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 White Tank Cars

From the Internet.  I have not seen a white tank car, much less a cut or unit train.  This could be a manufacturer's photograph.   If you have information about commodity, shipper, consignee or route, kindly share.  Thank you, John in Lansing, ILL.

Edited 11/06/2018.  Saw the one below.

DSCN9993

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Last edited by rattler21
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There is no DOT requirement that all tank cars in a particular product service must be a certain color.  Basically, the color of a tank car pretty much means nothing other than that’s what the car owner or lessee chose.

I manage rail for a chemical company and in our rail fleet; we have all white cars, white cars with oxide red center bands, white with black center bands, black with red boxes and all black.  I’ve seen competitors cars that are blue or varying shades of green.

The color combinations we choose have nothing to do with the characteristics of the product contained in a car and are intended only as a guide to our loaders indicating what product service the car is in.  And; even with that, they are still required to double check the reporting mark, car number and placards to confirm the car they intend to load is in the proper product service for what they plan to load in it.

Curt

Last edited by juniata guy
colorado hirailer posted:

Got any photos of a Coors white (or any color) tank car.  What time period did they operate in?  Have not seen that ..

As I recall Coors ran the cars from Colorado to Virginia to supply the water to there Williamsburg Brewery. Never took a picture of them. I don't even remember how long they used them. 

There life was cut short when Coors stopped the practice, with the west coast water shortage?? There was some talk of reversing the cars and hauling water west bound due to the water shortages.  

CSX Fan,

From Beer and Breweries in Virginia:

It makes sense to locate a brewery near a major city; transportation costs from the manufacturing site to the customer can be reduced, but the costs of labor and taxes will be low outside the city limits. That's why Budweiser is brewed in James City County near Williamsburg, VA.

The other major manufacturer with a brewery in Virginia is Coors. In 1987 Coors built a plant near Elkton where they blend, package and distribute 7 million barrels of Coors beer to Eastern markets. Rockingham County has excellent water supply and water quality, so Coors beer in Virginia includes Shenandoah Valley - as well as Rocky Mountain - water.

I am so spoiled.  We have a brewery called "Sierra Nevada."  One cannot buy this stuff east of the Colorado River.  Every other beer tastes, to me, like dishwater.

One friend drinks Bud Light.  He says only the first can tastes like dishwater.

All my model tank cars are getting sprayed scarlet, with black domes and underframes, and white lettering with black outline.  Stunning!

bob2 posted:

I am so spoiled.  We have a brewery called "Sierra Nevada."  One cannot buy this stuff east of the Colorado River.  Every other beer tastes, to me, like dishwater.

There is a beer called Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, with a green label—they have other varieties, too—that has been sold in New England for at least the last 15 or 20 years. Is this the beer that you refer to? It is good, but we are fortunate to live in a time when there are dozens and dozens of good beers.

Rob Leese posted:

I once set out a 50' white tank car carrying anhydrous ammonia...could barely keep my eyes open.  Nasty load.

These days, many white tank cars in my region are carrying HCl acid for oil field use.  Another nasty load.

 

Rob:

I remember being in a meeting in Washington with some PHMSA folks years ago and the discussion turned to the irony inherent in hazmat regulations.  The one fellow used anhydrous ammonia as a good example.  Overturn a truckload of this stuff on the highway and it’s a hazmat spill requiring emergency response.  Move that same truck across the ditch along the highway and spread it in a farmers corn field and it’s a normal fertilizer application.

Curt

The cars in the original post with the black stripe are used for oil.  Just had a chapter meeting for the PRRT&HS and one of our members worked at the Altoona Railroaders Memorial Museum.  He showed a video of a full unit train of those cars taking up the entire length of the Horseshoe Curve.  Very interesting to watch running because the center black stripe looks tricks the eye into thinking the cars end there.

Tom:

Your comment about the ATSF water cars jogged my memory.

In a "previous life" I worked for a company that had a potash mine and refinery near Carlsbad, NM.  The mine itself was located at Nash Draw - southeast of Carlsbad and about 48 rail miles from the refinery which was due east of Carlsbad. 

We had no potable water supply at Nash Draw so Santa Fe provided us with an ancient riveted, full sill tank car that, as I recollect, had a build date from the late '30's.  The car was painted silver and stenciled for "Potable Water Only" and something to the effect it was not authorized for use in interline service. 

The daily ore shuttle that delivered the raw potash ore to the refinery would bring the empty Santa Fe tank car over one or two days each week.  The refinery would load the car with potable water and the next day's shuttle train would pull that along with empty ore cars and deliver everything back to the Nash Draw mine site.

When I look at one of Lionel's "steam era" single dome tank cars, I always think about that ancient, full sill, riveted Santa Fe tank car.  😉

Curt

Last edited by juniata guy
juniata guy posted:

Tom:

Your comment about the ATSF water cars jogged my memory.

In a "previous life" I worked for a company that had a potash mine and refinery near Carlsbad, NM.  The mine itself was located at Nash Draw - southeast of Carlsbad and about 48 rail miles from the refinery which was due east of Carlsbad. 

We had no potable water supply at Nash Draw so Santa Fe provided us with an ancient riveted, full sill tank car that, as I recollect, had a build date from the late '30's.  The car was painted silver and stenciled for "Potable Water Only" and something to the effect it was not authorized for use in interline service. 

The daily ore shuttle that delivered the raw potash ore to the refinery would bring the empty Santa Fe tank car over one or two days each week.  The refinery would load the car with potable water and the next day's shuttle train would pull that along with empty ore cars and deliver everything back to the Nash Draw mine site.

When I look at one of Lionel's "steam era" single dome tank cars, I always think about that ancient, full sill, riveted Santa Fe tank car.  😉

Curt

DSCN0007DSCN0008

Curt, K-Line offered a twin pack consisting of a silver tank car with black graphics and a black tank car with silver/white graphics.  The upper case R behind the road number may indicate it was not for interline service.  We run the silver car in our MOW train.  John in Lansing, ILL

 

Santa Fe domestic water only

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