60' Gunderson 7538 Single Door Box Car
Photo: Photo by NearEMPTiness, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 · Wikimedia Commons
Technical Specifics
Scale
HO
Prototype Type
Standard boxcar (non-insulated)Source Category
Freight Car — Box Car
Needs Prototype Review
true
History
Full prototype page →The standard non-insulated boxcar, designated XM under the Association of American Railroads classification system, represents one of the most fundamental and enduring freight car types in North American railroad history. The boxcar in its most basic form dates to the earliest decades of American railroading, but the design was substantially codified in the years following World War One, when the AAR and its predecessor organizations worked to establish common dimensional and structural standards that would allow cars to move freely between railroads without restriction. These efforts produced a family of interchangeable designs that could be built efficiently by multiple manufacturers and maintained at any railroad's shops. The postwar economic expansion of the 1940s and 1950s drove enormous demand for boxcar capacity, and manufacturers such as Pullman-Standard, American Car and Foundry, and Pacific Car and Foundry responded with successive generations of XM-type cars in 40-foot and 50-foot lengths. The 40-foot, 50-ton car that had dominated prewar rosters gradually gave way to 50-foot cars with 70-ton and later 100-ton capacities as shippers demanded larger volumes and railroads sought to improve the economics of each car movement. By the 1960s the 50-foot car had become the dominant configuration, and builders were producing them by the tens of thousands annually for railroads across the continent. The XM boxcar served as the workhouse of general merchandise freight movement throughout the mid-twentieth century, carrying commodities as varied as canned goods, paper products, household appliances, and automobile parts. Its enclosed design protected lading from weather while accommodating the wide variety of goods that shippers required moved in covered equipment. Although the intermodal revolution of the late twentieth century steadily eroded the boxcar's market share in many commodity categories, the XM type remained in service on numerous railroads well into the modern era, and specialized successors continue to handle commodities that require enclosed, weather-protected transportation.
Model Train Manufacturers
Brands that produce Standard boxcar (non-insulated) in HO scale
Available as HO Models
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Real-world information about this equipment type
Standard boxcar (non-insulated)
freight car · XM