Model Train Database/Standard flatcar/SXT41750 TTX Finger Rack Flat Car
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SXT41750 TTX Finger Rack Flat Car

SKU SXT41750

In ProductionNo active listings

Photo: Photo by Unknown photographer, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain · Wikimedia Commons

Technical Specifics

Scale

HO

SKU

SXT41750

Prototype Type

Standard flatcar

Road Name

TTX Company

The standard flatcar represents one of the oldest and most enduring forms of railroad freight equipment in North America. In its most basic form, the flatcar predates even the boxcar, as early railroads simply needed a wheeled platform capable of moving heavy or oversized goods from one place to another. Through the nineteenth century, flatcars evolved from simple wooden-framed platforms into increasingly robust steel-underframe designs capable of handling the growing demands of industrial commerce. By the early twentieth century, the Association of American Railroads had begun formalizing standards for flatcar construction, leading to the FM designation for general-purpose standard flatcars with capacities typically ranging from 70 to 100 tons and lengths spanning roughly 40 to 89 feet. Throughout the mid-twentieth century, standard flatcars became indispensable workhorses for hauling commodities that could not be practically loaded into enclosed equipment. Lumber from Pacific Northwest mills, steel plate and structural shapes from Midwest foundries, large-diameter pipe destined for the petroleum industry, and heavy machinery of every description all moved regularly on flatcar decks. Military logistics operations during World War II and subsequent decades made heavy use of flatcar capacity, as tanks, artillery pieces, and other oversized equipment could be driven or craned directly onto the open decks. This versatility made the flatcar a staple of virtually every Class I and regional railroad's equipment roster. By the latter decades of the twentieth century, prominent builders including Thrall Car Manufacturing and Gunderson became major suppliers of new flatcar construction, while TTX Company, the pooling organization jointly owned by major North American railroads, managed large fleets of flatcars available for interchange service across the continent. The growth of intermodal traffic eventually drew some standard flatcar capacity toward container and trailer service, and certain specialized variants evolved into distinct car types in their own right. Nevertheless, the plain flatcar retained its role for loads too irregular, too heavy, or too awkward for any other type of freight equipment.

Model Train Manufacturers

Brands that produce Standard flatcar in HO scale

Prototype Reference

Real-world information about this equipment type

Standard flatcar

freight car · FM

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Also known as

sxt41750