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Re: [CBQ] Covered Hoppers For Grain

To: CBQ@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [CBQ] Covered Hoppers For Grain
From: robert runty <brjr51@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2005 07:35:26 -0800 (PST)
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Russ,
    Those must have been the days! Does anyone have or know of any  photos of a 
refrigerator car that was converted for grain use?
  
  Bob

Russell Strodtz <19main@groundcontrol.us> wrote:          Bob,
  
  The stock and refrigerator car situation was really a mess.
  
  The stock cars were not bad in grain service at all and there were
  a lot of them. BN's system is what fell down. All they would do
  is clean the cars and then give them to individual elevators to
  be lined with plywood. After that they were assigned to that
  particular elevator. Since the cars back from the unloading points
  in random order this required a great deal of switching to make
  up branchline locals. If the Railroad had been willing to line the
  cars they could have been in a free runner type pool just like the
  box cars were. These cars were also not light weighed at the time
  of conversion. The Office Manager of the feed mill where I was
  Agent picked up on this right away. After I had a couple weighed
  we agreed on 500 lbs of dunnage in each car. In addition to the
  freight charges they were buying their grain based on track scale
  weights so it was an big issue for them.
  
  The refrigerator cars were much more complicated. All the lining
  and insulation had to be ripped out and the floor racks, meat
  rails, (if so equipped), and bunker bulkheads removed. The ice
  hatches were usually tack welded shut and new loading hatches cut
  into the roofs about two ribs in. Usually just one on each side.
  These were covered with a homemade galvanized cover attached with
  big sheet metal screws. Various methods were used to construct a
  nailing place for grain doors, none of which worked very well.
  They were difficult to unload and required a lot of shoveling.
  
  The above referred to plug door cars. Swinging door cars were even
  more difficult. Very few locations would have the side room to
  allow the opening of a swinging door so they were just removed.
  Both sides were filled in with grain doors as close to the roof as
  they could get. The four foot opening made unloading more
  difficult as everyone's system was set up for a six foot door.
  Most of the cable or electric bobcats or shovels were almost
  four feet wide so it was slow going.
  
  The cars they really hated to get were ballast cars. No pit or
  conveyor system in use had been built for a car with lengthwise
  doors. Even a coal hopper would have been better.
  
  Now there are places that can load or unload a 110 car train in
  about six hours. Some progress has been made.
  
  Russ
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: robert runty 
    To: CBQ@yahoogroups.com 
    Sent: Wednesday, 30 November, 2005 13:29
    Subject: Re: [CBQ] Covered Hoppers For Grain
  
  
    Paul,
      I was going to  respond earlier but Russ beat me to it. He's  right in 
that up  till the mid to late 70's, almost all grain on  secondary and  branch 
lines moved in the 40' boxes. The big, modern  covered  hoppers in grain 
service were usually used at the big elevators   on the main lines.
       I spoke with Richard Kistler a while back and  he related as to  how 
during the early years of the big grain  export program around '70  and '71, 
anything that could hold grain  was pressed into service. He  recalled seeing 
stockcars with the  insides covered with plywood and  even old modified 
refrigerator  cars in use on the Neb. branches.
      
      Bob
  
    Russell Strodtz <19main@groundcontrol.us> wrote:          Paul,
      
      From my experience most of the elevators in Northern Illinois
      were boxcar only until they quit rail usage altogether, And,
      as I have said before, the car's roadname was not even a factor
      in regards to who loaded it. A 40' box car is a 40' box car.
      Since the CB&Q had a rather large fleet of 40' box cars they
      would be in the majority but I don't think they were ever used
      to the exclusion of anything else.
      
      The early three bay covered hoppers were very seldom used for
      basic grains. Since they were new a great deal of effort was
      made to find them higher rated commodities. Grain products
      like grits, soybean meal, or feed were usually loaded in these
      cars, along with minerals and industrial products like petroleum
      coke.
      
      The first large 200M covered hoppers are sort of a mystery. There
      must have been some favored, high output elevator somewhere that
      got them in quantity but I don't know where it was. By the BN era
      they had come up with CSD435 which was intended to keep cars on
      their owner's property. This was really a major error as it did
      not lead to the build-up of a large national fleet as had existed
      with 40' box cars. Everyone started rationing the larger and newer
      cars and the customers just plain quit shipping rail. It took until
      the late 80's to reverse that trend and the only way it was done
      was by guarantying the customers would get the cars as ordered. 
      Now pricing and car supply are linked. They do not sell service
      for which they can not provide cars.
      
      Russ
        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: Paul K. 
        To: cbQ@yahoogroups.com 
        Sent: Monday, 28 November, 2005 00:46
        Subject: [CBQ] Covered Hoppers For Grain
      
      
        All,
      
      I need to buy several models of these cars (HO) for  my  rural, line 
located in north central Illinois off the  double-track main  roughly halfway 
between Chicago and  Galesburg.  My free-lanced  branchline on the layout is  
imagined to be located probably close to  where Neponset might be  situated in 
the "real" world.
      
        Since I am modeling the CB&Q in the  late 1960's, I naturally  already 
have a majority of Burlington's  cars to be used to service the  elevators and 
local related grain  industry customers on the line.
      
        My question is that at the LHS I see  cars lettered for several  grain 
dealers, haulers, etc., and was  wondering if I should just get a  mix of most 
of these to round  out my fleet, or would only a couple  names be used in a 
specific  area or part of the country meaning I would  have to buy several  of 
the same few named cars?
      
        Does anyone know what names would be used in my modeled area of Lines 
East?
      
        Thanks . . .
      
      
      
      [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
      
                        
  
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