freight car in interchange for any quarter of any year during that time. It is called the "Official Railway Equipment Register".
Ed
As far as I have found, digital scans of the Register are available up to 1917 and search term indicies only are avail. after that year. There are also a smattering of copies being sold on eBay for about $50-100.
Is there a source I'm not finding?
Westerfield Models http://www.westerfieldmodels.com/
1885 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1888 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1892 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1897 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1900 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1905 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1911 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1915 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1919 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1925 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1930 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1935 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1940 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1945 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1950 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1955 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1959 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
1965 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
PRR 1888-1926 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $33.00
PRR 1927-1950 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $33.00
PRR 1951-1968 EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON DISK $23.00
PRR SET: COMPLETE EQUIPMENT REGISTER ON 3 DISKS $75.00
Displaying 1 to 22 (of 22 products)
Also check out photos of their products - models of steam era freight cars.
1953 ORER reprint
ACYSo far I'm finding most "new" (NEW) and "built" (BLT) dates are given (painted) as the same.
Today many, but not all, the model manufactures are endevoring to have the paint schemes on the correct cars and the dates match the paint schemes.
In the "good old days" many of the models had a mix of the features of two or more car builders products. The paint schemes were usually based on photographs, but sometimes the car they were applied to had only a superfical resemblance to the prototype and there was little concern about the dates.
Ultimately you only have to please yourself. Very few people will notice as long as you stay away from glaring inconsistancies (for example a tri-level autorack on a railroad set in 1950).
Many years ago I was a member of a club that would sometimes set a time period and for that session only allow models from that time period on the layout. I brought a couple WP 80" auto parts cars in their origional paint scheme and was told they were too new. They apologized latter after confirming that my contention that the cars had been in service for at over a year as of the end date of the session.
ACYI've seen a few articles that discuss the subject in general terms, but it's much too broad to cover comprehensively in less than several volumes. Jeff Wilson's Kalmbach book on freight cars of the late steam era is pretty good, as are some of Ted Culotta;s books available from Speedwitch. Tom Add Quote to your Post
Although there is no overall comprehensive source it is possible, with a lot of work, to find a lot of such information about some individual railroads in books and on the internet.
This site is one of them http://www.railgoat.railfan.net/ It is the site linked in the discussion of the WP cars in this thread.. There is some info on more than 70 railroads.
Duplicate post
tomikawaTT Oh, the humanity! Don't you find the nits to be less annoying than the nitpickers?
Oh, the humanity! Don't you find the nits to be less annoying than the nitpickers?
I love the smell of argument in the morning.
Rich
Alton Junction
MAXMAN I'm looking to stay between 1940 & 1960
Well, its clear although I've been a Model Railroader since I was 6 and into scale Model Railroading for about 40 years... I have a lot to learn! Now to achieve the balance between absolute accuracy and enjoyment. Wish me luck
I've yet come across any article that addresses identification of rolling stock by era/decade/whatever in order to avoid the more obvious anachronisms. So far I'm finding most "new" (NEW) and "built" (BLT) dates are given (painted) as the same.
[/quote]
I've seen a few articles that discuss the subject in general terms, but it's much too broad to cover comprehensively in less than several volumes. Jeff Wilson's Kalmbach book on freight cars of the late steam era is pretty good, as are some of Ted Culotta's books available from Speedwitch.
Attuvian Gary, One of the things you may want to consider are the built and re-weigh dates on the cars you do acquire. They should fall within the end date for the era you choose. ... Not only do you want to avoid car bodies that didn't yet exist, you can have old bodies that have been refurbed and repainted with dates beyond your established range. If you acquire a pre-lettered car that has dates that are incompatible with the bodies or are beyond the end of your era, you may be subject to two issues: the sharp eyes of RR-minded folks admiring your pike, or the labors you'll have to go through to re-letter them. That's a factor of just how exact (anal?) you are with such things. .... John
Gary,
One of the things you may want to consider are the built and re-weigh dates on the cars you do acquire. They should fall within the end date for the era you choose. ... Not only do you want to avoid car bodies that didn't yet exist, you can have old bodies that have been refurbed and repainted with dates beyond your established range. If you acquire a pre-lettered car that has dates that are incompatible with the bodies or are beyond the end of your era, you may be subject to two issues: the sharp eyes of RR-minded folks admiring your pike, or the labors you'll have to go through to re-letter them. That's a factor of just how exact (anal?) you are with such things. ....
John
One of the things I'd like to be able to do, however, is to know some of the more obvious "tells" that would indicate if a later BLT date indicates a newer design or simply a more recently built car of an older design.
wjstix One thing you'll notice looking at transition era freight trains is the difference in car sizes. You could have a 50', 10-1/2' high boxcar coupled to a 38' 8-1/2' high reefer. Although the 40' by 8-1/2' steel boxcar became standard for new construction in the late thirties, in the 1950's you could still find quite a few 40' by 8-1/2' boxcars - some all steel, some with single-sheathed or double-sheathed wood sides. One thing to keep in mind is you not only need to learn about what types of cars are appropriate, you need to know which paint schemes are appropriate. A boxcar built in 1942 would be fine on your layout - unless it's decorated for Penn Central or Burlington Northern!
One thing you'll notice looking at transition era freight trains is the difference in car sizes. You could have a 50', 10-1/2' high boxcar coupled to a 38' 8-1/2' high reefer. Although the 40' by 8-1/2' steel boxcar became standard for new construction in the late thirties, in the 1950's you could still find quite a few 40' by 8-1/2' boxcars - some all steel, some with single-sheathed or double-sheathed wood sides.
One thing to keep in mind is you not only need to learn about what types of cars are appropriate, you need to know which paint schemes are appropriate. A boxcar built in 1942 would be fine on your layout - unless it's decorated for Penn Central or Burlington Northern!
To Newcomers: "...unless it's decorated for Penn Central or Burlington Northern!", or any other railroad co. (or paint scheme) that didn't exist yet.
I have a tremendous advantage. Since I saw all of my freight fleet with my own Mark One Mod Zero eyeballs I KNOW the numbers are valid and the paint schemes accurate. About 90% of the latter are black with white stenciling, just the way they appear on my layout. (Can't say lettering. There are no 'letters' in Japanese.) As for the few that aren't, I know what colors were used, and why.
Modeling a single month and a national monopoly also helps. My JNR data will provide in-service and end-of-service dates at a glance. If the car is too early for my time frame I add the 'Tomi Maru' insignia above the reporting marks and consign it to my freelance coal hauler, possibly with modifications the prototype never heard of.
Then, too, I'm not one to let absolute fidelity to prototype straitjacket my modeling fun. That's why I model in Universe #13, Alfred E. Neumann - "What, me worry?"
A last thought. Beware of absolutes, like 'always, never, not before/after...' in debating. All it takes is a single contrary example to invalidate the argument.
Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964 - more or less)
PRR8259During 1955 they received fifty 50' PS-1 boxcars in the famous orange with silver feather scheme.
So there were silver and orange cars beginning in 1951 (text from website I posted). And you acknowledge even more cars in 1955. And steam lasted on WP's major connection SP through 1956. Sounds like Adam and Jamie would classify your myth of no colorful WP boxcars ever appearing behind steam as "Busted".
But do carry on.
From Kadee's Website:
The yellow-orange lettering of the feather on the brown boxcar side is a 1956 repaint.
The yellow lettering on brown boxcar (The Western Way) is a 1958 repaint.
Steam in much of the country was dead by 1956, so I don't know what else to say.
There was only EVER one or two Orange 40' WP boxcars. It's quite well documented elsewhere, including TLC books.
The 50' rebuilds...were one or two lots of 50 cars or so done in 1955 or 56.
Most nearly all WP boxcars were freight car red/brown during the steam era, excepting those few 50' rebuilds, and the one or two orange cars (and there may have been 50 silver 40' cars). They had thousands of boxcars, mostly brown.
PRR8259The link you provided includes photos of numerous repainted cars. They were not factory new in the early 50's in those schemes.
Read the text. Bottom line, there were colorful WP boxcars in silver and orange in the early and mid 1950s and they prototypically were pulled behind the last of WP's steam until 1953 and SP steam until 1956.
PRR8259The scheme worn by the vast majority of WP boxcars,
That's not what you said in your earlier post -- you categorically denied silver and orange WP appearing behind steam.
The scheme worn by the vast majority of WP boxcars, until the rebuilts and few upgraded cars of 1955-6, was the dark brown with Feather River Route herald.
The link you provided includes photos of numerous repainted cars. They were not factory new in the early 50's in those schemes.
PRR8259You better check your WP facts.
Well, one of us should.
http://www.railgoat.railfan.net/other_cars/wp_cars/wp_number/020801-021400.htm
The ORER only gives car numbers. It does NOT tell you what paint scheme the car wore. Many commercially available freight cars, available rtr, represent later era "repaints" and "rebuilds" of those earlier cars.
gdelmoro I'm trying to find out what freight rolling stock is appropriate for the Steam - Diesel transition.
When is the "steam-diesel transition"? Or more importantly, which year of this transition are you interested in? Is it the year that the first diesel appeared on your prototype railroad, or the year when the last steam engine dropped its fire for the last time? Note that whichever of these years you choose will not be the same for other prototypes since they all did not have the same beginning and ending transition dates.
Once you figure that out, then as others suggested you can get a copy of the ORER for that year. Any car listed would be appropriate for you, and any car not listed would be inappropriate.
cuyama PRR8259 No Western Pacific orange and silver boxcars (WP steam gone very early). The first batch of these cars were delivered in November of 1951. Steam on the WP lasted until at least 1953. But examples of that WP boxcar were also certainly interchanged to the SP, where steam was regularly in service until 1956 … and a few stragglers beyond.
PRR8259 No Western Pacific orange and silver boxcars (WP steam gone very early).
The first batch of these cars were delivered in November of 1951. Steam on the WP lasted until at least 1953. But examples of that WP boxcar were also certainly interchanged to the SP, where steam was regularly in service until 1956 … and a few stragglers beyond.
You better check your WP facts. Most were delivered brown with black ends. There is a one page website that goes through ALL WP box car paint schemes, if you search for it. There were NO orange 40' boxcars during the steam era, excepting one or two single experimental paint scheme PS-1 boxcars, numbered 1952 and/or 1953 (and often produced and sold in large numbers in model train form). But that one, or at most two, car lot was not at all the norm.
During 1955 they received fifty 50' PS-1 boxcars in the famous orange with silver feather scheme. However, it is important to remember that they had quite literally thousands of ordinary brown PS-1 boxcars, so seeing those orange/silver feather cars would have been...rare.
Also, just because some steam lasted into 1953, well...much WP steam never operated past 1950. The magnificent Challengers were done early because diesel power was ideally suited to their Nevada desert terrain. The 2-8-8-2's lasted a little bit longer because they were ideally suited to the speeds and geometry of the Feather River Canyon.
As a matter of fact, we tend to hold up as a "higher standard" those folks whose layouts appear in the various magazines. I can pick up any magazine, and for most featured layouts, start picking out the freight cars that simply do not belong behind the owner's steam power.
So I think perhaps I researched too much for too long, and can tell you the end is not necessarily happiness and contentment.
PRR8259No Western Pacific orange and silver boxcars (WP steam gone very early).
True transition era modeling means no, zero at all, of the following (all of which includes stuff I personally would love to have on my layout, and most of which is now gone):
Santa Fe bright red "Shock Control" or otherwise boxcars, no red cars at all. No Santa Fe diesels beyond black and silver zebra stripe paint scheme. No Rock Island blue freight equipment of any kind. No Illinois Central orange boxcars or freight cars of any kind. No big SP/SSW/Cotton Belt "billboard" large lettering style cars of any kind. No UP Yellow "We Can Handle It" or newer boxcars. No Western Pacific orange and silver boxcars (WP steam gone very early). No Rio Grande "Aspen Gold" and Silver boxcars (other than narrow gauge, they are generally from 1964)...
True, authentic transition era freight rosters involved saying no to far more things than saying yes. In the end I have found that depressing and just chosen to enjoy my steam and pull what I want to pull behind it.
Still, I feel guilty running the plain brown Cotton Belt 60' auto parts boxcar (new date of 1971) behind a steam engine scrapped during 1953, as if I'm committing some kind of unpardonable sin, almost. Likewise the beautiful Genesis Illinois Central orange autorack from 1966...The only thing keeping a few freight cars around is that my son likes them. Otherwise, they'd be gone and still might go.