FLATCAR

Ex-Virginia and Truckee Railroad #119, a type 4-4-0 steam locomotive, rides atop a Union Pacific Railroad flatcar as it stops in Ogden, Utah on May 9, 1969 just prior to the 100th anniversary of the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad.

A 'flatcar' (also 'flat car') is a piece of railroad rolling stock that consists of an open, flat deck on four or six wheels or a pair of trucks (US) or bogies (UK). The deck of the car can be wood or steel, and the sides of the deck can include pockets for stakes or tie-down points to secure loads. Flatcars designed for carrying machinery have sliding chain assemblies recessed in the deck.
Flatcars are used for loads that are too large or cumbersome to load in enclosed cars such as boxcars. They are also often used to transport containers or trailers in intermodal shipping.

Contents
History
Specialized types
Aircraft parts flatcars
Bulkhead flatcars
Centerbeam flatcars
Heavy capacity flatcars
Circus use
Remote control use
References
See also

History



Specialized types


Aircraft parts flatcars

Aircraft parts were hauled via conventional freight cars beginning in World War II. However, given the ever-increasing size of aircraft assemblies, the "Sky Box" method of shipping parts was developed in the late 1960s specifically to transport parts for the Boeing 747 and other "jumbo" jets of the time. The "Sky Box" consists of a two-piece metal shell that is placed atop a standard flatcar to support and protect wing and tail assemblies and fuselage sections in transit (originally, depressed-center or "fish belly" cars were utilized). [1] [2] [3]
Today, Boeing's 737 aircraft are shipped throughout the United States on special trains, including the fuselage.
Bulkhead flatcars

Kansas City Southern Railway #601471, a bulkhead flat car, carries a load of pulpwood.

Bulkhead flatcars are designed with sturdy end-walls (bulkheads) to prevent loads from shifting past the ends of the car. Loads typically carried are pipe, steel slabs, utility poles and lumber, though lumber is increasingly being hauled by centerbeam cars.


Centerbeam flatcars

BC Rail #871027, a centerbeam flat car, leaves Burlington Northern's Eola Yard, just east of Aurora, Illinois in 1992.

Centerbeams are specialty cars designed for carrying bundled building supplies such as dimensional lumber, wallboard, and fence posts. They are essentially bulkhead flatcars that have been reinforced by a longitudinal I-beam, often in the form of a Vierendeel truss, sometimes reinforced by diagonal members. They must be loaded symmetrically, with half of the payload on one side of the centerbeam and half on the other to avoid tipping over.


Heavy capacity flatcars

A heavy duty flatcar with load. Photographed in Scotch Block, Ontario, on 27 November 2004.

Heavy capacity flatcars are cars designed to carry more than 100 tons of lading. They often have more than the typical North American standard of four axles, and may have a depressed center to handle excess-height loads. Loads typically handled include electrical power equipment and large industrial production machinery.


Circus use

Southern Pacific Railroad #2806, a type 2-8-0 steam locomotive, hauls a Foley and Burk Circus train through San Luis Obispo, California in July, 1937. Wagons and rolling cages are lashed to the tops of flatcars for transport.



Remote control use

Some railroads, such as CSX, have former wood-carrying flatcars rebuilt into platforms which mount remote control equipment for use in operating locomotives. Such platforms are fitted with appropriate headlights, horns, and air brake appliances to operate in the leading position on a cut of cars (i.e. coupled ahead of the locomotive).

References



Great Northern Equipment Color Pictorial: Book Two, Freight Cars, Thompson, Scott R., , , Four Ways West Publications, La Mirada, CA, 1996, ISBN 1-885614-11-X

See also



Gondolas

Modalohr road trailer carriers

Railroad car

Roll-block

Transporter flatcar

Well cars

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