Posts: 1,275
Threads: 145
Joined: Dec 2008
I'm looking for ideas for industries that might use the round containers that come with the
N scale Atlas 42-foot gondolas. The containers are easily removed, but I thought it would be fun to discuss because they are ubiquitous in the hobby.
The first thing that comes to mind is cement, which was hauled in small containers before the widespread use of covered hoppers, but that seems difficult to justify in a Postwar setting. Any other suggestions?
Posts: 5,859
Threads: 175
Joined: Dec 2008
Well, the first thing which springs to mind for me is GERN Brand Flux and Flux products...after all, not everyone needs a covered hopper-load of the stuff. There's some info
HERE and
HERE
Some more mundane uses might be for carbon black (for ink-making), pigments for a paint manufacturer or brick or concrete manufacturer, and fertiliser or dry chemicals for a large city's Public Works Dept.
Wayne
Posts: 2,269
Threads: 181
Joined: Dec 2008
They are also used to carry concrete mix to hard to reach sites.
Posts: 1,275
Threads: 145
Joined: Dec 2008
I really like the pigment idea. Could lead to some interesting weathering, too, on the cans.
Posts: 2,269
Threads: 181
Joined: Dec 2008
I suspect that you can put them to pretty much any use you wish, and with some extra touches, make them serve any number of other specialized purposes, such as acid carboys, which I'm planning to do.
Posts: 48
Threads: 6
Joined: Dec 2008
Don't they have some special lined containers that are used to haul radioactive waste? Don't let your kid wreck that train. LOL
Or it's not waste but radioactive martials used by GERN.
Dave
Posts: 2,429
Threads: 63
Joined: Dec 2008
GERN Flux gives radioactive waste a 3% longer half-life.
David
Moderato ma non troppo
Perth & Exeter Railway Company
Esquesing & Chinguacousy Radial Railway
In model railroading, there are between six and two hundred ways of performing a given task.
Most modellers can get two of them to work.
Posts: 103
Threads: 1
Joined: Aug 2009
You can put anything you want in them but on the prototype they were pretty much only used for cement and were not removed from the gons. There were holes cut in the sides of the gons to unload the cement into trucks or bins at the destination.
Posts: 1,275
Threads: 145
Joined: Dec 2008
dave1905 Wrote:There were holes cut in the sides of the gons to unload the cement into trucks or bins at the destination.
Photos?
Posts: 103
Threads: 1
Joined: Aug 2009
<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://oscalemag.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/ms4fm-LVCMNT.JPG">http://oscalemag.com/wordpress/wp-conte ... LVCMNT.JPG</a><!-- m -->
Posts: 568
Threads: 36
Joined: Aug 2010
Dave which RR owned that gondola?
Andy Jackson
Santa Fe Springs CA
ATSF/LAJ Ry Fan & Modeler
Posts: 5,859
Threads: 175
Joined: Dec 2008
lajry Wrote:Dave which RR owned that gondola?
According to what's painted on it, that was a Lehigh Valley car.
Wayne
Posts: 103
Threads: 1
Joined: Aug 2009
I think RMC had an article on those cars a couple years ago.