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I am semi- aware of about sven different corrugated lightweight car body styles.  I do not have photos of all of them, so perhaps you could help.

 

For Budd, there are three common styles - the Zephyr (apparently includes Seaboard) where the corrugations continue above the window area, and the road name is added on top of them, the more-or-less standard, as on PRR, ACL, SP RF&P, etc., with smooth letterboard above the windows, and the slab-side, most often seen on dome cars and some PRR coaches.  I can get photos of all of these, later.

 

For Pullman, I can post two types - the "Innies" as used on SP, and some ATSF and Rock Island, the "Outies" as used on NYC, most ATSF, and many others (Known to 2- railers as Kasiner style), and the C&O/DRGW/D&H, currently not available in O scale, but easily done if the upper flutes are sanded off of a Kasiner extrusion.

 

Bob Delbridge tells us there is another group - the ACF cars - that are quite different, and possibly characterized by the newer OK extrusions.  This is a group that I am not at all familiar with.

 

So I will start with readily available photos - help me out in figuring who currently supplies these things:

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This is an excellent photo of the Kasiner extrusion, showing the NYC-style Pullman corrugations.  Note the significant differences between this and the Daylight car body.

 

 

The photo is courtesy of the DeBruins of Dallas and Atlanta.  This style extrusion has also been done by CRC, K-Line, and possibly Sunset.  Pecos River has done it in brass for ATSF, and I can get a photo of that when I shoot the  Budd extrusions.

 

K-Line used this style for their Daylight cars - beautiful cars, but wildly incorrect.  Sunset did it a lot better.

 

My interest has been piqued by Delbridge's "Hollywood" thread.

Atlantic Coast Line, FEC, and RF&P also had ACF 6 Bedroom, Buffet Lounge cars too.  From what I see the roofs were smooth, the sides had "large" fluting above and below the windows, and small fluting on the skirts.

 

ACL and PRR had ACF 14 Roomette, 2DR Sleeping cars.  FEC also had 14 Roomette, 2 DR Sleeping cars from ACF but the roofs on them have lateral ribbing.

 

I believe ALL these ACF cars had lateral ribbing, just can't see it in most of the photos.  The ribbing is plain to see on cars with stainless steel roofs, but on cars with black roofs it's hard to see.

 

I'm also seeing ACF cars that are smooth on all the surfaces.

 

I'm using "The Passenger Car Library, Volume 6" book by W. David Randall as a reference, it covers cars belonging to: ACL, FEC, SAL, SOU, C&EI, CofG, GM&O, and L&N, with RF&P and PRR lookalikes thrown in.

 

I imagine Pullman, Budd, and ACF pulled their collective hairs out trying to please all the RRs that wanted these cars.  SALs Pullman 10-6 sleepers were ordered with Budd roofing to match the cars ordered from Budd...Pullman said afterwards "Never again!!!".  Pullman had a hard time shot-welding from what I recall and their roofs started buckling, Budd must have had the procedure down to an art.  Here's a blurb on the NEB&W website that kind of explains things:

 

http://railroad.union.rpi.edu/...eight_Passenger_Cars

Really nice article - answers your diaphragm question.  I think, but am not sure, that the Cor-Ten steel was used on the corrugated outside panels on Pullman cars.

 

For a good photo of two different Budd extrusions, see that other forum.  My lighteight car thread died a violent death, then got resurrected.

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