Tangent - HO Scale - General American 8,000 Gallon 1917 Design Radial Course Tank Car - Union Tank Car Company (UTLX) #78224 - Black Repaint 1958+ cheme w/Yellow Lettering (SKU 20009-19014-09)
Available On: June 1, 2020
By the end of World War I, U.S. production of oil and oil-related products was sharply increasing thanks to the combination of war-related demands as well as demands from home. In order to move oil and new consumer products, tank car producers introduced new car designs. In 1917 General American Tank Car introduced a new general service 8,000 gallon non-insulated tank car.
Built in East Chicago, IN, these cars were easily identifiable by their circumferential rivets that surrounded the tank body, with notably different heights between the courses. These “radial course” tank cars utilized steel bolster plates that rise up vertically to hold the tank in place, complete with a “web” section behind to minimize steel consumption at a time when steel was a scarce commodity.
These cars were used for commodities beyond oil and other fuels. For example, Globe Soap of Cincinnati, Ohio purchased the cars. While in today’s world it is hard to imagine soap products as a tank car commodity traveling by rail, remember that the combination of manufacturing and packaging practices, as well as pre-truck era, both contributed to tank cars being used for more than just oil-related commodities at that time in history. General American was proud to help design custom tank cars for their many customers, including Globe Soap.
The GATC 1917-design prototypes were the most prolific tank cars built during this period and were found everywhere from 1917 to roughly 1970.
UTLX “Black Repaint 1958+” This scheme is the prototype repaint that was applied to UTLX cars in 1958. The car also includes an era-appropriate AB brake system.
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