cv_acr Well, depending on whether they actually ship/receive certain things by rail or truck, a lumber mill has one basic input (logs) and a primary output of lumber. Secondary byproducts of lumber production are sawdust and woodchips (created from chipping the bark and scraps). The logs would be shipped flatcars with side stakes or in gondolas. Or just shipped in by truck from local loggin cuts. Depending on era, the lumber is shipped in bundles on flatcars, or loaded by hand, board by board, into boxcars. Woodchips are shipped to paper/pulp mills for turning into paper. Chips are shipped in open cars. Usually tall gondolas (solid bottom cars), but some areas used hoppers (bottom dumping cars). A lot depends on era as well, the big 60' cars built specifically for woodchip service didn't really show up until the late 1960s. Prior to that lot of older cars were rebuilt with extended sides for woodchip service and not much was built specifically for woodchip service. If your railroad had a bunch of excess beet hoppers with tall sides, or was able to acquire a bunch on the cheap, it's conceivable to use these for woodchip service. Sawdust was normally just burned as waste, although if the mill could actually make money by selling it to another industry like a wood pellet producer for pellet stoves and barbeques, or MDF/pressed particle board, then they might do it. The fine sawdust would be light enough to be required to be shipped in a covered hopper (or it would just blow away - even woodchips have had issues with blowing out of cars in transit) - IF the mill actually shipped sawdust to another mill, and IF it was shipped by rail instead of locally by truck. I'm pretty sure it was mentioned a few times earlier in this thread that shipping sawdust or woodchips to a power plant for burning would be unlikely.
Well, depending on whether they actually ship/receive certain things by rail or truck, a lumber mill has one basic input (logs) and a primary output of lumber. Secondary byproducts of lumber production are sawdust and woodchips (created from chipping the bark and scraps).
The logs would be shipped flatcars with side stakes or in gondolas. Or just shipped in by truck from local loggin cuts.
Depending on era, the lumber is shipped in bundles on flatcars, or loaded by hand, board by board, into boxcars.
Woodchips are shipped to paper/pulp mills for turning into paper. Chips are shipped in open cars. Usually tall gondolas (solid bottom cars), but some areas used hoppers (bottom dumping cars). A lot depends on era as well, the big 60' cars built specifically for woodchip service didn't really show up until the late 1960s. Prior to that lot of older cars were rebuilt with extended sides for woodchip service and not much was built specifically for woodchip service. If your railroad had a bunch of excess beet hoppers with tall sides, or was able to acquire a bunch on the cheap, it's conceivable to use these for woodchip service.
Sawdust was normally just burned as waste, although if the mill could actually make money by selling it to another industry like a wood pellet producer for pellet stoves and barbeques, or MDF/pressed particle board, then they might do it. The fine sawdust would be light enough to be required to be shipped in a covered hopper (or it would just blow away - even woodchips have had issues with blowing out of cars in transit) - IF the mill actually shipped sawdust to another mill, and IF it was shipped by rail instead of locally by truck.
I'm pretty sure it was mentioned a few times earlier in this thread that shipping sawdust or woodchips to a power plant for burning would be unlikely.
thank you for the information., it will really help a lot. I thinking of having a bio-mess powerplant that uses certain waste to power a powerplant. If that's not probable with woodchips and or sawdust, i will find another use for the byproducts, but thank you again.
:)
Mr. LMD, Owner, founder
The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad
Chris van der Heide
My Algoma Central Railway Modeling Blog
cv_acr Mr. LMD: I have three Tichy Sugar Beet gondolas that looks great and will run great as my woodchip haulers. That should work fine. Railroads often re-purposed older cars into woodchip service, including older gondolas, old open hoppers and even cutting the roofs off boxcars as shown earlier here. Any place receiving woodchips would probably only receive one type of car since that's what they'd be set up to unload.
Mr. LMD: I have three Tichy Sugar Beet gondolas that looks great and will run great as my woodchip haulers.
I have three Tichy Sugar Beet gondolas that looks great and will run great as my woodchip haulers.
That should work fine. Railroads often re-purposed older cars into woodchip service, including older gondolas, old open hoppers and even cutting the roofs off boxcars as shown earlier here. Any place receiving woodchips would probably only receive one type of car since that's what they'd be set up to unload.
What other type of cars would lumber mills or logging camps use because I was thinking of having a few covered hoppers to haul the sawdust to a powerplant and that as fuel while the woodchips be used as BBQ fuel or other uses.
thank you,
Mr. LMD I have three Tichy Sugar Beet gondolas that looks great and will run great as my woodchip haulers.
cv_acr R. T. POTEET: Wood chips were USUALLY transported in hopper cars with raised sides however gons were sometimes used in this service. As stated much earlier in this thread, that really depends on your area. On some railroads and in some areas hoppers would have been used exclusively, and in others they'd be virtually unknown, and gondolas ubquitous. Or even standard boxcars using wood/cardboard doors like old fashioned grain doors. If not specifically modelling a particular prototype situation, the modeller is free to choose whatever type of car he pleases, but each mill receiving chips from sawmills will probably have a preference to receive a particular type of car (as the unloading equipment/facilties for each would be different depending on whether you're bottom-dumping a hopper, rotary dumping a gondola, end-dumping a gondola with hinged end doors, or digging out the chips through the side door of a boxcar or gondola).
R. T. POTEET: Wood chips were USUALLY transported in hopper cars with raised sides however gons were sometimes used in this service.
As stated much earlier in this thread, that really depends on your area. On some railroads and in some areas hoppers would have been used exclusively, and in others they'd be virtually unknown, and gondolas ubquitous. Or even standard boxcars using wood/cardboard doors like old fashioned grain doors.
If not specifically modelling a particular prototype situation, the modeller is free to choose whatever type of car he pleases, but each mill receiving chips from sawmills will probably have a preference to receive a particular type of car (as the unloading equipment/facilties for each would be different depending on whether you're bottom-dumping a hopper, rotary dumping a gondola, end-dumping a gondola with hinged end doors, or digging out the chips through the side door of a boxcar or gondola).
R. T. POTEETWood chips were USUALLY transported in hopper cars with raised sides however gons were sometimes used in this service.
For the older type drop bottom gondolas with raised sides check out the Intermountain website {both HO (Red Caboose) and N (Intermountain)}
Also MicroTrains N scale.
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.
I know for a fact that Walthers has both Woodchip gons and hoppers right now in HO scale. They are prominent at the moment since they have reissued the paper mill series.
Wood chips were USUALLY transported in hopper cars with raised sides however gons were sometimes used in this service. Manufacturers in both HO-Scale and N-Scale have offered wood chip hoppers although I don't remember anyone ever offering a wood chip gon. I don't know of any (wood chip) hoppers currently being offered in N-Scale; I can't answer for HO-Scale.
From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
cv_acr Mr. LMD: lonewoof: Southern and Central of Georgia used some of these. I have 3 of these in N scale made by Tichy Group. Sugar Beet Hoppers with extended walls. Incorrect. Those look like regular old 40' boxcars rebuilt with extended sides and roofs removed. This sort of thing shows up on other railroads like CN, CP, BAR, MEC, etc. Also, once more with feeling, HOPPERS are self-clearing cars with bottom dump outlets. Do you see any of those???? This is a boxcar rebuilt into a GONDOLA, NOT an hopper.
Mr. LMD: lonewoof: Southern and Central of Georgia used some of these. I have 3 of these in N scale made by Tichy Group. Sugar Beet Hoppers with extended walls.
lonewoof: Southern and Central of Georgia used some of these.
Southern and Central of Georgia used some of these.
I have 3 of these in N scale made by Tichy Group. Sugar Beet Hoppers with extended walls.
Incorrect. Those look like regular old 40' boxcars rebuilt with extended sides and roofs removed. This sort of thing shows up on other railroads like CN, CP, BAR, MEC, etc.
Also, once more with feeling, HOPPERS are self-clearing cars with bottom dump outlets. Do you see any of those???? This is a boxcar rebuilt into a GONDOLA, NOT an hopper.
ummm ok? My bad if I didn't put more time into the photo and what is your problem with hoppers? It's my layout I use what I want and I'm using covered hoppers.
These are (were) indeed 40'boxcars with roofs removed and sides extended. Some of my photos show a definite weld line diagonally down from each end, indicating the presence of an added slope sheet. There are drop doors underneath, raised and lowered by those round windlasses on the sides, and there is a large hole cut in one end, giving access to the air reservoir, valve, and brake cylinder that have been displaced from underneath.
/Lone
Remember: In South Carolina, North is southeast of Due West... HIOAg /Bill
Southern Pacific woodchip cars. The first a modified drop bottom gondola is also known as a sugar beet gondola, a commodity it often carried into the 1970's. Other railroads used similar modified gons cars for woodchips. (ie. the Northern Pacific and Western Pacific). The second car appears to be a purpose built woodchip car, it has a drop bottom too.
http://www.southernpacificmodelerssociety.org/sp-woodchip-car-variety-t787.html
Diagrams of Northern Pacific woodchip cars
http://research.nprha.org/Wood%20Chip%20%20Rack%20Cars/Forms/AllItems.aspx
Western Pacific woodchip gondola:
http://www.protocraft.com/category.cfm?ItemID=397&Categoryid=32
Mr. LMD lonewoof: Southern and Central of Georgia used some of these. I have 3 of these in N scale made by Tichy Group. Sugar Beet Hoppers with extended walls.
cv_acr Hoppers were common in some geographical areas, but in many others gondolas (including converted boxcars and mill gondolas) were more common. (Please note and understand the distinction between hoppers and gondolas. I don't know why, but some people really seem to have a hard time with this for some reason.)
Hoppers were common in some geographical areas, but in many others gondolas (including converted boxcars and mill gondolas) were more common. (Please note and understand the distinction between hoppers and gondolas. I don't know why, but some people really seem to have a hard time with this for some reason.)
Hoppers are self-unloading (having sloped sides and bottoms with chute doors/openings), gondolas are not (must be clamshelled/shoveled/etcetera out even if there are bottom hatches or turned on their sides or ends).
lonewoof Southern and Central of Georgia used some of these.
For my layout I decided that I will use 3 Tichy Group Sugar Beet Gondolas for the woodchips (leftover from logs becoming lumber at the sawmill) and shipping two from the mill to the steel mill and the other to a local customer in one of my three cities (one city, one log village, one city). Later on I might add a power plant to be a new customer.
For the Sawdust, I purchase and will use 2 of the 4 covered hoppers, to also transport the sawmill to the steel mill (to fuel the fire) or local business to make mulch or bag for fuel to power stoves or fireplaces.
What I recall in the Southeast starting in the late 70s were jumbo hoppers, kind of like a coal hopper on steriods with extra growth hormone added. Tall and long to hold the maximum volume since the weight was low. Like someone said above, up until then most of the wood was shipped as pulpwood and chipped at the mill, but now most of the chipping is done local and shipped as chips.
If you can, look up the Ashley, Drew, & Northern. MR ran an article on it in the 80s also. They used converted hoppers with extension sides to haul chips, etc around an integrated mill so that the waste from one process (lumber) was used in the paper or particle board plant. This would make an interesting model railroad operation in it's own right.
Title is what frieght cars carry wood chips and sawdust:
There were at least four styles made in HO by E&C Shops/LBF in the 1990's for mainly western style wood chip hi-side gondolas.
ExactRail has made an outside brace version in the past several years that is nicely detailed in N and HO.
Finally, I believe Walthers has offered an HO large sawdust/woodchip hopper within the last 10 years.
Rio Grande. The Action Road - Focus 1977-1983
The big customers for wood chips are paper mills. Used to be logs were shipped to the mill, then debarked and chipped. In the last 40 or 50 years, large portable chippers were developed, so logs are chipped in the woods near where the trees are cut, then are moved by truck and/or by rail.
Another large customer these days would be a power plant that uses wood chips and other"biomass" to run the boiler
Sawdust could be used to make wood pellets that are used in home wood stoves; however, as mentioned before the sawdust probably would be shipped to the pellet plant by truck from a nearby source like a sawmill.
George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch
One of the problems with sawdust is that there really is little $ value to the product. Rail movement of some thing like this is not a big money maker. Trucking it to a nearby plant(like the Presto log one mentioned) - and then rail shipment of the eventual product would be more common. Sawdust does not store outside very well(rain) and many times is more valuable for co-generation of electical power or boiler fuel at the mill.
I used to see 'chips' moving from the Black Hills to paper mills in Wisconsin. Converted box cars were used - I have not seen movements of chips for at least 10 years now.
Jim
Modeling BNSF and Milwaukee Road in SW Wisconsin
Cat litter
Fuel
Particleboard
artistic materials
Pykrete
Apropos sawdust.
Just saw a bit on The Science Channel about a new company that mixes sawdust with pulverized vegetable waste (essentially organic garbage) to manufacture high-quality ($8.50/bag) garden compost. No mention of where the sawdust came from or how it was delivered, but there didn't seem to be any woodworking or sawmill operation in the immediate area.
The operation is only a couple of years old, produces about ten truckloads of product a day and had about 3/4 megabuck in profit last year.
Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
Manning, glad you liked the MILW car, MILW was pretty creative in their days!
Well, it is more of a "Shelf Display" Yes, I did all of the work, design - through completion.. I wanted more than my silly 'wall o' containers' as seen in these shots... Here is a description I put on it somewhere else..
Although this has been shown at different places before, the question came up.. Although it may look room size (photo cropping) it is only a measures 18.25" x 8" deep. So all my pictures do look alike, due to the limited space of track & scene. I used HO Dual Gauge Track to support HOn3 as well. It was my first serious attempt to make a quality display, even if it is just a small shelf unit! But, using all the tips & experience in the Mags, Forums & kind friends, the results came together fairly well. In the future I hope to go much larger, as in around the room & then some!
ChadLRyan Here is an example that may not have been mentioned, some boxcars with their roof's removed.. It's somewhat imcomplete, but I wanted to show it to you.. Here is a classic MILW Wood Chip car. I got this form a WI hobby shop, along with the 40ft box car behind it. I have some work to do on it, touch up & details, but it was a unique item. The 'wood chip load' is actually from my disc sander capture unit, glued to the kit provided plug. I believe the kit was offered by "Rib Side Cars" (CLUB?) or something similar, not an everyday find. As a 70's MILW Fan, yup, sold! Mine! Perhaps that is how YULE Logs burn forever?? Sure - Wow!!!
Here is an example that may not have been mentioned, some boxcars with their roof's removed.. It's somewhat imcomplete, but I wanted to show it to you..
Here is a classic MILW Wood Chip car. I got this form a WI hobby shop, along with the 40ft box car behind it. I have some work to do on it, touch up & details, but it was a unique item. The 'wood chip load' is actually from my disc sander capture unit, glued to the kit provided plug. I believe the kit was offered by "Rib Side Cars" (CLUB?) or something similar, not an everyday find. As a 70's MILW Fan, yup, sold! Mine! Perhaps that is how YULE Logs burn forever?? Sure - Wow!!!
That looks cool and I never thought of modifying a boxcar to have a wood chip car. Is that your layout just wondering?
ratled Mr. LMD: jrbernier: Could you use the sawdust for mulch or other products? Anytime after 1934 they used it to make Prest o Logs. In the 1970's (?) it was chip board and later MDF (Medium Density Fiberboard). Also chips are used for OSB (Oriented Strand Board). The closer to current day the less likely they burned it . If they did, the earlier stuff was in the iconic wigwams. Later it would be in generator building for making electricity. These are general statements that should help you. Did you have a specific era, local or company in mind? ratled
Mr. LMD: jrbernier: Could you use the sawdust for mulch or other products?
jrbernier:
Could you use the sawdust for mulch or other products?
Anytime after 1934 they used it to make Prest o Logs. In the 1970's (?) it was chip board and later MDF (Medium Density Fiberboard). Also chips are used for OSB (Oriented Strand Board). The closer to current day the less likely they burned it . If they did, the earlier stuff was in the iconic wigwams. Later it would be in generator building for making electricity.
These are general statements that should help you. Did you have a specific era, local or company in mind?
ratled
I do not have an era local, or company in mind. It's just a general question. I do not mind people talking about whatever locale, era, or company. Just information is good enough for me.
No, mulch is made from woodchips (sometimes chipped bark). Sawdust is too fine. It would also simply blow away if you tried to ship it (even woodchips tended to blow out of cars in transit). Woodchips are used by OSB/chipboard mills and for pulp & paper-making.
Not true, Presto Logs have already been mentioned. Presto Logs were made from sawdust. This was mainly a local market that served the area. (they were used in place of firewood, in stoves and fireplaces)
When I was young I hauled tons of these from the truck to the back porch.
Well now some folks call them energy logs. (marketing?)
"The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination."-Albert Einstein
http://gearedsteam.blogspot.com/
In a joking sort of way, "Almost any car that was misplaced near my Disc Sander.."
If you you have a disc sander or even a hungry MotoTool, you probably know what I mean, Heh heh..
Seriously though...
If Saw Dust 'were' to be receyled or repurposed, would Airslides be conceivable???? Hmmmm...