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Umm, Type 27 refers to an American Car & Foundry (AC&F) patented tank car design of 1927, not just the underframe. It includes things like longitudinal courses, riveting patterns, saddle design etc.
A popular misconception is that AC&F identified the entire tank car by a Type designation............When speaking of a particular Type tank car from AC&F, then, it must be kept in mind that this applies to a standardized under frame, not the tank.
The Kaminski book is a great resource, especially for ACF cars. The best tank car model in my book you cannot get any more. It was the old Arnold Rapido car with nice almost scale sized metal hand rails. I obtained a bunch, nice proto paint schemes. A big problem though, very very hard convert to Micro Trains coupler mounted trucks, I never tried body mounting. Out of five cars I only converted two. I did buy a S*** Pot of IM cars when they came out as the were different looking than MT cars and came in multi packs. Nate Goodman (Nato). Salt Lake, Utah.
The best tank car model in my book you cannot get any more. It was the old Arnold Rapido car with nice almost scale sized metal hand rails. I obtained a bunch, nice proto paint schemes. A big problem though, very very hard convert to Micro Trains coupler mounted trucks, I never tried body mounting.
So it would seem that all three of the current tank car models (BMann, IM and MTL) are on Type-27 underframes, with the IM being 8K, the Bmann being 10K, and the MTL possibly representative of the 12K prototype.
There weren't that many 8000 gallon cars or small capacity cars built after the 40s. You might find some special cars like Bromide cars or something that were low capacity but most cars after 1950 were getting pretty big.
Type-XX as designated from AC&F does not include the tank, it's just the under frame. edit:From Edward Kaminski's ACF Tank Car book.I'm not going to argue the point. I can only go with the resources I have. I'm open to any new info if you can cite any.Jason
On another matter relative to the new Bachmann single dome cars, as much as like them and consider them a nice addition to my rolling stock, they are very light. Has anyone figured out a practical way to add weight to them? If one could only remove the dome....Otto K.