Quentin
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar ....They want to be sure all the booze or whatever drains out of that one.
23 17 46 11
QUOTE: Originally posted by edblysard Top one is a tankcar, looks like gasoline....
QUOTE: Originally posted by Junctionfan Found a few more interesting hoppers. http://www.northeast.railfan.net/images/tr_cp420935.jpg http://stewart.railfan.net/rail/hp5.htm (I put this one on because normally cement is in 2 bay hoppers) http://stewart.railfan.net/rail/hp26.htm http://gelwood.railfan.net/misc-b/bdnx301ags.jpg http://gelwood.railfan.net/misc-frt/dpcx2800bjm.jpg
ML
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)
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR I think Eric is right about CACV 3000 carrying diesel fuel (at least based on the "1993" placard). But why is it classified as a covered hopper? I'd love to find out the car's previous identity (which I might have been able to do if the ACI label were readable in the photo!). I've never seen a car like that, with the slopes so pronounced (that isn't telephoto compression). It's those slopes that suggest that it originated as a "covered hopper", similar to pressure-differential cars made by both Union Tank and General American. Unfortunately, I can't bring up a current UMLER record for the car, so it's no longer in existence (at least in that identity).
QUOTE: Originally posted by tdmidget The second one is a Halliburton drilling mud car.
RJ
"Something hidden, Go and find it. Go and look behind the ranges, Something lost behind the ranges. Lost and waiting for you. Go." The Explorers - Rudyard Kipling
http://sweetwater-photography.com/
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR OK--Here's the information on this strange sausage-shaped car. It was built by General American in 1964 as GACX 30000. It became Delaware & Hudson 12503 in the 1970s (that's where the red color and the ACI label came from). It later went to the Cooperstown & Charlotte Valley (a D&H subsidiary) as CACV 30000, and was renumbered to 3000 when CACV got a bunch of LU cars numbered in the 30000 series. General American's trade name for the car was "Pressure-Slide".
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