Coal operations
NW Modeling List
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Tue Oct 30 22:27:26 EDT 2018
How you handle coal can be very era specific.
Not my area of greatest expertise but I can't help but weigh in here.
The biggest assumption is that coal is coal. Almost every mine has a
slight variation in the coal it produces. For example some have a
higher content of ash when burned some have lower or higher amounts of
other elements like sulfur that make a difference on where it is used.
When everyone one used coal as a home heating fuel, you wanted something
that didn't clinker left little ash to carry out of the basement and
didn't smell bad. Some home heating coals were advertised as dustless
which meant it was sprayed with oil to hold the dust on. Dealers also
carried coal from different producers with brand names just like we have
for gasoline. To prove you were getting the brand you paid for little
tags were sprinkled into the coal with the brand name on them. Coal
also came in different sizes from lump (greater than eight inches) going
down in sizes to egg and pea etc. If you had a home stoker most weren't
powerful enough to crush coal so you had to buy the right size coal. If
a tipple had more than one track under it, it was to load different
sizes of coal. Depending on how the sorting screens were arranged from
left to right you would see a track full of cars with lump coal, a
medium size then a smaller size (or vice versa). Because coal dealers
weren't all the same size they didn't all want the same size of car.
Modelers don't load enough coal in gondolas. If a dealer only wanted 25
tons they might load a low side G-1 gondola instead of a 55 ton hopper.
The coal car directories the railroad published always included
gondolas and hoppers as "coal cars".
The coal merchandising department didn't go away when people quit using
coal at home. Those thousand or so varieties of coal would be custom
blended for coking or export. When we toured Lamberts Point the first
time they described this to us. The picker crew in the yard would have
to put in coal car A car B etc. up to eight different varieties (IIRC).
They also said there were a few times when from the thousand or so cars
to pick from they didn't have the right coal for a blend. To make the
ship sailing time a car or two or four from one specific mine would be
rushed on the back of a merchandise train to Norfolk. Big coking
operations like South Boston would need the same kind of blending.
I didn't hear anybody mention timbers. After you cut all of the trees
down around the mine your had to bring in timbers some nearly the size
of railroad ties for bracing and shoring.
Nor did I hear anybody mention weighing. Most mines didn't have their
own scales but the mines wanted the weight as soon as possible so they
could make the most money (before the railroad rocked it off the top or
it leaked out through a hole or a leaky door.
Everybody thinks about what we have now. Power plants that are almost
designed to burn a specific coal. So the Powder River dirt gets shipped
150 cars at a time from one mine to one power plant.
Maybe this will bump some long dormant gray cells loose and some of the
real old times can throw in some more complications.
Stoney
Rick Stone
NWHS #0001
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