Insulated Boxcar 6056 Interior
Insulated Boxcar 6056 Interior.
Insulated Boxcar 6056 Interior.
Boxcar-noir: P-S boxcar 40091 interior.
Two-bay hopper 86941 at Memphis, Tennessee in June 1942.
Note that the car was built in May 1923 and rebuilt in June 1942.
This photograph was taken at the Frisco’s freight car repair shops at Yale Yard (YA). At this time these shops largely specialized in building and repairing the railroad’s open top cars including gondolas and hoppers.
When originally built in 1923, this was a rib side open top hopper. It is a clone of an United States Railroad Administration (USRA) two bay hopper car design. Frisco originally owned 3,500 of these then standard 30 foot length twin hoppers.
This car has just been rebuilt with replacement panel sides. These were sometimes referred to as blister sides. These panels were designed to increase the car carrying capacity by approximately 2%. Union Metal Products and Standard Steel Railway Supply are among the manufacturers of the panels.
Over time, these replacement panels fell out of favor. Due to their shape, the lower portion tended to retain moisture and rust out. Also, due to their multiple unique shapes it meant keeping a full inventory of car panel sets for repairs, which became an undesirable inventory expense when compared to flat sheet steel.
In addition to having been rebuilt, the car is freshly painted. It will very soon be moved to the yard’s weigh scale. Shortly afterward the final weigh data stencil will be painted to add the car’s load limit (LD. LMT.) and empty light weight (LT. WT.).
Special thanks to Mark Davidson.
A wintertime shot of gondola 64101 and outside-braced boxcar 150960 (date and location unknown).
4-4-0 184 at Columbus, Kansas in 1933 (Marshall Sage).
Pulpwood Flatcar 5154 (date and location unknown).
Outside-Braced Boxcar 163235 (date and location unknown). The car was built in April 1930.
Railway Express Agency Refrigerator 492 (date and location unknown).
Davenport 44-Ton 1 at Springfield, Missouri on January 17, 1948 (Arthur Johnson).