BowserBowser

Spine Car

In ProductionAvailable at 1 source

Photo: Photo by GT1976, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 · Wikimedia Commons

Pricing

Market Low

$34.99

Market Avg

$34.99

Market High

$34.99

Technical Specifics

Scale

HO

Source Category

Freight Car — Intermodal

Needs Prototype Review

true

The spine car emerged as a direct response to the explosive growth of intermodal freight traffic in North America during the 1970s and 1980s. As railroads sought more efficient ways to handle ISO shipping containers, equipment designers recognized that a conventional flatcar carried far more structural material than was actually necessary to support containerized loads. The spine car concept stripped the design down to its essential components, retaining only the center sill, side sills, and lateral support arms needed to cradle containers, eliminating the heavy decking and much of the superstructure found on traditional container flatcars. This reduction in tare weight allowed railroads to move more payload per train while staying within track and bridge weight limits. TTX Company, the car pooling cooperative owned jointly by major North American railroads, became one of the primary forces behind the proliferation of spine cars, acquiring large fleets and making them available across member railroads. Builders including Gunderson and Trinity Industries produced substantial numbers of these cars from the 1980s onward to meet sustained demand from carriers like Union Pacific, BNSF, and other major intermodal operators. The spine car proved especially well suited to the deregulated railroad environment following the Staggers Rail Act of 1980, which encouraged railroads to compete aggressively for truck traffic by offering faster, more economical intermodal service. The spine car fleet became a fixture of transcontinental intermodal corridors, handling everything from consumer goods to industrial components moving between ports and inland distribution centers. While well cars capable of double-stacking containers ultimately captured much of the premium intermodal business, spine cars continued to serve in single-stack applications, particularly on routes with clearance restrictions that precluded double-stack operations. Their relatively simple construction and low maintenance requirements gave them a long service life, and examples built in the 1980s and 1990s remained in active revenue service well into the twenty-first century.

Prototype Reference

Real-world information about this equipment type

Spine car / container car

freight car · S

View prototype →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the price range for Spine Car?

The Spine Car is currently priced between $34.99 and $34.99, with an average price of $34.99.

Who manufactures the Spine Car?

The Spine Car is manufactured by Bowser.

Where can I buy the Spine Car?

There are currently 1 active listing for the Spine Car across 1 source on TrainDex.