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...Roofwalks: Not on new cars after 1966, to be removed by 1974 but this deadline was later extended to 1979. So what percentage of cars would still have them? What I'm thinking is that I'll remove them from all the Trainman cars, since they're quite chunky, and leave the finer etched or thin plastic roofwalks on other cars. That would be about a third of the fleet, does that sound right? I suppose the other option would be to go by the car service date. I'd guess that anything serviced before '66 would still have the roofwalk, but would a car serviced in say '68 have had them removed? Of course the real solution is to find pictures of the cars I'm modelling, but that's easier said than done. I've found a few, but not a lot. Does anyone have any advice on how to approach this?
There is a wealth of info in this video,and a shameless plug for my own upload too . It is not the greatest quality, but it shows the common car types and you can see roofwalks slowly fade out of the picture too. The video starts in the 60s and ends in the late 70s, everything until you see the GP38-2s is leading up to 1974. I think most of it was shot in Mass, but I'm not totally sure, I didn't shoot it, I just rescued it from VHS.
"Plain" 40 ft boxcars seem to have kept their roofwalks in higher numbers than other cars, probably because they were largely obsolete by the 70s, and the railroads didn't want to spend money on them. That said, among the BN's cars, I don't remember ever seeing a GN BSB, CB&Q green, NP "BN Green", or BN boxcar with a roofwalk. Those were all painted after 1966. I don't model them, but by the same reasoning, I would think that PC-painted cars with roofwalks would be rare, while PC-patched cars could easily have them.