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According to some quick research, the answer is no.*From the book Burlington Northern Railroad: Coal Hauler ...After discussing the early traffic patterns east and south out of the PRB the book states "A new directional twist took place on January 5, 1980. On that date, the first full train carrying coal to the Pacific Northwest arrived at Castle, Oregon."*However, I seem to recall the the D&RGW ran unit trains into Oregon/Washington, so they may have routed over BN lines at some point.
Hard to tell from the context if that quote was referring to just PRB coal or coal in general. It sure seems to say coal, period, but while I wouldn't have expected PRB coal to get there until 1980-ish, surely the PNW got coal from somewhere prior to 1980?
Also a few 70 ton cars from Bluford would add a good mix to the train.
If you're talking about the former GN cars, then the Bluford model is wrong. The GN cars had a different number of panels.
Can always be a stand-in, how does the old MDC 70 ton hopper fit in?
Sorry Sirenwerks, Mplsjct is correct, the 14-panel hoppers we did in GN and BN paint were 2nd hand cars purchased from Detroit Toledo & Ironton. The 15-panel cars you are thinking of are GN PS-3s. As for the offset hoppers, CB&Q and their subsidiary C&S had quite a few and many were still well within their service life in the era you model (mostly in Chinese red or black by that time.) It doesn't appear that any of the CB&Q 3-bay offset side cars were ever repainted for BN.
Southern Railway ran the first unit trains of coal of any railroad, from its new Pride, AL transload facility in 1977 or so.