I see fewer and fewer boxcars every year...maybe not surprising in view of the ever increasing popularity of containers. Are the rails still selling boxcar service or is the boxcar being phased out?
That's interesting.. I read somewhere that containers are not as fuel efficient given that they are transferred along with the load.
Boxcars don't necessarily require sidings...the shipper can truck his load to the railhead where it is then transferred to a boxcar. Given that so much freight is palletized these days...this may be a better alternative to containers.
Ulrich wrote: That's interesting.. I read somewhere that containers are not as fuel efficient given that they are transferred along with the load.
Rail Runners are pretty efficient since they're basically a trailer with two train axles and a pair of couplers. A lot of time (which actually DOES = $) is saved in the loading/unloading of the box car. Aluminum/wood/plastic trailers are pretty lite compared to steel/steel/steel box cars.
Absolutely not! A close study of the big 6 will show you more boxcars of all types are handled then intermodal.
http://www.railroadpm.org/Performance%20Reports/NS.aspx
Larry
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Several years ago NS converted excess box cars into container cars or trailer cars. There was an ad in Trains at the time. It said something like, "Last week it was a box car".
ndbprr Several years ago NS converted excess box cars into container cars or trailer cars. There was an ad in Trains at the time. It said something like, "Last week it was a box car".
How time has change.During the week of 10/10/08 NS handled 22,294 boxcars of all types versus 7,464 intermodal cars.
Only the CP and BNSF handled more intermodal then boxcars during the same week..
Yes but an intermodal car could be five sections long with as many as four containers per section as each section is a number followed by a -e. So one intermodal car could actually have five times four containers or twenty compared to one box car. So the theoretical limit of containers if each car were a five section one would be 20 x 7464 = 149,280 containers. Assuming half were empty that would 74,640 containers. That is more than three times the number of box cars. Now I don't know how many containers equal the box car volume but it sure looks to me like containers are more prevalent and I doubt the railroad is going to let us know the actual numbers. If they are individual cars they can still handle two containers so my opinion (not a fact) is that containers are more common.