Discontinued
Brand Logo
5 out of 5 Customer Rating

N H32 Covered Hopper, PRR (2-pack B)

Item No. BLI7251
Discontinued
Brand Logo
5 out of 5 Customer Rating

N H32 Covered Hopper, PRR (2-pack B)

Item No. BLI7251
This Item is No Longer Available
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Product Details

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In The Box
  • (1) N H32 Covered Hopper, PRR (2-pack B)

Features

  • Plastic (ABS) body with ABS chassis
  • Metal wheels and axles milled for Ultra-Smooth Friction-Free movement
  • Separate Applied Details including roof walkway, roof grab irons, and brake wheel
  • Detailed Underbody
  • Operating Knuckle Couplers
  • Prototypically Accurate Paint Schemes and Lettering
  • Operates on Code 55, 70, and 80 rail
  • Minimum Operating Radius: 9 inches.

Overview

In 1948, the PRR built a total of 300 H32 Covered Hopper Cars in number series 253500-253799. Welded construction was used for both the superstructure and the underframe. The material was high tensile steel. The cars had a plain welded roof and 14 roof hatches, each with a 3 by 3 opening. The metal running boards were Apex Tri-Lok. There were four bulkheads, creating five bays, each having two hopper openings measuring 13" by 24". The hopper bottom mechanism was furnished by Enterprise Railway Equipment Co. The horizontal sliding doors were hand operated, using a rack and pinion. The trucks were Class 2E-F22A, made by American Steel Foundries with Type A-3 Ride Control. The couplers were Type "E" with Imperial rotary bottom operated uncoupling devices.

There were four PRR paint and lettering schemes on this car. First was the Circle Keystone (CK) as delivered in Freight Car Color (FCC) with white lettering. Second, some shopped cars received the gray body color with the CK scheme in black. Third, some had the Shadow Keystone (SK) with gray body color with black lettering. And lastly, the Plain Keystone (PK) scheme with gray body color with black lettering was also used. In addition to the PRR schemes, they were also painted in both Penn Central (gray and green) and Conrail (gray and red) schemes.

In this production run, Broadway Limited Imports is offering models of the eye-catching cars in each of these prototypical liveries, and also in eight fantasy paint schemes. The owners of the "Fantasy Paint Scheme" models did not own any of the H32 prototype in real life, but they did operate similar covered hopper cars.

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