Private cars collect car-hire on the basis of mileage only.
Railroad-owned reporting marks on cars entitle them to collect car hire on the basis of per diem (hourly compilation, last I checked) with a mileage component. There are different per diem rates for cars depending on age and value. So, conceivably, it could make more sense to have the cars in one reporting mark or another depending on their use, their age, and other factors. I'd probably have to be in the business to explain this better.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
CShaveRR wrote: If First Union Rail decides that it can earn more money using a railroad reporting mark (as opposed to one of its private-company marks), the car will have NOKL lettering.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
IIRC - NOKL is now RailAmerica owned.
What it is/was is the remnant of the Northwest end of the old KATY (MKT) in Woodward, OK consisting of a yard and about 3 miles of old MKT/Beaver Meade & Englewood RR track near the Oklahoma panhandle badlands. There is a grain elevator on the property along with the car shops.
Go to the library and check out Katy Northwest.
shawnee wrote: I've recently seen a bunch of intermodal cars with the reporting marks "NOKL". Looking it up, it's a small shortline in Northwestern Oklahoma! What is this shortline doing with modern intermodal cars running in the northeast? It is primarily a railcar leasing company, or is really there that much intermodal business in norwest Oklahoma?Confused on this one...
I've recently seen a bunch of intermodal cars with the reporting marks "NOKL". Looking it up, it's a small shortline in Northwestern Oklahoma! What is this shortline doing with modern intermodal cars running in the northeast? It is primarily a railcar leasing company, or is really there that much intermodal business in norwest Oklahoma?
Confused on this one...
NOKL is one of the many shortlines that lease out their marks to leasing companies. GE Capital for example owns freight cars that carry marks like AOK, TR, HS and NOKL. There are several other nuances to the arrangement that I can't fully recall right now, since each arrangement depends on the type of lease - but the same thing can be applied to freight cars leased by major railroads. For example there are certain leased cars in the UP fleet that carry CHTT and more recently now CMO marks (which is similar but not exactly the same- UP still owns the CHTT/CMO marks and applies them to the car themselves to ID it as a lease fleet car in their fleet- while the NOKL cars, GE purchases the rights to use the marks on the car and leases it to any road that needs it). In short- the cars are not owned by the NOKL, but by a leasing company that pays a fee to use the marks on certain types of cars in their fleet.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
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