The prototype for this distinctive Grand Trunk Western class XP boxcar was built in 1974. According to the Association of American Railroads, the car’s XP classification indicates it’s specially fitted to haul automobile parts loaded on pallets or in bins. These cars aren’t lined, but have a dozen horizontal rub rails per side and an Equipco load restraint system. The waffle-side pattern provides clearance for the bulkheads and other load restraints to latch onto the rub rails.
This new model closely follows the prototype dimensions found on a GTW car data sheet. It’s a scale 65′-6″ long, 10′-6″ wide, and 17′-0″ tall. The prototype cars have 20″-travel PS cushion underframes with the couplers mounted in the extended sills.
A cushion underframe is an option that some railroads don’t use. This car includes cushion-underframe sliding sill details, but there’s no sign of the PS hydraulic cushioning device or the extended couplers (20″ at each end), which are used on the prototype GTW car. That’s an error in a premium model.
The ExactRail model comes fitted with plastic American Steel Foundries (ASF) 100-ton Ride Control trucks. The well-detailed trucks have brake beams and brake shoe details. The RP-25 contour metal wheels measure a correct scale 36″ in diameter. The wheels are chemically blackened, mounted in gauge, and free rolling.
The model’s 5-ounce weight matches the National Model Railroad Association’s Recommended Practice RP-20.1.
Our sample car is smoothly painted in an appropriate GTW blue with white excess height panels on the car ends. Its printed lettering is clear and opaque, and includes the proper note that the car has Plate F clearances that restrict its movement to specific routes.
This is an excellent model of a contemporary auto parts car, with the exception of the absent extended couplers that go along with the sliding sill details.
Manufacturer
ExactRail
1053 South 1675 West
Orem, UT 84097
www.ExactRail.com
Road names
(6 car numbers per road name) Grand Trunk Western; Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe; Milwaukee Road; Norfolk & Western; Norfolk Southern; and Union Pacific
Era: 1974 to present