Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Model Railroad/Answer Key"

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[[Image:UTLX 204455 20050529 IL Rochelle.jpg|thumb|300px|A modern tank car, owned by the [[Union Tank Car Company]], passes westbound through [[Rochelle Railroad Park]], [[Rochelle, Illinois]] on [[May 29]], [[2005]].]]
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[[Image:6619.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Covered hopper car originally built in the 1950s for the [[Atlantic Coast Line Railroad]]. After the 1967 SCL merger these cars were fitted with rotary couplers and used in [[Bone Valley]] phosphate service.]]
[[Image:Tank car UTLX 12283.jpg|thumb|300px|A tank car on display at the [[Mid-Continent Railway Museum]] in [[North Freedom, Wisconsin]].]]
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[[Image:LO DME 49328.jpg|right|thumb|200px|DME 49328, a covered hopper owned and operated by the [[Dakota, Minnesota and Eastern Railroad]].]]
A '''tank car''' is a piece of [[railroad]] [[rolling stock]] designed to carry [[Bulk liquids|liquefied loads]], [[petroleum]] products, liquid [[chemicals]] and [[gas]]ses. Many variants exist due to the wide variety of [[liquid]]s and gasses that can be transported. Tank cars can be [[Thermal insulation|insulated]] or non-insulated, [[pressurized]] or non-pressurized, and designed for single or multiple loads. Non-pressurized cars have plumbing at the bottom for unloading, and may have an access port and a dome, housing various valving on the top. Pressurized cars have a pressure plate, with all valving, and a protective cylindrical housing (dome) at the top. Loading and unloading are done through this opening.
 
  One source of confusion on this site: tank cars are grouped by lining, not by cargo carried!
 
  Thus: Food service tank cars are lined with stainless steel, glass, or cleanable plastic. Marked as non pressurized, insulated cars. Usually these are small around 10000 gallons
 
    Petroluem carrying tank cars are lined with alloy steel, rubber, or carbon steel. They are insulated, usually non pressurized cars(exemption: very light petrochemicals or jet fuel cars will be pressurized with nitrogen to prevent evaperation. this is an explosion harard!) These cars are larger, around 23000 gallons. the ends will be doubled to provent ruptures during accidents. AS of 2007, the multicargo type mentioned above is obsolete.
 
  Natural gas, LPG, or ammonia carring cars are basically 60000 gallon alloy steel pressure vessels on steel wheels. They have no linings, and are double ended. The whale belly type is giving way to higher but standred width cars.
 
  Safety: all tank cars(no exemptions!) are inspected every couple of years for damage, corrosion, etc. Relief valves and mounts are inspected every loading. Presserized cars are pressure tested regularly to insure they are solid. All tank cars now feature "double shelf" couplers-will not uncouple in an accident, so the coupler will not puncture other tank cars.
 
  
Insulated cars (which may also incorporate heating or refrigeration systems) are used when the contents must be kept at a certain temperature. For example, the Linde tank car depicted below carries liquified [[argon]]. Cars designed for multiple loads have internal bulkheads to separate the contents. Each compartment must have separate plumbing and its own dome if so equipped. The added complexity of multiple-load cars means that they make up a small percentage of the tank car population. If two loads must be transported, it is often simpler to use two tank cars instead of a two-load car.
+
A '''covered hopper''' is a [[railroad]] [[freight car]]. Structurally, it is very similar to an open-top [[hopper car]] in that the carbody consists of a large hopper with unloading chutes at the bottom.  What distinguishes this type of car from an open hopper is not only the car's roof, but also the car's overall size. Covered hoppers typically carry loads of less dense, and therefore lighter, materials, so they are built to a higher cubic capacity than open top hoppers.  They are used predominantly to haul various grains such as [[maize|corn]], [[wheat]] and [[barley]].
  
In the [[United Kingdom]], [[Ireland]], and [[New Zealand]], tank cars are generally called '''tank wagons''' or '''tanker wagons'''.
+
Some covered hoppers are built to carry loads that are heavy, but very susceptible to damage if exposed to the weather.  Loads such as [[cement]], processed [[phosphate]], and [[kaolin clay]] are carried, in powdered form, in covered hoppers.  Covered hoppers designed for these loads more closely resemble open-top hoppers.
  
==History==
+
[[Image:Santa Fe Conditionaire Covered Hopper.jpg|thumb|250px|left|ACFX #47633, one of 100 specially-built "[[Refrigerator car#Hopper cars|Conditionaire]]" centerflow hoppers operated by the [[Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway]] in the late [[1960s]] and early [[1970s]].]]
<gallery>
 
Image:RR-1331.jpg|The narrow domes on these [[East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad]] tank cars mirror the designs of the first all-steel units.
 
Image:OP-16236.jpg|Texaco, Inc. (TCX) #723, a single-dome tank car designed for transporting [[gasoline]], passes through [[Amarillo, Texas]] on [[April 4]], [[1936]].
 
Image:OP-16233.jpg|This double-dome tank car has two separate interior tanks, which allow different products to be transported in the same car.
 
Image:OP-19582.jpg|This unusual three-dome tank car has an oversized center dome.
 
</gallery>
 
  
Tank cars have always been specialized pieces of equipment. The interior of the car is usually lined with a material to isolate the car's structure from the contents, such as [[glass]]. Loading a liquid into a car that is designed to carry something else is unwise and sometimes dangerous. Even after a thorough cleaning, traces of the previous contents may remain. Loading a [[pesticide]]-carrying tank car with [[cooking oil]] is one example. The cooking oil will at best be unpalatable and at worst become toxic.  
+
Covered hoppers in [[North America]]n service have been built by most of the freight car manufacturers of the [[20th century]]. The most common covered hoppers that are still in use were built by either [[Pullman-Standard]] or [[American Car and Foundry|ACF]].
  
As a result of this specialization, tank cars have always been "one-way" cars. Other cars, like [[boxcar]]s can easily be reloaded with other goods for the return trip. Combinations of the two types were attempted, such as boxcars with fluid tanks slung beneath the floors. While the car could certainly carry a load both directions, the limited size of the tanks made this style unsuccessful.
+
  Here's some more informtion on covered hoppers:
 +
  1)TYPES/History: in the beginning of north americian railroading, damagable bulk loads where an issue for the railways. Wheras a load of pots could go into a boxcar, a keg of nails could go into a gondala or a boxcar, a load of grain or cement really had no car to move in. Double sheathed boxcars (two walls, one on top of the other) where used to protect these loads from weather. The problem was simply unloading time-workers had to enter the car, and manually clean it out. As wages increased, so did problems.
 +
  Parallel to this, coal was becoming a large money maker for the railways. This cargo, orginally moved in gondalas' also needed to be unloaded by hand. To allow for fast unloading, s required by power plants, the pennsylvania railroad, in conjection with pullman standard, built the first open hopper. The bottom unloading of course made unloading much easier.
 +
  Now, back to cement. As this was becoming a large revenue source, pullman built a small steel hopper car with a roof. This car, the first PS-2 covered hopper, started the covered hopper family. The 1750 cu ft cement hopper car is the direct decendent of this first car. However, grain remained a boxcar load.
 +
  By the late 1950's those boxcars had worn out. Long, heavy, diesel powered freights became common. Newer, heavier rail was laid. Grain became a centralized commonity. Pullman-standard once again took the lead, and released the 4425 cu ft grain covered hopper. This car revalotionized grain handling by allowing for quick, easy loading(troughs in the roof), and unloading( hatches in the floor) apart from that, it looked like a standard straight waller hopper car. In the 1970's, the gaint 4750 cu ft covered hopper was released. These are still in service today. Versions have been built by PS, Evans rail products, PC&F, and Canada car.
 +
  Another type of covered hopper is the ACF(americian car and foundry) center flow. This is now the most common covered hopper in service. Its' main advantage is the ease of unloading, especially for granular products(Salt, soda ash, chemicals). You see, the PS car has a large steel shaft that runs from one set of wheels through the bottom of the car to the other set-this creates a strong car, but provides a surface that can hang up cargo. Free flowing cargo, like grain or soybeans, isn't really caught, but those granular loads will. The ACF solution is to build the car bottom as a grid, with strong steel shafts on the sides of the car, with cross members running across the car. So there is no hang up space and loads flow freely. The most common size is 4650 cu ft, but other sizes have been built.
 +
  A third type is from Canada. This one is the Cylindrical covered hopper. It looks like a beer can lying flat on its' side, on wheels. This type was designed by the Canadian wheat board, and built by several canadian companies. It holds 4550 cu ft. However, by moving the hopper ends farther apart, car up to 4750 cu ft have been built.
 +
  Powdered products: even with covered hoppers powdered goods( think flour, powdered sugar) remained hard to transport. The reason is that the loads stick toghether, and don't unload. A first solution, for GATX, was the AIRSIDE covered hopper. In this car, Large air bags are mounted inside the car, on the walls. at unloading time, an air hose is connected to those bags. By inflating and deflating them, the powdered load is unloaded. Pressuraide cars are more modern. in these cars, Pipes are used to connect are the unloading hatches. Compressed air is used from the top of the car to force the load out. Some plants use a vacuum on the unloading pipe to suck load out, thus speeding up the process.
 +
  Plastic pellets: recently massive 6000 cu ft cars have been built for moving plastic pellets.
 +
  Common loads in these car types are4500 cu ft+ plain covered hoppers: Chemicals,salt,feed/seed, grain,soybeans, corn, and any light to medium weight bulk load.
 +
  2000 cu ft cars: Cement, soda sh, or any dense, heavy bulk load.
 +
  Airside or pressuraide: flour, powdered sugar, or any powdered load.
 +
 +
{{rail-stub}}
 +
{{freight cars}}
  
Because of their one-way nature, tank cars are simply dead weight half of the time, making them unappealing to major railroads. Virtually all tank cars are owned by companies serviced by railroads instead of the railroads themselves. This can be verified by examining the [[reporting mark]]s on the cars. These marks invariably end in ''X,'' meaning that the owner is not a [[common carrier]].
 
  Some addtional railway information, as per the discussion page: First of all the claim above that tank cars are always privately owned is false( CP has a fleet,check out canadain freight car gallery for proof). The reason for so many privately owned tank cars is historical, not economical( Coil cars and 89ft boxcars are usually railway owned, and travel one way in empty mode)
 
  To understand tank car history we need to go to the first tank built, which was in Pennsylvania to move petroleum. It consisted of three open vats bolted to a flat car. The railway said "good idea!" and built it.
 
  The problem came as tank car design and liquid cargo types expanded(remember this happened very quickly!) Investing in new cars all the time made tank cars unappealling to railways, so a new company was founded: UNION TANK CAR company. this company was charged with building, maintaining, and running, on behalf of the railways, the tank car fleet. See the union tank car website for more info.
 
  As well, tank car fleets today are often not strictly one way runners. While the pesticide laced cooking oil simply wouldn't happen because:
 
  Pesticide-requires a large 23000 gallon, steel lined car. the cargo would appear as a non freezing, poisionous cargo. A proper car would be dispatched.
 
  Cooking oil-requires a smaller, 12000 gallon, insalated, glass or stainless steel lined tank car. Cargo would appear as a food based, freezing cargo. But the car dispatched would be termed a corn sprup tank car. It may bring corn syrup, molasses, or liquid suger in to city B: it may return to city A (home of the suger plant) carrying vegatable oil. get the picture?
 
 
==Timeline==
 
[[Image:OP-3471.jpg|thumb|Chicago and Northwestern Railway tank car #6093 sits on a siding in [[Lusk, Wyoming]] on [[August 1]], [[1947]].]]
 
[[Image:Carro cisterno de Ferrovie Eritrea.jpg|thumb|A ''carro cisterno'' (tank car) of the [[Eritrean Railway]] (''Ferrovia Eritrea'', or ''FE''), date unknown. The 2-axle car is 7,000 [[millimeter|mm]] (23 [[foot (unit of length)|feet]]) long, and has a 6,650 [[kilogram|kg]] (14,660 [[pound (mass)|lb]]) load capacity.]]
 
* [[1865]]: Flats with banded wooden tanks mounted on top are employed for the first time to transport crude oil from the fields of [[Pennsylvania]].
 
* [[1869]]: Cast iron tanks (with an approximate capacity of 3,500 gallons / 13,200&nbsp;l per car) replace wooden tanks.
 
* [[1888]]: Tank car manufacturers sell units directly to the oil companies, with capacities ranging from 6,000 gallons to 10,000 gallons (22,700&nbsp;l to 37,800&nbsp;l).
 
* [[1903]]: Tank car companies develop construction safety standards; more than 10,000 tank cars are in operation.
 
* [[1915]]: A classification system is developed by the tank car industry to ensure the correct match of product being shipped to car type. Some 50,000 tank cars are in use.
 
* [[1920]]: Welding technology replaces riveting in tank car construction, enhancing the safety of cars. 
 
* [[1930]]: 140,000 tank cars transport some 103 commodities (in addition to oil) to market.
 
* [[1940s]]: Virtually every tank car is engaged in oil transport in support of the [[World War II|war effort]].
 
* [[1950]]: Pipelines and tanker trucks begin to compete for liquid transport business.
 
* [[1963]]: The Union Tank Car Company (UTLX) introduces the "Whale Belly" tank car.
 
<br style="clear:both;">
 
==Specialized applications==
 
{{Cleanup|date=April 2007}}
 
===Gas transport===
 
[[Image:OP-20296.jpg|thumb|left|Tank cars such as [[Canadian National Railway]] #51860, shown passing through [[Quebec|Québec]] in August, [[1937]] were designed to transport [[industrial gas]]es under high pressure.]]
 
[[Image:Linde-raix708a.jpg|thumb|right|This [[Linde AG|Linde]] tank car transports refrigerated liquefied gases and is insulated in order to prevent the contents from evaporating during transport.]]
 
<br style="clear:both;">
 
 
===Milk cars===
 
[[Image:BFIX 520 20050716 Illinois Railway Museum.JPG|thumb|Borden (BFIX) #520, a restored milk car on display at the [[Illinois Railway Museum]].]]
 
A milk car is a specialized type of tank car designed to carry raw [[milk]] between farms or regional creameries and processing plants. Not all milk cars were tank cars. Today, milk would be chilled before loading, and moved in a glass lined, food service tank car.
 
<br style="clear:both;">
 
 
===Pickle cars===
 
A pickle car is a specialized type of tank car designed to carry [[Pickled cucumber|pickle]]s. This car has four visible wooden tanks and is roofed. Pickles which are preserved in salt brine are loaded through hatches in the roof. Obsolete in 2007
 
 
===Tanktainers===<!-- This section is linked from [[Containerization]] -->
 
[[Image:Railroad car with container loads.jpg|thumb|A [[Union Pacific Railroad]] tank container and another [[containerization|container]] aboard a [[flatcar]].]]
 
A tanktainer, also known as a tank container, is a specialized type of [[containerization|container]] designed to carry [[bulk liquids]] or [[dangerous goods]] on standard [[intermodal freight transport|intermodal]] equipment. The tank is held within a box-shaped frame the same size and shape as a container.
 
<br clear=all>
 
 
===Vinegar cars===
 
[[Image:OP-16131.jpg|thumb|Two double wooden-tank vinegar cars owned by the Speas Co. wait for their next assignment in [[Denver, Colorado]] ''circa'' [[1965]].]]
 
A vinegar car is a specialized type of tank car designed to transport [[vinegar]].  The largest such car built was built by [[Morrison Railway Supply Corporation]] in 1968.  The car's underframe included all of the modern conveniences of freight car design including roller bearing [[bogie|trucks]] and cushioning devices built by FreightMaster, while the tank that rode on it, made of Douglas fir, could hold 17,100 gallons (64,730 liters).  The car, called the largest wooden tank car ever built, took 18 months to complete construction. Obsolete in 2007- vinegar now moved in ordinary tank cars lined with glass, plastic, or alloy steel.<ref>{{cite journal| journal=Railway Age| month=[[October 28]]| year=[[1968]]| title=Week at a glance: Vinegar by rail - in giant wooden tanks| pages=p 11| volume=165| issue=17| }}</ref>
 
<br style="clear:both;">
 
 
==="Whale Belly" cars===
 
[[Image:GATX96500.jpg|thumb|GATX 96500, the largest railroad tank car ever built at 63,000 gallons capacity.]]
 
In the early [[1960s]], the [[Union Tank Car Company]] (UTLX) introduced a series of "whale belly" tank cars which offered increased capacity over the standard cars of the day. Capable of carrying 33,000 gallons (125,000&nbsp;l) (for example [http://www.northeast.railfan.net/images/csox31084.jpg CSOX #31084]) to as much as 63,000 gallons (238,500&nbsp;l) in the case of [[General American Transportation Corporation|GATX]] #96500, which had been conceived as a 'rolling experiment' of sorts. The largest tank car ever placed into regular service, [http://www.northeast.railfan.net/images/utlx83699.jpg UTLX #83699], was rated at 50,000 (189,200&nbsp;l) gallons, and is now on display at the [[Galveston Railroad Museum]] -- first hit the rails in 1963 and remained in service for over twenty years. This behemoth is 89 feet (27&nbsp;m) in length and weighs 175,000 lb. (79,400&nbsp;kg) empty; the car, which rides on four two-axle trucks to distribute the additional weight, was used to transport such diverse substances as [[liquefied petroleum gas]] (LPG) and [[anhydrous]] [[ammonia]].
 
<br style="clear:both;">
 
 
 
==References==
 
* {{cite web| title=History Of The Rail Tank Car| author=Herron, J.|date=April 2002| work=e-Train, the online magazine of the Train Collectors Association| url=http://tcaetrain.org/articles/tickets/tankcar/index.html| accessdate=April 20| accessyear=2007}}
 
* {{cite book| author=White, Jr., John H.| year=1993| title=The American Railroad Freight Car| publisher=The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland| id=ISBN 0-8018-5236-6}}
 
<references />
 
 
==External links==
 
{{commons}}
 
* [http://rwhales.railstuff.net/ Rail Whales]
 
* [http://tankcarhomepage.railfan.net/ Modern Tank Car Homepage]
 
* [http://www.utlx.com/dictionary/dict.asp Tank car dictionary]
 
* [http://www.robertjohndavis.com/milktrains/ Milk Trains blog for information specific to milk tank cars.]
 
 
{{Freight cars}}
 
 
[[Category:Freight equipment]]
 
[[Category:Freight equipment]]
  
[[de:Kesselwagen]]
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[[de:Offener Güterwagen#Selbstentladewagen]]
[[eo:Cisterna vagono]]
 
[[fr:Wagon-citerne]]
 
[[ja:タンク車]]
 

Revision as of 19:59, 2 October 2007

Covered hopper car originally built in the 1950s for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. After the 1967 SCL merger these cars were fitted with rotary couplers and used in Bone Valley phosphate service.
DME 49328, a covered hopper owned and operated by the Dakota, Minnesota and Eastern Railroad.

A covered hopper is a railroad freight car. Structurally, it is very similar to an open-top hopper car in that the carbody consists of a large hopper with unloading chutes at the bottom. What distinguishes this type of car from an open hopper is not only the car's roof, but also the car's overall size. Covered hoppers typically carry loads of less dense, and therefore lighter, materials, so they are built to a higher cubic capacity than open top hoppers. They are used predominantly to haul various grains such as corn, wheat and barley.

Some covered hoppers are built to carry loads that are heavy, but very susceptible to damage if exposed to the weather. Loads such as cement, processed phosphate, and kaolin clay are carried, in powdered form, in covered hoppers. Covered hoppers designed for these loads more closely resemble open-top hoppers.

File:Santa Fe Conditionaire Covered Hopper.jpg
ACFX #47633, one of 100 specially-built "Conditionaire" centerflow hoppers operated by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Covered hoppers in North American service have been built by most of the freight car manufacturers of the 20th century. The most common covered hoppers that are still in use were built by either Pullman-Standard or ACF.

  Here's some more informtion on covered hoppers:
 1)TYPES/History: in the beginning of north americian railroading, damagable bulk loads where an issue for the railways. Wheras a load of pots could go into a boxcar, a keg of nails could go into a gondala or a boxcar, a load of grain or cement really had no car to move in. Double sheathed boxcars (two walls, one on top of the other) where used to protect these loads from weather. The problem was simply unloading time-workers had to enter the car, and manually clean it out. As wages increased, so did problems. 
  Parallel to this, coal was becoming a large money maker for the railways. This cargo, orginally moved in gondalas' also needed to be unloaded by hand. To allow for fast unloading, s required by power plants, the pennsylvania railroad, in conjection with pullman standard, built the first open hopper. The bottom unloading of course made unloading much easier.
 Now, back to cement. As this was becoming a large revenue source, pullman built a small steel hopper car with a roof. This car, the first PS-2 covered hopper, started the covered hopper family. The 1750 cu ft cement hopper car is the direct decendent of this first car. However, grain remained a boxcar load.
 By the late 1950's those boxcars had worn out. Long, heavy, diesel powered freights became common. Newer, heavier rail was laid. Grain became a centralized commonity. Pullman-standard once again took the lead, and released the 4425 cu ft grain covered hopper. This car revalotionized grain handling by allowing for quick, easy loading(troughs in the roof), and unloading( hatches in the floor) apart from that, it looked like a standard straight waller hopper car. In the 1970's, the gaint 4750 cu ft covered hopper was released. These are still in service today. Versions have been built by PS, Evans rail products, PC&F, and Canada car.
  Another type of covered hopper is the ACF(americian car and foundry) center flow. This is now the most common covered hopper in service. Its' main advantage is the ease of unloading, especially for granular products(Salt, soda ash, chemicals). You see, the PS car has a large steel shaft that runs from one set of wheels through the bottom of the car to the other set-this creates a strong car, but provides a surface that can hang up cargo. Free flowing cargo, like grain or soybeans, isn't really caught, but those granular loads will. The ACF solution is to build the car bottom as a grid, with strong steel shafts on the sides of the car, with cross members running across the car. So there is no hang up space and loads flow freely. The most common size is 4650 cu ft, but other sizes have been built.
 A third type is from Canada. This one is the Cylindrical covered hopper. It looks like a beer can lying flat on its' side, on wheels. This type was designed by the Canadian wheat board, and built by several canadian companies. It holds 4550 cu ft. However, by moving the hopper ends farther apart, car up to 4750 cu ft have been built.
  Powdered products: even with covered hoppers powdered goods( think flour, powdered sugar) remained hard to transport. The reason is that the loads stick toghether, and don't unload. A first solution, for GATX, was the AIRSIDE covered hopper. In this car, Large air bags are mounted inside the car, on the walls. at unloading time, an air hose is connected to those bags. By inflating and deflating them, the powdered load is unloaded. Pressuraide cars are more modern. in these cars, Pipes are used to connect are the unloading hatches. Compressed air is used from the top of the car to force the load out. Some plants use a vacuum on the unloading pipe to suck load out, thus speeding up the process.
 Plastic pellets: recently massive 6000 cu ft cars have been built for moving plastic pellets.
 Common loads in these car types are4500 cu ft+ plain covered hoppers: Chemicals,salt,feed/seed, grain,soybeans, corn, and any light to medium weight bulk load.
 2000 cu ft cars: Cement, soda sh, or any dense, heavy bulk load.
  Airside or pressuraide: flour, powdered sugar, or any powdered load.

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