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The Lima P70 is a drop dead ringer for the car in the top photo- a very early P70.
The "inset" belt rail is a painted stripe. If you look closely at the splice plates they run up over the belt rail which stands proud over the side sheets.....conventional construction. I'm not a PRR expert but the second lower photo is probably an earlier car as it has simulated wood sheathing. People were worried about being electrocuted by lightning in metal cars.The six wheel trucks were also used on this family of cars, especially the mail baggage combine.Charlie Vlk
Look again at that "wood sheathing". Those lines aren't quite vertical and the extend over the rest of the car including underbody detailing and the trucks, and even on the rails. You'll also see vestiges of these lines on the upper photo but at a more severe 45 degree angle. Likely a photo reproduction effect.
I agree, there's no recessed belt line. Tho the Pennsy did some odd design things, I doubt they put a pointless groove down the sides of their cars. And if you look very carefully at the first B&W print, at certain places along under the window sills you can see a faint parallel line, which corresponds to the rail under the sills on the builders photo. Since it's an intermittent line I'm pretty sure its not a distortion or bad resolution of the photo, since those would go the entire length. Why they painted that line black however, I have no idea.