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I think I've seen a gondola with darn near a lawn in it .
And they also move a lot of gons loaded with big plastic bags full of something.
I saw a cut of about 12 or 15 of these on a CN freight on Sunday (305 I think). All of the gons were placarded UN 1077, which is a class 9 environmental hazard. That means nothing to be, but Google seemed to indicate that this is commonly used on pesticides and herbicides, and the fact that beside each placard on the cars was a placard of a dead tree (both appeared on the bags as well), bags of herbicide seems likely.
PRR had a gon with holes cut in the floor so the prop blades could stick through . I made a half assed model of it .
The TrainCat G22 gondola has holes (or gates) in the floor and would be a good candidate for this type of load.It also could be transported in a well car. From where did you scrounge the propellers?
they may also be bags of contaminated soil being removed from a spill clean up or Superfund site (which Canada has a equivalent of) for disposal at a certified landfill (of which there are too few in the US).
Anyone know why my images were published upside down in my post? When I click on the image, they are correctly rendered.Just wondering.
Pulpwood loads, please.This is the Micro Trains 499 43 945 40" Pulpwood Square Loads #1 and #2. I painted these.Strangely, MT doesn't make a 40' gon suitable for these loads, except for the 40' GS Drop Bottom Gon (083 00 000 series). Even then the load sits too high and I can't see a railroad using a drop bottom gon for pulpwood loads risking damage to the equipment. But there is a prototype for everything.Why didn't MT do this for their 50' gon instead?
Soil tends to move in containers on 2 unit spine cars or in tarped gondolas around these parts. It's possible they bags are carrying dirt as I really don't know whats in them, but I'm thinking more along the lines of powdered death. below is a link to a photo of a gon carrying the bags in question, though in this image there are no visible placards on the car.http://freight.railfan.ca/cgi-bin/image.pl?i=atw400539_2&o=atw