Showing posts with label Harriman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harriman. Show all posts

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Modeling the Owl (Part2) - Korea to 1960

In this part of discussing the Owl (Nos.57 & 58), I will look at the changes that happened to the Owl from 1951 to 1960.  After which point the Owl was on the slide to being annulled, leaving only the San Joaquin Daylight running between LA and Oakland.  Follow this link back to first part of Modeling the Owl (Part 1).

SP 4255 leading No.58 between Bakersfield and LA.

Southern Pacific in the Bay Area, by George H. Drury, page 89 shows the regular Owl (No.57) at Martinez, nearing the end of its run on April 22, 1950.  The shot shows the headend of the Owl, with an RPO right behind the engine, a 80-BH-1 horse baggage, and SP 6114 (60-B, ex-60-PS-1 4402).  The lower photo of the same day shows the middle of the Owl with one of the 72-C-1/2/3/4 class "Deluxe Chair" cars , but no number is visible.

Most of the consist info shown below is from the SP Trainline No.74 from Winter 2000, with some data extracted from the commentary in the article on the Owl by Sheldon King.  I want to thank Brian Black and James Salkeld for letting me use their fabulous photo collections taken by their family members during the 1950s.

Consist 1951


No.58, eastbound at Ravenna - James Salkeld Collection (used with permission)

The last consist I showed in Part 1, shows Feb 15, 1951, but to avoid making readers flip back and forth, I'll relist the consist here.

No.57 Feb 15, 1951
BG Oak-Bakersfield (returns on No.57)
BG Oak-LA (Storage Magazine - Tuesdays only)
BG Oak-LA (Ex-Sunday)
PS Oak-LA Postal-Storage
RPO Oak-LA (Working)
Chair (probably News Agent)
Chair
Chair
Chair
Diner
STD 12-1 (Replaced 16-Section Troop Car)
STD 12-1 (Replaced 16-Section Troop Car)
STD 6-2-Lounge (Mission-Series)
STD 6-6-4 (LW) or STD 8-5 "Clover" (Alternating Days, one of each assigned)
STD 14-SBR (Night Fern & Night Mantel assigned)
STD 10-1-1 (HW Car)
STD 12-1 ("Regular" 12-1 sleeper)

By November 1st the two 12-1 sleepers behind the dining car were moved to the rear of the train.  Also an additional partitioned coach was added on Mondays and Fridays.

Nov 1, 1951
BG Oak-Bakersfield (returns on No.57)
BG Oak-LA (Storage Magazine - Tuesdays only)
BG Oak-LA (Ex-Sunday)
PS Oak-LA Postal-Storage
RPO Oak-LA (Working)
Partitioned Coach (Mon & Fri)
Chair
Chair
Chair
Chair
Diner
STD 6-2-Lounge (Mission-Series)
STD 6-6-4 (LW) or STD 8-5 "Clover" (Alternating Days, one of each assigned)
STD 14-SBR (Night Fern & Night Mantel assigned)
STD 10-1-1 (HW Car)
STD 12-1
STD 12-1
STD 12-1

A 3D Printed model of the News Agent space, used on some of the SP's Chair Cars. - OwlMtModels 4052 shown.

I'm not clear if the leading Chair car remained as a News Agent car or if the assignment of the partitioned coach could have been a News Agent car.  Generally, I would think the NA car remained the leading Chair Car.

SP 4251 with No.58 at San Fernando - James Salkeld Collection (used with permission)

Steam continued to be the regular assignment over the Tehachapi Pass until 1952.  Before about 1950, the ACs received MT-class or GS-class helpers over the Tehachapi Pass between LA and Bakersfield.  After 1950, enough AC's were being displaced by diesels that they could afford to let them double head on the Owl.

In the San Joaquin Valley, the Owl was assigned Mt or GS class engines between Bakersfield and Oakland.  On occasion P-class engines can be seen working lighter sections of the Owl, when Pullman traffic overflowed what the Owl's normal consist could handle, or the schedule of the extra traffic didn't make it possible for the extra passengers and cars to be worked into regular trains.

Consist 1953


SP 3501, converted to Baggage-Dormitory service. To the left is T&NO 141 a recent transfer from the Sunbeam.

In 1953 the SP rebuilt the 14-Single Bedroom sleepers Night Fern and Night Mantle to be Baggage-Dorm cars SP 3500 and 3501, which were regularly assigned to the Owl consists.  These cars are not easily modeled from standard Pullman sleepers without a large amount of window changes.

Typical Consist for 1953
BG Oak-Bakersfield (returns on No.57)
BG Oak-LA (Storage Magazine - Tuesdays only)
BG Oak-LA (Ex-Sunday)
PS Oak-LA Postal-Storage
RPO Oak-LA (Working) - Usually 70-BP-30-1/2/3 or 69-BP-30-2/3 as seen above in some of the photos.
Bag-Dorm - (SP 3500 & 3501 assigned once rebuilding was complete)
Chair
Chair
Chair
Chair
Diner
STD 6-2-Lounge (Mission-Series)
STD 6-6-4 (LW) or STD 8-5 "Clover" (Alternating Days, one of each assigned)
STD 10-1-1 (HW Car)
STD 12-1
STD 12-1
STD 12-1

It should be noted also that during 1953 the ex-SSW American Flyer" Osgood-Bradley chair cars were assigned to the Owl, among other Pacific Lines trains, it wasn't uncommon to see at least one of the Chair cars on the Owl being one of these unique cars.

Consist 1954


Kitbashed model of SP 3503 starting from Rivarossi 12-1 sleeper

I've decided to model one of the next two cars the SP rebuilt in this way, which were the 1954 rebuilt Pecos and Sunburst Rose, which started as Pullman 12-1s, and also became Baggage-Dorms SP 3502 and SP 3503 receptively.  Follow this link to see how I chose to Model the SP 3503.  I chose the 3503 because I had an extra pair pf Walthers Pullman 242 trucks, and the SP 3503 retained those trucks when rebuilt.

No.57, April 9, 1954
BG-Express Fresno-Oakland (Ex-Mon) return on No.58 unless noted
60ft RPO Mail Apartment (SP 5044 & 5045, 77-BP-60 - ex-77-D-6 diners with new 60ft Apartments)
PS Mail Storage (Ex Sat & Sun)
BG-Express
Bag-Dorm (usually 3500 & 3501)
Chair (News Agent)
Chair (Fri, Sat, Sun)
Chair
Chair
Chair
Diner
Lounge (Full Lounge or Tavern car)
STD 6-2-Lounge (Mission Series)
STD 8-5 "Clover" series HW Sleeper (Now two cars assigned, LW 6-6-4 dropped)
STD 10-1-1 "Palouse Falls and "Prior Lake" regularly assigned
STD 12-1
STD 12-1

The changes to the 1954 Owl include the new 60ft RPOs (SP 5044 & 5045) rebuilt from 77-D-6 dining cars.  The balance of the space in the 77 foot body was assigned as baggage-express space.  These newly rebuilt cars had ply-metal doors, as did most of SP's rebuilds after 1953. (see the door style on the SP 3503 model above.  One of the three 80-BP-60 (SP 5217-5219) rebuilt Horse-Baggage turned RPOs protected the San Joaquin Daylight and the Owl.

Late in 1954, the SP began experimenting with "Hamburger Grill" cars, rebuilt from HW Diners.  The 10502 and 10503 were the first two regularly assigned to the Owl in January 1955, replacing the full dining cars.

Also late in 1954, the STD 10-1-1 HW sleepers were withdrawn from service on the Owl.

Consist 1956


In 1956, the steam assignments of GS-3s and GS-6s between Bakersfield and Oakland finally came to an end.  Often two-unit sets of F7s (A-B pairs) took over the assignment.

SP 6383 with two B-units leads No.51, the San Joaquin Daylight, in the Valley in the late 1950s. Brian Black Collection

In September 1956, the use of the remaining Heavyweight sleepers in the Owl's regular consist came to an end.  The Mission-series 6-2-Lounges were retired to MW service and LW 6-6-4 sleepers became the regular accommodations for all Pullman passengers.

The 6-6-4 sleepers replaced the old HW Dark Olive Green and TTG sleepers, here SP 9161 in 1953 Golden State colors.

Consist 1957


By the end of 1957, the Owl, No.58 was down to the following cars:

BG Bag-Express (Ex-Sun)  - Oak-Fresno (Return on No.57)
60ft Mail Apartment  - Oak-LA (SP 5044 & 5045 regularly assigned)
BG Bag-Express  - Oak-LA
BG Bag-Express  - Oak-LA
Chair  - Oak-LA
Chair  - Oak-LA
Chair  - Oak-LA
HW Hamburger-Grill  - Oak-LA
STD LW 6-6-4  - Oak-LA
STD LW 6-6-4  - Oak-LA

The end was coming for the Owl, even with the discontinuance of the (Tehcahapi) Mail Trains (Nos.55 & 56) in 1954/55, there wasn't a lot of mail and express traffic left for the Owl to handle.  1956 also saw the end of HW Pullman sleeper use on the Owl.

In Closing


The marker on a UP 6-6-4 brings up the rear of the Owl.

The end for the Owl was still several years away, during those years the food service would again see a step down to "Automat" service in March 1962, basically a rack of drink and snack vending machines and cold sandwiches to eat.  The "Economy" Baggage cars would start showing up in 1960-1962.  Towards the end, even UP 6-6-4 LW sleepers would be seen on the Owl as there were not enough SP 6-6-4s to cover all the assignments.

UP "American Captain", a 6-6-4, similar to the pair seen in a photo of the Owl near the end.

The last trip was made on April 13, 1965, with barely any notice by the public or the news media.  Fewer than 33 passengers road No.58 on the last trip.

Jason Hill

Related Links and Articles:

Modeling the Owl (Part 1) - Post WWII to Korea

Friday, January 6, 2017

SP 60-C-5s, (Part 2) T&NO 777 Coach

In the second part of this series, I'll be focusing on the T&NO 777, also a 60-C-5, the same as in 60-C-5 (Part 1), SP 1005.   Because this is basically showing an alternate car of the same class, I will only be touching on the points that differ in this build than on the SP 1005.

Prototype Car History


SP and T&NO owned 556 60-C-series coaches and chair cars, built between 1908 and 1924, these cars lived on until the last 4 were retired in 1968.  In this post we will look at a "modernized" 60-C-5 of the Texas & New Orleans subsidiary of the SP.

T&NO 777 with trucks installed.

SP's Texas & Louisiana subsidiary, the Texas & New Orleans handled all SP's connections east of El Paso on the "Sunset" route to New Orleans to comply with a Texas law that stated any railroad operating in Texas had to be based in Texas, got to love Texan politics!

As such the T&NO absorbed many other smaller railroads and consolidated then in 1931 under the T&NO reporting marks.  T&NO 777 was built specifically for the T&NO and remained on the T&NO until retirement.  Many T&NO coaches were transferred to the SP in 1924 and 1931 probably as the T&NO absorbed and then annulled passenger runs in various areas.  Also 1931 would have been about the time that the SP and T&NO took delievery of the 73-C-1 and 74-CC-1 coaches and chair cars.  The last batches of 60-C-series cars came over to the SP in the early 1950s with the annulment of many passenger trains on the T&NO.  The odd thing about T&NO 777 was photographed in Oakland in 1954, but wasn't one of the cars transferred officially to the SP during that time.

Modeling the T&NO 777


In many ways this build follows the same basic pattern as my build of SP 1005 (Part 1), in which I'd painted the body, decalled, and put the glass in the windows.  Leaving the changing of the roof vents to the standard "globe" type of the 60-C-5s for later.  I should point out the major difference in the starting point between this car and the one used on the SP 1005, is the T&NO 777 is a car that had the transom windows with stained glass windows plated over by 1950.

For comparison, SP 1005 with the as-built green transom windows.

On SP 1005 I used an underframe built by John Ruehle.  On the T&NO 777 I will be building my own simpler floor and underframe made from scratch in styrene.

Underframe Construction


The basic underframe is pretty simple for the T&NO 777, as with all the underframes that I build for the Soho cars that I work on.  I follow the general idea that detailing of parts of the car that will either never be seen or interfere with the operations of the car will be eliminated or modified in a way to allow unrestricted operations.

The under bodies of SP 1804, TNO 777, & SP 2178.

The new floor is made from a piece of 0.030" sheet styrene which is cut to 7.922" long and 1.120" wide.  A center sill beam is made from a piece of 0.250" x 0.125" styrene bar stock, which is cut to 8.035" long.  The center sill has to be cut to fit between the coupler box pads.  The floor sheet is mounted with up to six small screws.  I match drill these to the bodies so that the floor will be fixed to the body for the next step.

I usually mark center marks on the underframe or coupler box pads and the center line of the center sill.  Once the center sill is lined up, I use Tamiya liquid styrene cement to weld the two parts of the new floor together.

The new underframe with scribed center marks for the truck bolster.

The bolster holes, for the trucks, are drilled in the center sill on the centerline of the car.  I measure 1/2 the distance between the inside edges of the bodies side sheets.  I came up with a measurement of 0.668" which I set on my calipers and used the inside points of the calipers to scribe a centerline on the center sill.  If these scribe marks don't match, mark the center point with the scribe between the existing lines.

I always measure the truck centers in from the endsills to be sure there's enough room around the ends of the car and the steps.  The Soho models are slightly too short, so it's a good practice to use.  Drill the center marks on the center sill with a No.50 drill.

Truck Modifications


The Walthers 8ft Pullman 4-wheel trucks need some modifications as well.  I chose to use 0.030" sheet styrene pads on the top of the truck bolster and cut out two 0.333" wide, 0.360" long square.

A pair of Walthers 920-2124 trucks with the 0.030" sheet styrene marked for cutting.

The truck bolster shims are ACC (superglued) to the top of the Walthers truck bolster.  I hold off on marking and drilling out the new bolster holes on the trucks until the new shims are dried and secured in place.

Modified truck bolsters.

I use the carbine scribe to press a center mark into the bottom of the truck bolster ship, in the center of the original bolster hole.  I then drill out the center marks with a 2-56 clearance drill (No.46).

Making the Body Bolsters


I prefer to build up a body bolster as it is certainly easier to add material than to bolster than to remove it.  So I do this by adding a reasonable height of shim styrene. I cut two pieces from 0.060" styrene sheet, which actually only measure 0.055" thick.  These body bolster plates are 0.250" wide x 0.350" long.  I again mark a center point and drill with my 2-56 clearance drill (No.46).  If you feel that you will not have enough thread in the center sills to hold the trucks alone, you can make this hole with a No.50 drill and then plan to tap it.

Here's the body bolster plates after they are cut out.

With the holes drilled in the bolster plate, I align the bolster plates to the bolster center holes in the center sills.  Again Tamyia liquid glue is used to weld the plates to the center sills.

Bolster plates instaled to raise body to correct level for couplers.

At this point I noticed that I'd not tapped the holes in the bolsters yet.  Be sure to make these holes square to the body.

Tapping the holes in the bolsters.

I picked out two 0.015" (Red) Kadee shims and placed them on the bolster plates.  If these are not thick enough, I will get a better idea after the car has the couplers mounted how much more I need to raise the body by.

Underframe and all parts to put the car on its trucks.

I prefer to keep the shims as the actual bearing surface between the trucks and the body of the car, so if I have to add more shims, they will take the form of sheet styrene, as the original bolster plates.

Here's the car as it looks with the trucks installed.

I mounted the trucks with 3/8" 2-56 screws.  I'm tending to use Phillips head screws now, which are a bit quicker and easier to keep the screw driver from slipping off of.

Right side of T&NO 777

Left side of T&NO 777, the body took some scratches, and I covered those with rust, the prototype photo I 

The prototype car photo I am working from showed some damage and weathering to the car's finish.  This was advantageous because the decals didn't go on perfectly and there was some damage to the finish under the decals.

Hand Tools


I'll take a moment to show a photo of some of my hand tools that I regularly use.
The various hand tools that I use in most of my builds.  Calibers, top, various drills, 2-56 tap, No.11 blade, scribe, etc.

Left to right;
Digital Calipers (12")
NMRA Standards Gauge (Mark IVb)
Pinvice with No.46 2-56 Tap Clearance Drill
Pinvice with No.50 2-56 Tap Drill
Pinvice with 2-56 Tap
Standard Screwdriver (red) - from driver set -
Phillips Screwdriver (yellow)
Mechanical Pencil - 0.25mm leads & extra eraser
No.11 Xacto Blade & Handle
Carbide Scribe (also used for center marks)
Self-closing Tweezer
Needle File (again from a set which has many shapes)

Interior Layout


The interior on this car is different, as T&NO 777 remained a 72-seat coach, while the SP 1005 after 1943 was fitted as a 60-seat chair car.  I used second hand Walthers bench seats from my various 73-C-1 coach upgrading projects - Another story for another time! -

Walthers coach seats glued to strips of styrene.

I'll be showing the installation of the interior seats in the next part of this series after the interior lighting is installed.  I also plan to cover the detailing of the underbody as well.

Jason Hill

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Modeling Mail Trains 55 & 56, the Tehachapi Mail

Another Easy-to-Model "Pike Size" Train Consist
Trains No.55 & No.56, The "Tehachapi" Mail train

An MT-3, 4341, leads a short Tehachapi Mail based on the photo on pg.78 in Southern Pacific in the Bay Area, by Drury.

Originally called the Tehachapi, Nos. 55 and 56 dropped to a no name "Passenger" in the time table after WW2.  I will be continuing to call it the Tehachapi in this post to avoid confusion with other generic SP "Mail" trains.

The Tehachapi Mail train was the main US Mail and Railway Express Agency connection between Oakland and Los Angeles.  The Owl (Nos.57 & 58) and the San Joaquin Daylight (Nos.51 & 52) would carry some faster mail & express but was very limited in capacity and train length, while the Tehachapi Mail could adjust its length and consist to suit the day's needs.  Sundays tended to be lighter with the weekend originating mail and express dropping off on Saturday and Sunday and picking back up Monday night.

The Coast Mail's nickname of "Sad Sam" is indicative of how fast it worked on the Coast Route.  The Tehachapi, Nos.55 & 56, would take over 20 hours to get from Oakland to Los Angeles or vice versa.  These were certainly not the fastest trains over the rails, often hot perishable and express perishable traffic would be routed on faster schedules if possible, but not always.  The article 'Where'd You Get that Dirty Hat' by Strong in SP Trainline Issue 68, pg 23, has a great story of riding No.55's coach from Saugus to Allard the night of the '52 earthquake.

Remember also that these trains also handled the checked baggage of passengers from the premier trains on the same routes.  Passengers would check their baggage the night before they would leave on the San Joaquin Daylight.  The same thing for the Coast Daylights (Nos. 98/99) and the Coast Mail Nos.71/72).  If everything was on time, the mail trains would arrive a few hours before the premier trains so the baggage would be waiting for the passengers just as they're getting off.  Often this checked baggage would be in trunks with all the various labels and stamps of where it had been,  Too bad that whole style of travel is gone now.

My previous links to modeling particular train consists:
Modeling the Shasta
Modeling the Owl (Part 1)
SP HW Psgr Car Index

Engine Assignments

SP's MT-class 4-8-2, 4351, shown as an example of the usual "Valley" engine assigned to the Mail.

The Tehachapi was usually pulled by an MT-class (4-8-2) engine or a larger P-Class (4-6-2) between Bakersfield and Oakland.

No.56 led by SP 4110 brings a pre-1939 Tehacahpi Mail into the old Central Station. Photo from Eddie Sims Collection

Over Tehachapi Pass it would be assigned an AC-6/12 class road engine and whatever was needed as a helper. Sometimes even another AC-class helper when the train was very heavy from holiday traffic.

In the last year of operation, the Tehachapi Mail used MK-class engines like 3259 over Tehachapi Pass.

Later in 1955 just before the Tehachapi was cut-off and annulled from the time table, regular engine over Tehachapi Pass for the last year or so of operations was an MK-class (2-8-2), as the train was down to only 4-5 cars.  The Owl and San Joaquin Daylight took over most of the traffic from what was left of the Tehachapi.

Consist Order, Circa 1952



An example of a UP car that could have been used as the Seattle or Portland car. Stand-in model by MDC/Athearn RTR.

No.55 (Los Angeles to Oakland)
1 Bag/Express LA-Bakersfield - S/O with Storage Mail for Bakersfield (usually a 70ft car)
2 Bag/Express LA-Oakland
3 Bag/Express LA-Sacramento
4 Bag/Express LA-Mojave - S/O & P/U Storage Mail & Express daily except Sunday. (No S/O Sunday AM or P/U Sunday PM.
5 Bag/Express LA-Portland (Return on No.60)
6 Bag/Express LA-Seattle (Return on No.60)
7 Bag/Express LA-Oakland
8 Bag/Express LA-Oakland
9 Baggage (Working TBM) LA-Oakland - This would be a "star baggage" if available for the Train Baggage Man.
10 RPO 30ft Apt/Baggage LA-Oakland (SP 5215 or SP 5216 regularly assigned) Ex-Sunday
11 Rider Coach LA-Oakland (Through Car)
12 Local Passenger Coach Fresno-Oakland

No.56 (Oakland to Los Angeles)
1 Bag/Mail Oakland-LA
2 Bag/Mail Oakland-LA
3 Bag/Express Sacramento-LA
4 Bag/Express Fresno-LA
5 Bag/Express Oakland-LA
6 Baggage (Working TBM) Oakland-LA
7 RPO 30ft Apt/Baggage Oakland-LA (SP 5215 or SP 5216 regularly assigned) Ex-Sunday
8 Bag/Express Bakersfield-LA - P/U at Bakersfield (Car added here because of ease of switching)
9 Rider Coach Oakland-LA (Through Car)
10 Local Passenger Coach Oakland-Fresno

The No.55 consist includes two or three cars from Portland and Seattle, via the Klamath to Oakland. The Seattle car would be from a pool of UP, NP, and GN baggage and express boxcars.  The Portland car would be from a UP, NP, and SP pool.  These cars returned north on SP's No.60, West Coast, connecting to the Passenger Local (No.201) that connected at Gerber with the Klamath for movement north.  These cars add a great amount of color to both the Tehachapi and the West Coast consists!

I will quickly add that the above are the basic consists.  These consists could swell during heavier traffic times due to holidays or express perishable movements. Consists length also dropped by large amounts, usually on Sundays, as the US Post Office didn't work on Sundays and many shippers wouldn't be shipping REA goods on Saturday or Sunday.

These off-days would propagate across the passenger, mail, and express systems across the country, resulting in some trains not having this car on a Wednesday - why is it not here on a Wednesday?  Well, because when the car would have originated half way across the country it was a Sunday and that car doesn't depart on a Sunday.

It is interesting to note that the RPO/Baggage cars were not run on Sundays.  Also on Sunday several of the connecting, express forwarding, or P/U & S/O carloads would not be entrained either.  The resulting consists were down to

Cars in the Consists


Headend Cars - Perishable Express Reefers

Stand-in Walthers 50ft Express reefer, repainted CNW Green (REA Hunter Green) and decalled in the early 1950s scheme

Often SP's Mail trains also would handle express perishables in express reefers.  These would not always be PFE cars, although a good number of the originating loads on the SP would use PFE's fleet of Express Reefers.  Often Transcontinental Mail trains would handle foreign line reefers coming west or returning east.  Nationally the pool of Express Reefers was always rather tight, so if there was a load near by local REA Agents would try to get whatever express reefer cars they could get on site by the required date to make the shipments happen.

Walthers 50ft General American express reefer painted for PFE.  By the late-1940s these cars had roof platforms I've not installed yet.

Very nice models by BLI, Walthers, and Athearn are on the market for the Railway Express Agency's basic 50ft round roof express reefer by General American.  Walthers and Branchline (Atlas) has made some of the REA's 50ft all-steel express reefers.  Walthers has also made the Pennsy's unique R50b express reefers, so you can add some variety to your express reefer fleet.

Walthers PRR R50b #2561 rather weathered and chalk marked from travels around the country.

Do try to pay attention, some of the models produced are lettered "Freight Service Only".  This means the car is NOT equipped with steam and signal lines for passenger service, therefore is not suitable for operations in a mail train such as the Tehachapi Mail and would have to be handled on a train more like the SP's Overnight or other high-speed scheduled freight train.

Headend Cars - 40ft Baggages & Express

One of the Express Boxcars I did a long time ago from an Accurail AAR boxcar with modified Athearn "express" trucks.
The SP rostered a number of these B-50-24 class express boxcars.  Tony Thompson has done an excellent job discussing these on his blog here on Tony's Modeling SP Passenger Trains: Part 4 Express Boxcars.

This older model that I did is still painted in Floquil Pullman Green and MicroScale decals (SP Overnight & Express Service cars, which for this car is correct.  The Accurail car is at best a stand-in for a proper B-50-24 in resin or maybe RedCaboose's model.  At the time I was a poor high school student or freshman in college, so had to go with what I could have on hand or for $10.  I don't actually plan to retire this model anytime soon, as from the side view in a passenger consist it looks pretty good.

The truck modifications were made by cutting off the outside brake hangers from the older Athearn Express Trucks that came from the older (pre-R-T-R) 50ft wooden (round roof) Express Reefer kits.

Headend Cars - 60ft Baggages & Express

60-B-1 thru -8
SP 6190 before my 2016 upgrade and renumbering program for it.
Both these 60ft Baggages are MDC cars (Now Athearn R-T-R) with varying levels of kitbashing done to them.  I discuss this in my MDC 60ft Harriman Baggages (Part1) blog post.

60-B-9 & -10
MDC Kitbashed 60-B-10, SP 6233, after my 2016 shopping when I repainted and decaled it.

It's worth pointing out here that the vast majority better than 60% of SP's headend fleet was 60-B-1 through -8 series cars.

A few 60-B-series cars were modified during the 1930s or rebuilt from RPOs with 6-wheel trucks for storage mail service.  This loading was VERY heavy compared to standard REA or Company Baggage loading with mail stacked to the roofs of the cars.

Headend Cars - 70ft Baggages & Express

70-B-1 thru -9 series Baggage Cars & 70-BA-4 & 70-BA-5 Auto-Baggages
Soho model of SP 6444, a 70-B-9.  This model's not finished at this point.
SP also ordered about 150 70ft baggage cars and baggage-automobile cars built.  Many of SP's 70ft baggages were upgraded in the early 1950s with stars above the number indicating improved Train Baggage Man facilities on the car.  Usually an effort was made when making up the train to assign the 'working' baggage on a train one of these improved cars.

The while I've kitbashed a model of these cars from parts left over after building the SP 6190, a better model for these is the Soho brass car.  Golden Gate Models is also planning to import some of these cars in 2017 in plastic.  I talk about their models on my blog post HERE.

I plan to do a quick build blog on these Soho brass models soon.

70-BH-series and 80-BH-1 
An in-progress photo of SP 7220, a 70-BH-1 Horse-Baggage from MDC parts.

Horse Baggage cars were few in number, only about 37 cars built in four classes.  These cars are easily recognized by the three doors on each side.

I'm currently working on two kitbashed MDC models for 70-BH-1s.  At some point I will discuss these in a build blog specifically about Horse Baggages.

Ex-70-BP-30-4 Retired RPO-Baggage
SP 6102 is a heavily kitbashed 70-BP-30-4 built from MDC Baggage and RPO parts

The SP over time retired some of their RPO cars.  When retired the SP would paint out the US Mail Railway Post Office lettering.  Some cars also were rebuilt or had baggage doors cut in the RPO section.  SP 6102 is one such car that was retired, but at the time of the photo that I'm modeling it from it did not have any other work done to it.  The RPO fittings inside and outside (catcher arms) were removed.

The model started life as the double baggage doors from a 60-B-9/10 and rearranging the RPO windows from a 60ft MDC RPO.  The extra windows at the baggage end were scratch built from clear styrene and sheet styrene forming the sashes.  I cover more on my blog about the SP 6102 Kitbashing an RPO from MDC/Athearn Parts.

Mechanically the car is the same as the other discussed on this page MDC 60ft Harriman Baggages (Part1) and the trucks are installed the same as the SP 5199, SC&F 69-BP-30-3 RPO (Part 1).

Paint is StarBrand SP Dark Olive Green and the lettering is ThinFilm's SP set 87-160.  Chalk marks are added with a carbide scribe and Prisma pencils.

70-B (ex-EPSW) Baggage (11-cars)
Ex-EPSW 70ft Baggage, SP 6515

This is one of the 11 ex-EPSW 70ft Baggage cars that the SP acquired in 1924.  Renumbered into the 6500-series they continued to serve around the SP system (6510-6520).  I've seen photos of 70ft clerestory baggage cars in the Tehachapi Mail, Starlight, and Shasta.  Several received improved TBM facilities and stars over the reporting marks.

The model started life as a clerestory Walthers ACF 70ft Baggage.  Amazingly the car is basically correct except for some slightly different vertical rivet strips on the car side.  I'm not going to worry too much about that.  The door size, placement and details are correct.

Mechanically I did my usual tweaks to the trucks, body mounted the couplers, and added a 0.080" weight down the center sill to help the tracking slightly when run with other heavy brass cars or at the headend of a long 16-18 car passenger train.

Finish is painted with StarBrand SP Dark Olive Green and MicroScale decals in the pre-1946 scheme.  The car is more heavily weathered, per a photo of the SP 6515 at Oakland in 1951-1952 still in the old lettering.

Note cars of this series receiving post-June 1946 lettering "SOUTHERN PACIFIC" on the letterboard also had their doors shortened and a full length letterboards installed. - Therefore, the Walthers model is most correct for pre-1946 lettering.

RPO/Baggage with 30ft Mail Apartment

SP 5215 & 5216 - Rivarossi HW 1920s RPO-Baggage
SP 5216, ex-EPSW 555, a 66ft RPO-Baggage.
The SP 5215 and 5216 were the RPOs regularly assigned in the early-1950s, both were ex-EPSW 66ft RPOs with a 30ft Mail Apartment.  These cars stayed with the Tehachapi until they were converted to baggage-express cars in 1954.

This model started as a Rivarossi HW "1920" RPO-Baggage.  While usually not associated with SP, these EPSW clerestory-roofed cars with deep centersills were none the less prototypical for SP after the EPSW was absorbed into the SP system in 1924.  These two cars were the only all-steel RPOs the EPSW owned and it is interesting that they both came west and were assigned to the same train.

The prototypes had 8-window baggage doors.  I've not done that upgrade to this model yet.  Also planned will be upgrades to the interiors and window bars, etc.  So far the car has been mechanically up graded with Walthers trucks and my standard basic plastic bolster design (like on the SP 5199 build).  The weight of the car has been increased with just a lead centersill weight.

This is by far one of the easiest very close to prototype RPOs that someone could model.  Most of this car modeling was repainting it with StarBrand SP Dark Olive Green paint and this car actually needed the MicroScale SP Passenger Car decals.  The SP 5126 had the a shorter set of letterboard lettering than the SP 5215 because the 5216 had a slightly higher baggage door that extends about 1/3 of the way up into the letterboard.

69-BP-30-3 or 70-BP-30 - Protection RPOs
If the SP 5215 or SP 5216 was unavailable, a 69-BP-30 or 70-BP-30 would be pulled from the pool to protect the assignment out of LA or Oakland for the Tehachapi Mail.  I've not seen any photos of these two EPSW cars running on other assignments, so it seems they did stay on the 55/56 train.

An example of a protection RPO for the Tehachapi Mail (Nos.55/56) a 69-BP-30-3 from SC&F resin kit.

If you want to be more generic then with your Mail train or flexible with your cars to model different trains, I would select one of these two alternate classes which were by far the most common "main line" RPOs used by the SP after WW2 until the mid-1950s on the Mail trains on various routes.  The Overland and Klamath as I understand it used 60ft apartment cars, so keep that in mind as well.

Rider Coach


The SP's Mail trains generally used a single rider coach on the rear of the train for whatever poor soul had a company pass or otherwise didn't care how long it took to get from point A to point Z.  These cars were nothing fancy (think basic Grayhound bus!) no food, no additional frills.  The Conductor and Rear Brakeman rode in the coach.  The Mail trains in general became basically the last mainline "Accomodation" train.  The article 'Where'd You Get that Dirty Hat' by Strong in SP Trainline Issue 68, pg 23, has a great story of riding No.55's coach from Saugus to Allard the night of the '52 earthquake.

Below are several options to model various SP coach classes:

60-CC-Series Non-A/C Coach (a.k.a "old" Chair car).
Non-A/C 60-CC-series Chair cars like SP 2701 could have been assigned to 55/56 as the through coach.

The SP had 32 old chair cars in class 60-CC-1 that never received A/C.  Several of them with smoking rooms were converted to All Day Lunches and then later to News Agent Chairs, but were never equipped with A/C.  One was refitted for Commute Service and several more were converted to MW or sold to the SPdeM in 1928.  The Model Power 67ft coach works nicely as a stand-in for these cars.  I discuss this more in my build of SP 2701 (Part 1 and Part 2) is an example of one such car that never received A/C and was never officially down-graded to a coach, however these cars were quite obsolete as Chair Cars after about 1940.  All the SP's 'nice' chair cars were upgraded with A/C and often upgraded to "Deluxe" status between 1937 and 1941.

These old Chair Cars therefore were left to soldier on acting as coaches and bounce around on assignments away from San Fransisco's Commute Pool where the SP wanted highest density seating possible in those cars.

60-C-Series Non-A/C Coach
SP 1190, a 60-C-3/4, model is a modified Ken Kidder coach.  This model is still painted in pre-1946 and is pretty crusty.

SP's large fleet of coaches were very commonly used as rider cars and local coaches on the SP's mail trains.  This pool was made up from the 556 coaches built for the SP between 1909 and 1925.  The 60-C-3 & -4s, shown above, and the later 60-C-5,-6,-7,-8-,9, & -10s, shown below were the two main styles of 60ft coach to be found.

More common would be rider coaches such as SP 2178, a 60-C-9, such as this Soho Model.

Some SP Mail trains had a second coach for part of the trip.  This was true on SP Nos. 55 & 56 to service the US military installations along the eastern parts of San Fransisco Bay.  On No.56 the extra coach was dropped at Fresno as most of the passenger traffic was off the train by then.  The same car would probably have been picked up by No.55 later in the day for the return trip to Oakland.

The Coast Mail (Nos.71/72) often carried a second coach as well for the coastal military bases.

Modeling Operations - Set Out & Pick-Up Cars

SP 6102, ex-SP 5138, a 70-BP-30-4 rests at Bakersfield after being set out of No.55 or No. 58 last night.
Full carloads of Mail were dropped at intermediate points along the routes of many Mail trains.  Bakersfield received two regular carloads a day, except Sundays, and sent out two cars a day, one to LA and one to Oakland.

To model this on the La Mesa Model Railroad Club layout we use four cars in this cycle.  We have assigned certain cars to this cycle, which makes it easier to pick out which cars are the "working" cars when the train is in the station.

SP 6233, an SP 60-B-10, shown as an example of cars usually used for P/U and S/O cars at intermediate stations.

The Tehachapi had an hour scheduled to work at Mojave alone loading and unloading mail at the station.  Mojave's Mail Set Out baggage car was rather interesting, as it was only done in one direction.  No.55 would drop (set out) one baggage at Mojave 6 nights a week.  It would also pick up one baggage car 6 nights a week.

The regular Mojave switch engine, SP 1310, couples to a T&NO baggage at the freight house for No.55 to pick up.

On the model this means we need to have three cars in this cycle; one at Mojave for P/U, one to Mojave for S/O, and one car returning on No.56 to start the cycle the next day.  Many photos show lonely 60ft 60-B-1 thru -10 cars sitting at various stations worked by the mail trains.  The 60ft 60-B-9/10 by MDC or 60-B-1-thru-8s by SC&F are good for these set out cars.

Ex-EPSW 70ft baggage, SP 6515 rests at Bakersfield waiting to be picked up by No.56 or No. 57 later in the eveing.

Bakersfield is also a hotbed of perishable traffic originating, often No.56 will fill with a few extra carloads of express reefers or perhaps holiday baggage cars or express boxcars loaded with the mail rush from Thanksgiving to Christmas each year.

There's always room to adjust your operations to fit what cars you have or what extra cars you want to use to keep things 'interesting'.  Also, don't forget that during peak seasons second sections of regular passenger trains would be put on to move the extra Holiday Mail & Express or perishable blocks of express reefers when the regular "slow" mail trains weren't fast enough.

A Modeled Example Consist

In the past I've tried to include an actual consist that was recorded of the train I am discussing, however I don't have an historical consist.  Follow the links on the car numbers to my modeling blogs on building that model.

This is the consist photographed at top and below:
SP 4341, Mt-3 class 4-8-2 (Sunset Models - Brass)
SP 6233, 60-B-10 (MDC 60ft baggage, light kitbashed)
SP 6515, ex-EPSW (Walthers 70ft ACF baggage) - see modeling info above
SP 6189, 60-B-2 (MDC 60ft baggage, heavy kitbashed)
SP 5216, 66ft RPO/Baggage (Rivarossi 1920s RPO/Baggage) - see modeling info above
SP 1005, 60-C-5 non-A/C'd "Chair" Car, used as coach (Soho brass) "Through" Rider-Coach
SP 2701, 60-CC-1 non-A/C'd "Chair" Car, used as coach (Model Power) "Local" Coach

The Tehachapi would have normally used two normal coaches, not old "chair" cars, so this would have been unusual.  Unfortunately, I didn't have any of my coaches done in time for this photographing opportunity.  If one old 60-seat "Chair" car was used in the consist it would most likely have been the through car and the "local" car would have been a standard 72-seat configuration coach car.

Markers into the Night


"Chair" SP 2701 (60-CC-1) and old "Chair" SP 1005 (60-C-5) bring up the rear of this Tehachapi Mail consist.

I hope you have enjoyed reading about SP's Tehachapi Mail train and getting some ideas about how to model your own mail and local service SP passenger train operation.

My previous links to Modeling particular train consists: Modeling the Shasta blog, Modeling the Owl (Part 1), SP HW Psgr Car Index.

Jason Hill