Here are a couple pics of some scratch built coil racks on a Lionel semi truck, also a coil storage rack inside a building. I would like to find a nicely detailed 1:48 scale semi & flatbed?
Jeff
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Here are a couple pics of some scratch built coil racks on a Lionel semi truck, also a coil storage rack inside a building. I would like to find a nicely detailed 1:48 scale semi & flatbed?
Jeff
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Jeff Very Nice!!!!!
Nice job Jeff!
They look great Jeff!!
Alan
Jeff,
Those coil racks really look nice. You will have to construct a steel service center with a leveling line for them.
I would like to boast that I was one of the lucky ones this past Friday that got to see this fantastic layout of Jeff James. Jeff, thanks for opening your home to us and tell the wife that the brownies were out of site.
If you are even close to Jeff, you need to contact him and see this wonderful layout and his "Wall of Trains".
Thanks again Jeff.
Thanks everyone for the comments, the racks were built by my buddy who is a master at what he does.
Alan, we have something in the planning stages already!!
Roger, My wife said to say thank you about her brownies, that made her day!!
Jeff
Jeff,
The trailer, coils, and racks look outstanding! As you correctly show, these 53' flat trailers can only handle 2 decent-sized coils in a load (they are heavy). I think you told me once you were a crane operator in a previous life. Would you say that the covered gondola coil cars were loaded the same way (2-3 coils / car)? I tend to doubt you would see 8 16-20 ton coils in a single car (200 tons), but maybe you can set me straight.
By the way, I have a Mack 60B tractor/trailor combination (I think it came with logs), that I'm looking to re-paint (or have painted) in the Black & Orange Weir-Cove scheme. That will be tooling around the layout as they did in the prototype.
Thanks,
George
Hi George,
Thanks for the comments!! Yes, I was a craneman for a lot of years loaded a bunch of coils on trucks & coil cars during that time. You are spot on about the two coils on the semi, max weight was 40,000 lbs of steel on the trucks unless they had a permit to carry extra weight. The railroad cars varied on the amount of coils of course due to there individual weight. An average load would usually be in the 170,000 - 180,000 lb range give or take a little. Generally, we tried to load the cars to full capacity weight wise. Sometimes only 4 coils up to possible 10 coils per car. I can not remember what the max limit was on the rails with the car included, but I think it was somewhere in the 252,000 lb range?? Maybe someone else could chime in here more on the aspect. It was a awesome job playing with the big toys!!!
Thanks, Jeff
Hi George,
I can not remember what the max limit was on the rails with the car included, but I think it was somewhere in the 252,000 lb range?? Maybe someone else could chime in here more on the aspect. It was a awesome job playing with the big toys!!!
The numbers that come to mind were 263,000. Later it escalated to 286000, and in some places 315000 (or at least there is a proposal afloat to raise it to this)
---PCJ
Hi George,
I can not remember what the max limit was on the rails with the car included, but I think it was somewhere in the 252,000 lb range?? Maybe someone else could chime in here more on the aspect. It was a awesome job playing with the big toys!!!
The numbers that come to mind were 263,000. Later it escalated to 286000, and in some places 315000 (or at least there is a proposal afloat to raise it to this)
---PCJ
Wow! 286,000 lbs = 143 tons. I know from the hot mill side of the operation you could see 80, 120, 160, 200 ton hot metal cars, but those typically don't run around on mainline tracks. Spilling hot molten metal on a mainline could be...bad. Real bad.
But I digress. With that kind of tonnage in coil cars, a decently sized train would require 3-4 MU'ed diesel locomotives (also called a LASHUP by some infidels
).
Since my mill operates in the mid-1950s, I'm going to limit the number of coils in my gondolas to no more than 4.
Thanks for the info!
George
Jeff:
That must be John sitting on the trailer as usual. He looks just like I remember him. Nice job on the racks they look so real brings back old memories.
Jim
Jeff....well done my friend...looks just as we see them out in CA on the freeways...
jeff z .
VERY NICE JOB ON THE COIL RACKS.
THE IS A COMPANY CALLED DHS DIECAST, HE COMES TO YORK ALSO, THAT HAS A LINE OF TOP OF THE LINE TRUCKS IN 1:50TH SCALE. THEY ARE MARKETED UNDER SWORD. ON THE DHSDIECAST.COM SITE GO TO AMERICAN TRUCKS. ALSO, SINCE YOU WERE A CRANE OPERATOR CHECK OUT THE CRANES. THEY ARE CONRADS, NZG, TWH. FIRST CLASS. NEED MORE INFOR PLEASE CALL. MARSHALL 614-769-2005
OK, so the next logical question is: Who makes O scale coils?
I think at one time, K-Line did but they are no more. Someone (can't remember) made coils out of real steel - they were heavy.
Any recommendations?
Thanks,
George
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