That's great information. Thankyou very much everybody.
Mike
Modelling the UK in 00, and New England - MEC, B&M, D&H and Guilford - in H0
My understanding is that not a whole lot of boxcars have been built in recent years, as much of the freight they used to handle has switched to intermodal. There were a lot of leftover box cars from the 70's and 80s' too, so the supply is such that not a whole lot of new ones are needed to be made. Big markets where they still dominate are paper, some wood products and auto parts industries, full boxcar load, shipper-direct-to-customer businesses.
Because of the "leftover" oversupply of boxcars from the 70's/80's, a lot of those are still in service today- 50 and 60 foot boxcars, some refurbished. 50 foot boxcars are still a common sight on today's rail, and 60 footers more common still. Quite common on short lines, where they still carry a lot of freight. One thing that's cool is that because of the more aged nature of boxcars, many of them with second or third owners still sport fallen flag heralds and colors, probably more so than any other type of freight car.
Good info regarding the steam era freight cars.
All steel 50ft. boxcars from ACF and its competitors continued to be built up until the early 70s. Plug door models were the preferred choice. Though there numbers are smaller than years past, quite a number survive today.
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Could someone please tell me, in general terms, when 40 and 50 ft boxcars were phased out, or point me in the direction of the relevant website? Do some even survive today? I wouldn't have a clue
Many thanks!