In the image below, I have overlaid text to highlight some of the details. Views of roofs are especially interesting as they illustrate the diversity of types, as well as the differing heights of cars.
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Lots of interesting things in this photo
Thursday, February 4, 2021
When is a Monon Box Car not a Monon Box Car?
John W. Barriger III National Railroad Library
This photo was recently posted at the Barriger's flickr site. It immediately grabbed my attention because I knew from the car number and details that it was not a Monon car. CIL 9147 was a 1937 AAR-design car, like CIL 9157 shown below. Monon's 1947-built cars were different, as well, with welded sides and Improved Dreadnaught ends with full-width top ribs and that group of cars also had either Superior or Improved Youngstown doors. I love this type of challenge. Fortunately, I knew immediately what it was, but as an A+ geometry student in high school, I like working through the proof.
This is what CIL 9147 would have looked like, including the National B-1 trucks:
Big Four Graphics
- "Bow-tie" arrangement of rivets at the bolsters
- Pre-war Youngstown doors
- Abbreviated top rib in Improved Dreadnaught ends
- "Kinked" right ladder stile
- Capacity data fully spelled out, along with type style
The conclusion: CIL 9147 was actually a CB&Q postwar car from the XM-32 family of box cars (note that while the prototype shown below has Improved Youngstown doors, there were cars in this group with pre-war Youngstown doors; I just don't have a good photo of one!) The Monon marketing team no doubt doctored the photo to promote their service to Old Forester. Case closed... Columbo solves the crime again! Book 'em Danno
Al Hoffman Collection
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