Thanks, Steve, I discovered this restored little gem a couple of years ago and have visited their photo site a number of times for their excellent slide show. They also provided me with the CP Eqipment Drawing of some of the early cars, including #5, the subject of Jack Work's article. The Thurso & Nation Valley #27 was originally "as built" when they received it and is shown in an early slide in the show. This car never received the observation platform and fancy railing at the back or the rebuilt icebox on the right side of the front platform.
Since I posted this string, I again found an article from the March, 1988, CP Rail News, (which I'd found and lost several times!) about Car No. 21's new home with the Vintage Locomotive Society to be rebuilt. The story covers the details of this interesting group of business cars and is quite interesting. I'd very much like to someday build an O scale model of one of the rebuilt cars and have already built up a nice collection of detail parts, including a Monitor (clerestory) roof I can cut down to save myself from becoming mired in a scratchbuilding project for making one myself.
Thanks for your help, guys. I'll keep you posted.
Deano
The Thurso & Nation Valley Business Car No. 27 is preserved by the Bytown Railway Society in Ottawa, ON, Canada.
They have a little page on each of the items they have preserved, including T&NV No. 27.
If in doubt, send them an email. I'm sure someone there could help you out. Many members of the group are model railroaders.
Link is here: https://www.bytownrailwaysociety.ca/index.php/equipment/tnvr-official-s-car-no-27
Steve Hoshel
mbinsewiI sure do like your little business car, Wayne.
Thanks, Mike.
Here's the other side of it...
This one has a little more room, but no lady in the shower, either...
Wayne
Sorry, it WAS Jack Work! Sometimes my brain goes to lunch and doesn't take me with it.
Dave's post got me interested in just what these cars were all about. I did some searching, and sure enough! I found the lady in the shower. Only visable because the side of the car was off, exposing the interior. I don't know how to post pics on here from Google images, unless I run it through my pictures, and into Photobucket, not worth the hassle.
Cute little cars.
I sure do like your little business car, Wayne.
Mike.
My You Tube
My version of Oscar was never built, although that little piece of the original Athearn car is probably kicking around somewhere.
I wasn't aware of the "lady in the shower", or I might have saved-up for one of those kits.The shorty business car didn't get a lady in the shower either...in fact, the amenities in that car aren't all that impressive...
Perhaps the life of a rail magnate in the late '30s wasn't all that the public thought it to be.
But it does look a bit like CP business car 24, doesn't it?
http://www.trainweb.org/oldtimetrains/CPR_London/BC_24.jpg
And also a little like this Santa Fe car
https://photos.smugmug.com/Sante-Fe-Atchison-Topeka-Sante/Santa-Fe-1980s/i-bGNmx9D/0/c4434a95/L/ATSF%2016%20-%20Dec%2031%201959%20-%20Business%20Car%20423%20%40%20Pueblo%20Colo%20-%20Jim%20Ozment-L.jpg
Since you mentioned Walthers' "Oscar," Doctor Wayne, inquiring minds want to know ... did you include the "lady in the shower" in your model?
Dave Nelson
Ah, yes, Jack Work. I remember that article, as it was what inspired me to cut an Athearn observation car apart, in order to shorten it. I was only a kid at the time, so the project, in three pieces, languished in a box for a l-o-n-g time. I think that my plan was to use the cut-out section to build a version of Walthers' "Oscar". I did, many years later, cement the two end sections together and built a new underbody, but it turned out nothing like Mr. Work's...not surprisingly.
OT DeanI’m a great admirer of the work of the late Paul Larson, whose 2-part article for building an HO Canadian Pacific business car appeared in the December ’56 and January ’57 Model Railroader
That was indeed a great two part article but the author was Jack Work, not Paul Larson (who of course would have been equally capable of building such a nice model).