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Do the rail rodes have a book or something to go by when thay repair rail cars?? If so what is it called?

2007-03-25 05:08:04 · 5 answers · asked by Husker m 1 in Cars & Transportation Rail

5 answers

boxcar repair manual , passenger car then company name

2007-03-25 06:48:51 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

*chuckle* I like the earlier answers from people who just made stuff up. Sure, uh, go to Borders and buy "Boxcar repair for dummies"... uh huh thanks for the 2 points :-b

In the United States, what you want is the "AAR Interchange Rules". The AAR is an industry association which defines the standard procedures and rates of repair for rolling stock.

The Rules say whether it fairly warrants repair, how to fix it and how much to charge. The idea is, if a GATX tank car arrives on Union Pacific and they spot something they think is a defect, they do not have to call GATX and fight over whether and how it'll be fixed by whom. GATX doesn't have to worry about UP overcharging, doing unnecessary work or shoddy work. UP doesn't have to worry about whether GATX will question the bill.

Having this standardized makes for simpler business all around. It also gives railroads financial motivation to do scrupulous inspection of equipment (which is good for safety) since finding more defects means more repair revenue.

2007-03-25 08:43:59 · answer #2 · answered by Wolf Harper 6 · 2 0

particular. undertaking does count. they're going to look at the vehicle by way of staring at values of like autos in like undertaking with like mileage in the instantaneous section. i'm not so particular they're going to care approximately wrappers and such and cans and occasional cups yet they're going to care approximately stains and rips and tears and past dents and scratches .

2016-10-19 21:15:41 · answer #3 · answered by ramayo 4 · 0 0

You could try ebay or Amazon, or the search engine on a railfan webring like http://www.trainweb.com

You could also try browsing at railfan swapmeets or writing to the railroad companies direct.

The reference section of your local library might be worth a look, too.

2007-03-25 07:01:35 · answer #4 · answered by squeaky guinea pig 7 · 0 1

"Rail RODE"???

2007-03-25 09:58:57 · answer #5 · answered by Angela M 6 · 2 0

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