Category Archives: Rolling Stock
Wordless Wednesday #83
Freight Car Friday #73 – CPAA 89958 Model
The prototype for this car was built by Pullman-Standard in late 1962 for their Transport Leasing Company and leased to Spruce Falls Power & Paper Co. of Kapuskasing, Ontario for what appears to have been a ten-year lease. Originally numbered TLCX 1001-1075 and decorated in an attractive dark green paint scheme with large and eye-catching yellow logos for the paper company, the lease expired by the end of 1972 and by early 1973 the cars were then leased to Canadian Pacific and they were renumbered into the CPAA 89910-89980 series and had their original lettering patched out. These lasted on the CP roster until about 1987 at which point they disappeared, disposition unknown.
The model is a Kadee PS-1 boxcar that was factory decorated for Spruce Falls Power & Paper. I gave the car a basic layer of airbrush grime weathering and masked and painted over the original logos much like the prototype did and added the new numbers using MicroScale stencil decals. This should be a unique and eye-catching addition mixed in with other CP and CPAA marked boxcars for paper and pulp service via Franz.
Lumber Wrap Assortment #14
Playing around with logos again today. Some modern versions.
Aspen Planers (blue logo) (Merritt, BC) – ~2007
PDF | XLSX – Prototype
Aspen Planers (redlogo) (Merritt, BC)
PDF | XLSX – Prototype
iLevel Lumber (Weyerhauser) – ~2009
PDF | XLSX – Prototype
Longlac Lumber Inc. (Longlac, ON) – 2015-Present
PDF | XLSX – Prototype
Nakina Lumber Inc. (Nakina, ON) – 2018-Present
PDF | XLSX – Prototype
Freight Car Friday #72 – CP 80967 Model
CP 80967 is a simple study in very minor paint and decal tweaks to update the appearance of a (basically) RTR car.
The subject is a factory decorated model originally produced by Life Like under the Proto1000 brand label. (This tooling is now owned by Walthers.) It’s basically Ready to Run, other than the ladders and door rods being modeler-applied parts although they don’t really take any special skill to install.
One thing about the model is the colour of the roof. The roof is factory painted a pale grey colour to represent a bare galvanized steel roof, but just being a flat grey fails to really “pop” properly. So to improve the car (actually a trio of cars I have in these colours) I masked off the roof and re-sprayed it with Model Master “Steel”. The overall colour is almost the same shade except the Steel actually gives it a proper metallic finish. Next, as the 80967-81216 (yep, this car is actually the “class unit” for the series) were delivered in 1967 and actually originally painted in script, the Action Green MultiMark represents a repaint of these cars, and a little bit of Action Green overspray was added around the edges.
Standard decal additions of COTS and U-1 stencils in varying locations on the different cars and updated weigh dates completes the standard lettering updates before weathering.
One really neat feature of this model also needs to be addressed here. Life Like tooled two body version with different styles of plug doors – an inside-post (flush appearance) as shown on this car, and an exterior-post (recessed appearance). The interior post doors were on cars built up to 1968, and cars built 1969 or after had the exterior post doors. Another key difference between the earlier and later cars was the wheelbase, with cars built up to 1967 having a shorter 38’10” length between truck centres, and cars built 1968 and later have a longer 40’8″ truck centre distance. The model does something super clever here that a lot of people may not even be aware of – the truck bolsters are actually separate pieces that can be removed, rotated 180 degrees and reinstalled to shorten the wheelbase. (The truck centres should be narrowed on this car, but I took the photo before addressing the trucks.)
A roster of prototype cars that match the models, with door and wheelbase information:
Series | Date | Door | Wheelbase | UF | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CN 401483-401882 | 12/66-1/67 | YPD | 38’10” | C | |
CN 400600-400999 | 1-3/67 | YPD | 38’10” | C | |
CP 80967-81216 | 4/67 | YPD | 38’10” | C | |
QNSL 1670-1679 | 5/67 | CPD | 38’10” | C | |
PGE 4601-4642 | 5/67 | YPD | 38’10” | U | re# BCOL 4601-4642 |
CN 400350-400599 | 6-7/68 | YPD | 40’8″ | C | re# CNIS 400350-400599 /70 |
DWC 403000-403149 | 1-2/69 | YPDX | 40’8″ | C | |
CVC 402000-402499 | 2-4/69 | YPDX | 40’8″ | C | |
PGE 4651-4750 | 4/69 | YPDX | 40’8″ | U | re# BCOL 4651-4750 |
CPI 85000-85499 | 5-7/69 | YPDX | 40’8″ | C | re# CP 85000-85499 |
MDW 7001-7099 | 7/69 | YPDX | 40’8″ | C | re# CPAA 86000-86099 /88 |
Door: YPD = interior post (flush) Youngstown plug door, YPDX = exterior post (recessed) Youngstown plug door, CPD = interior post Camel plug door.
Underframe (UF): C = HydraCushion cushioned underframe, U = rigid underframe