N 40'quad Hopper Car Bachman Silver Series C&O
Technical Specifics
Scale
HO
Prototype Type
Quad hopper (4-bay)History
Full prototype page →The four-bay open hopper, designated under the AAR classification code HA, represents one of the most significant freight car designs in North American railroad history. The development of the quad hopper was driven by the demands of bulk commodity shippers, particularly coal producers and utilities, who required cars capable of moving increasingly large payloads in a single shipment as the twentieth century progressed. Railroads serving the Appalachian coalfields and the western Wyoming coal basin were among the earliest and most enthusiastic adopters of larger hopper designs, as the economics of unit train operations made higher individual car capacity directly translatable into reduced operating costs per ton hauled. The four-bay configuration emerged as a practical response to the limitations of earlier two-bay and three-bay hoppers, which could not accommodate the volume of material that modern high-capacity loading facilities were capable of delivering. By extending the car body to incorporate four discharge bays, builders were able to achieve gross weights in the range of 100 to 120 tons while keeping the car within dimensional clearances acceptable on most major rail corridors. The growth of unit coal trains serving electric power generating stations from the 1960s onward created sustained demand for these cars, and fleets numbering in the thousands were assembled by major coal-hauling railroads including Norfolk and Western, CSX Transportation, and Burlington Northern. In more recent decades, manufacturers such as Trinity Industries and FreightCar America have continued to produce quad hoppers for coal and other bulk commodity service, though changing energy markets beginning in the 2010s led to a general decline in new coal car orders. Despite this shift, large numbers of HA-coded hoppers remain in service or storage across the North American rail network, and the design continues to be used for commodities such as taconite pellets and construction aggregates where high-volume, gravity-unloading capability remains essential.
Prototype Reference
Real-world information about this equipment type
Quad hopper (4-bay)
freight car · HA