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The Railwire is not your personal army.
a good resource is the opsig industry database .. its a list of known industries on railroads for various time frames .. so if you want to know what propane dealers there were in maine in 1950, it should be able to tell you ..Its a free windows download here http://www.shenware.com/dlindman.htmlsee the attached file, and load it into a spreadsheet
Texaco still had their 103s in service in 1970, although the only ones I've seen pictures of were black. There's no reason they couldn't have had some of the silver billboard style cars, as they weren't banned, like billboard reefers years ago...
... Oh, no edit option for my previous post? I was surprised to find I had to made a new post for this.
... many also sold Coal,so some 50-55-60 ton double hoppers from one of the Anthracite roads like Lackawanna,D&H,CNJ,LV,Reading,O&W,or Erie woudnt be out of place.
To expand on this — Both B&M and NH had huge twin-bay hopper fleets in the 1950s. And for some reason, there was a large presence of B&O equipment as well. The Atlas fish belly twin and Atlas offset twin are correct for most if not all of the anthracite roads listed above, as well as B&O. The Atlas offset twin is correct for B&M. The Bachmann USRA twin is correct for both B&O and NH, but would require custom painting (the stock B&O deco is incorrect).
John, the exe file at the site you linked does me no good because I'm not running Windows so I can't extract the files from it. The file (OpSigEST.txt) you uploaded on the other hand works fine when I run it in Libre Office. Looks to me like some pretty useful info.Could you upload the one for western roads? OPSigWST.txt
As for what cars to use, the simple answer is that almost any tank car with a frame and a dome would work.
For the B&M there were 200 2 bay hoppers, half ex c&O and half bought new. They also had 1000 quad hoppers which I'm planning to get from Broadway Limited when they're released in a few months. I believe that these were all used for tide coal and that the majority were used for locomotive coal which explains the rapid decline in numbers following the end of steam.
@garethashenden — What area of New England are you modeling, and which road is your primary? Interesting tidbit on the (apparent) over-representation of B&O hopper equipment throughout New England, good to know.
Did you try to run it under WINE? -- there are other text files with the rest of the country inside that zip .. I would encourage you to do a Libre Office version of this database ... and share it
... [B&M] also had 1000 quad hoppers which I'm planning to get from Broadway Limited when they're released in a few months. I believe that these were all used for tide coal and that the majority were used for locomotive coal which explains the rapid decline in numbers following the end of steam.
I've never seen a prototype picture of their silver tank cars, so wasn't sure if they were accurate at all. I have one of the black ones, but will keep my silver ones anyway. An inaccurate car on a fictional branch sounds about right...