Home Page Forums Prototype and Historical Maintenance of Way Missouri Pacific Scale Test Cars

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  • #6228
    Bud Moss
    Participant

    I recently found a brass model of at typical short scale test car used by almost every railroad. Does anyone know the number series, or have a photo fo an MP scale test car? Coal operations at Bush are stalled until I can get a scale test car up form Gorham to test the scales!

    Jerry Michels

    #9352
    madonnasuffolk30
    Participant

    Jerry,

    Are you talking about this style of scale test car?

    Nate

    #9353
    princessclyne69
    Participant

    In the 1968 SoE there were 5 cars listed, X192 to X197. I know of X194 being active, and Nate has X195. There was also an X5121 listed as a scale test car.

    I believe, before the renumbering, cars in MoW service were assigned numbers at random. I believe, but I can’t prove, that starting in 1961, cars being newly assigned to MoW service were numbered beginning at X14001 and going up sequentially, but cars with old numbers did not get renumbered.

    Back to the scale test car, those were the ones in use on the MP system at the time you’re modeling. There was a Hallmark car and there was a Walthers car. I think mine is Hallmark, but the Walthers one is probably nicer detail. I just went upstairs and checked, and mine is not here so it’s in Wichita already, in a big pile of boxes. I think I lettered mine in a manner similar to the one in the photo. It’s painted Floquil reefer orange.

    I have a shot of the prototype in transit, right where it’s supposed to be, at the rear of the train right in front of the caboose. It’s not listed in my photo index, so don’t know when I shot it.

    RG7

    #9354
    Bud Moss
    Participant

    Nate and Ron, This is exactly the model I have. Mine is painted black, which I think is correct for the 1950s before the renumbering, but it gets in in the ballpark. This was a real help. Thanks so much. Jerry

    #9357
    peggyrothschild
    Participant

    Scale test cars were ‘rear riders’ and had a speed restriction (25 mph I seem to recall). Needless to say the operating department wasn’t thrilled with moving them. When I wrote the Iron Mountain book I seem to recall the MP/IM having over 100 track scales. During my career we did our best to eliminate static scales and wrote business rules to use the hump scales. Some of our static scales were built when 40’ cars were the norm so larger cars had to be double weighted (double drafted) by placing the trucks on the center of the scale and the scale master (a railroad clerk) adding the two gross weights together. Besides railroad scales the test cars also were used to certify customer track scales. Scale tickets noted the gross, tare and net weights and any weather conditions as rain or snow would make the gross weight heavier and the shipper could ask for a reweigh.

    Some commodities like molasses and tar were weighted loaded and then empty as all the contents couldn’t be completely unloaded due to clinging into the interior of the tank car. The consignee was given ‘commercial consideration’ by the shipper for the material that remained in the car. Where the ‘empty’ net weight was subtracted from the loaded net weight.

    #9366
    madonnasuffolk30
    Participant

    Found this one also.

    Nate

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