Virginian hoppers
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Tue Sep 5 07:53:35 EDT 2006
At 07:28 PM 9/4/06, you wrote:
>I didn't have anything showing that the Virginian versions were
>built in the clamshell version also [I think
>Westerfield markets it for C&O and NYC ??]
Page 19 of the Nov/Dec. 2005 Arrow has a nice broadside photo of an H-5 in
its original configuration, sandwiched between a pair of H-4s in their
original skirted clamshell triple hopper configuration.
>Now that said, the 1948 diagram book still shows the H-11 in
>the 4 rib 5 panel configuration. So is there better
>info out there?
General Arrangement drawing #286-F (March 4, 1943) shows the H-11 as a
7-rib car.
David Thompson
>Frank Bongiovanni
>
>--- nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org wrote:
>
> > At 12:49 PM 9/4/06, you wrote:
> >
> > >This is still a work in progress. Please feel free
> > to
> > >provide corrections and/or constructive criticism.
> > Any
> > >errors are probably my own; for a change there's
> > very
> > >little ego tied up in this.
> >
> > Just a few things off the top of my head:
> >
> > *H-11 were rebuilt with conventional 7-rib sides
> > circa 1942 (this is
> > somewhere in the AFE listings)
> > *the Athearn ribside twin is accidentally the
> > Unitcast ribside twin which
> > was the basis for the Virginian H-8 (and the postwar
> > H-12 and H-13 without
> > the cast parts)
> > *H-7 were 'early standard' hoppers, probably
> > piggybacked on a B&O N12 order
> > *there is a mysterious 'BSPX' note lurking in the
> > 1948 diagram book,
> > probably Koppers USRA twins leased to VGN for a few
> > years in the late 1920s
> > *H-5 were built with a center clamshell hopper
> > *H-1 were clones of C&O's 40-ton high-side wood
> > hoppers, built for
> > Deepwater by AC&F(?)
> > *H-2 were clones of N&W's 50-ton Seley composite
> > hoppers, built for
> > Deepwater by WSC&F in 1906
> >
> > David Thompson
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