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I know they're both, I just wanted input from any 2-railers who might know something about these, buuut I didn't post it in 2R because...reasons. Anyway:

Among an assortment of "9 older Atlas cars" I got from a Cabin Fever auction on 01/05/2022 were these two gondolas, one Virginian and one C&O, the only two in the assortment without boxes.

ches and vgn gondolas

That alone wasn't unusual. It still isn't. But while doing research to identify them, I found that these didn't appear in a listing of 1970's era Atlas production (on a set of webpages I had to go into the Wayback Machine to find), in which I found that like AHM, Atlas at the time only made 4 or so roadnames in each freight car type. In the case of the 50' gondolas, they were Norfolk & Western, Reading, Pennsylvania, and Great Northern, leaving these two as outliers.

CandO gondolaCandO detail

I provided close-ups of the two to show that they probably weren't repainted by the previous owner, as I don't see any decal film. In fact, these look like they were pad-printed.

VGN gondolaVGN detail

So my question is, has anyone seen these two boxed, or if they were commercially redecorated, have any idea who offered them as such? I'll probably make up reproduction boxes for these eventually since all my other examples of early Atlas production (pretty much all of them) have original boxes, but I'd like to be able to provide product numbers for my inventory, as well as custom labeling for whatever boxes I cobble together for them.

---PCJ

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  • CandO gondola
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  • VGN gondola
  • VGN detail
Last edited by RailRide
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It is in fact early atlas-roco origin.

One of the custom painters of this early plastic O scale were Bev Bell.

this from internet:

Remember them?

This firm was started by a husband and wife, back during the late 1950's, as a side job, in their respective home in New Jersey and prospered for well over 40 years.

For the readers who are not familiar with Bev-Bel, they specilized in customing painting and decorating of HO, N and O Scale stock undecorted Athearn, Roundhouse, Train Miniaturer and others in HO, plus other scale manufacturers.

No deacaling used, print pad stencil method.

So, I had a few  of these found at O scale shows. I bought them at the Stamford (Connecticut) shows.  I had the two gondolas you have displayed,  and the box cars.
my favorite was a Susie Q , 40 footer. It had an image of Susie on it! Might possibly be able to find photos of them in an old PC. The wheels were plastic and the flanges were like Lionel wheels large enough to support their use on tubular rail. The standard coupler part of the truck assembly was a non operating but some of them had a swing. They fit in the standard  Lionel coupler. The models were light weight. Adding weight to them for use was an easy application. I would change the trucks and wheels on these. They were nicely detailed. The stock rolling stock had limited paint schemes and commercially they were easy to weather. Bev Bel made them irresistible!

Last edited by Leroof

That was one of them. I remembered the other one -- P&D Hobbies was issuing special runs of Atlas rolling stock and I believe they offered F9's based on the Atlas-Roco, but with modified pilots.

In addition to Bev-Bel and P&D, Petersen Supply also offered custom runs of the “old” Atlas (Roco/AHM) gondolas.  I owned several of them at one time, but have since sold them all off.  I can still picture the white boxes with a cellophane window and red pinstriping.

Last edited by CNJ #1601

Nearly all of my HO CNJ equipment was custom run Athearn by Bev-Bel in the 1980's.  They were the go to custom run company during my high school years.

Peterson Supply has also been a big supporter of custom runs.  I did several painting diagrams on 3rd Rail locomotives on their behalf for the FP7 and the E7 projects.

I really like these C&O & Virginian gondolas.  I'll have to keep my eyes open now that I know they exist.

Last edited by GG1 4877
@GG1 4877 posted:

Nearly all of my HO CNJ equipment was custom run Athearn by Bev-Bel in the 1980's.  They were the go to custom run company during my high school years.



I always wondered why I would see “BEV-BEL” on the typewritten labels from Athearn and Roundhouse boxes. It all makes sense now.

I don’t know how 10 year old me functioned without the Internet. I literally had zero resources for model train info in mid to late 80s rural Pennsylvania. Other that the 10 minutes I would quiz the shop keeper at the local hobby store until my mother said “time to go!”

@rplst8 posted:

I always wondered why I would see “BEV-BEL” on the typewritten labels from Athearn and Roundhouse boxes. It all makes sense now.

I don’t know how 10 year old me functioned without the Internet. I literally had zero resources for model train info in mid to late 80s rural Pennsylvania. Other that the 10 minutes I would quiz the shop keeper at the local hobby store until my mother said “time to go!”

Funny you should mention this.  I was 14 when my dad started taking me to train meets in NJ and eastern PA.  That would have been circa 1983.  I really wanted the HO Athearn / Bev-Bel Trainmaster in CNJ and ran across one at a meet, but the seller wouldn't take my $20 dollar bill against his $25 asking price.    I was literally devastated as I had around 10 Athearn / Bev-Bel heavy weight cars and a GP9 in "Red Baron" paint.  At that time the CNJ Trainmaster was my unicorn!  I already had a GG1 by then manufactured by Pemco which started me down the rabbit hole of GG1 collecting.

It helped me that my dad, to this day, is an HO modeler and collector and got his interest in the hobby from my grandfather who started collecting HO in 1947 after an honorable discharge from the US army after his service during WWII.   

Honestly, I'm not sure the internet would help much now with a history of Bev-Bel custom runs.  At least I have not run across much.  I'd love to see more.

Sorry to deviate from the OP topic.  Mystery paint schemes are always fascinating regardless of scale.

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