I was told that train stations had walers (boards that ran horizontally) to protect the stucco from impacts from the baggage carts wheels and frames. Sometimes there were two walers, and sometimes only one waler. At what height were these placed apart from each other? Was there a standard baggage cart dimension/size?
Prairie,
Actually this query would be better asked/answered on the Prototype information for the modeler forum.
Tom
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
Always loved stations that had a operators bay window on the building, then they refinished the building in aluminum siding. Especially when the bay window area was the RPO's aiming point when discharging mail sacks 'on the fly'. Talk about dings and dents!
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Baggage cart deck would be at same height level as a baggage car door.
MidlandMike Baggage cart deck would be at same height level as a baggage car door.
Will we ever get Spel Czech back?
Johnny
On the UP, we called them hand trucks, and I always thought ours superior to those I saw on other lines around the country.
Ours had uprights at either end, which certainly made it easier to build a load that held together. We built those loads "high like a mountain and wide like a tree," and they usually didn't fail on their journeys across rough plank crossings.
We handled mostly baggage and canvas sacks of U.S. mail. I could understand the Railway Express version at our same depot, which lacked the upright at one end, because sometimes they would get a long roll of carpet, or something else outsized, in their mix.
But I always wondered about the numerous other railroads that seemed to disadvantage their mail and baggage handlers with an upright at only one end.
dakotafredOn the UP, we called them hand trucks, and I always thought ours superior to those I saw on other lines around the country. Ours had uprights at either end, which certainly made it easier to build a load that held together. We built those loads "high like a mountain and wide like a tree," and they usually didn't fail on their journeys across rough plank crossings.
Still use ones like that for VIA rail:
C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan
That's the very one, Schlimm; thanks! I wish I could build a load on it that touched the sky right now.
Here's an old CNW cart outside depot in Watertown, WI.
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