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)
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp Carl, have a look at this page about McCloud River RR LUs.
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp Carl, have a look at these pages about McCloud River RR and Ashley, Drew and Northern LU boxcars.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR Does anyone else here remember the all-door box cars, AAR Mechanical Designation LU? They were fairly popular around the 1970s, but now are all but extinct. I remember them well, but my friend Sarah would appreciate seeing a picture of one, if anyone can either post one or point us to one. At any rate, I have a couple of questions: First, what were the floors of these cars like? Were they wooden, and did they have some sort of provision for anchoring the doors into position in the floor, by the edges? The reason I was asking was that tonight we classified a welded-rail train--about 30 flat cars--with all of the cars numbered in the ADBF 300 series (ADBF is the Adrian & Blissfield Railroad, a line in Michigan that probably owns more cars than it has track to put them on). These cars looked like cut-down bulkhead flat cars to me. However, when looking at the Equipment Registers or UMLER, they show as being of AAR Mechanical Designation LU! And it occurred to me that an LU car, cut down to the floor, might look like a bulkhead flat car would have--after all, they had no solid walls, just doors along the sides. Hence the second question--does anyone know whether the ADBF 300-series cars (32 of them, numbers 300-331) were converted from old LUs? I will try other sources for this information, and post it on this thread if I find anything out.
QUOTE: Originally posted by kenneo Carl All-Door cars were, esentially, bulkhead flats with a roof and plug doors for sides. Most were owned by Evans Products of Corvallis, OR, and leased to various folks. It has been a very long time since I was last in one, but I seem to remember that the floors could be either wood decking or nailable steel. Most had tiedowns on the floor next to the door sill and these tended to be equipped with air bags. I only remember seeing these cars as CSD-145 Assigned Service - Specific shipper at a specific point. Your thought that these cars you saw were rebuilt (cut down) LU's probably is correct.
QUOTE: Originally posted by espeefoamer QUOTE: Originally posted by kenneo Carl All-Door cars were, esentially, bulkhead flats with a roof and plug doors for sides. Most were owned by Evans Products of Corvallis, OR, and leased to various folks. It has been a very long time since I was last in one, but I seem to remember that the floors could be either wood decking or nailable steel. Most had tiedowns on the floor next to the door sill and these tended to be equipped with air bags. I only remember seeing these cars as CSD-145 Assigned Service - Specific shipper at a specific point. Your thought that these cars you saw were rebuilt (cut down) LU's probably is correct. Those tie downs were not intended for lumber[:(]. What you saw were shackles intended for PEOPLE[:0].These cars were paid for by the NWO and were leased out for lumber service until they could take over and use them to haul prisoners to the death camps[B)][:(][:(!][xx(]!!!
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR Jim, the car you caught next to the lady pin-puller was an Evans-built "Side Slider", a relatively rare variant of LU. The two doors on the outside were sliding doors; the two in the center were plug doors. On most LUs, all four doors on each side are plug doors. I'm sure the advantages of this design (chief among which must have been a lot less weight) were offset by disadvantages, or maybe LUs fell out of favor soon after this design was introduced. And I'm holding out hopes that Sarah will come work for us! Carl AMG
QUOTE: Originally posted by StillGrande QUOTE: Originally posted by espeefoamer QUOTE: Originally posted by kenneo Carl All-Door cars were, esentially, bulkhead flats with a roof and plug doors for sides. Most were owned by Evans Products of Corvallis, OR, and leased to various folks. It has been a very long time since I was last in one, but I seem to remember that the floors could be either wood decking or nailable steel. Most had tiedowns on the floor next to the door sill and these tended to be equipped with air bags. I only remember seeing these cars as CSD-145 Assigned Service - Specific shipper at a specific point. Your thought that these cars you saw were rebuilt (cut down) LU's probably is correct. Those tie downs were not intended for lumber[:(]. What you saw were shackles intended for PEOPLE[:0].These cars were paid for by the NWO and were leased out for lumber service until they could take over and use them to haul prisoners to the death camps[B)][:(][:(!][xx(]!!! You beat me to it! I was looking for that answer. You have revealed too much information. Please report to the black van at the curb. You may bring 1 small bag with personal items.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CShaveRR The Evans Products Company that built the LUs was probably not the Evans company that hauled lumber in them. Evans, by the way, made LU cars of both styles--four plug doors and Side-Sliders.
QUOTE: As for your "tally post", Jim, the NOKL cars came later--they were mostly ex-LOAM, at that point. The Weyerhaeuser cars were owned by North American Car Corporation--they were lettered LUNX, but North American also had LU cars under two or three other reporting marks (NADX, BCFX, CFPX, I think).
QUOTE: The U.S. Plywood cars (PLYX), among the oldest large fleets around, were already gone by 1981, having been converted to standard McCloud River box cars, as shown on the link referenced early in this thread.
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