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... It is listed as a PRR class K7a car so I guess the other names are foobies unless the PRR design was generic enough to cover other roads. ...
... I can always assign them to a through train with no on-layout destination. ...
My reading on UP livestock operations indicated that livestock traffic rarely interchanged. It required specific support facilities and couldn't tolerate the time it would take for switching, even if highly coordinated. The animals had to be fed and watered, or it would result in excess "shrinkage", where they would lose weight en route, therefore losing market value. That's why livestock operation was one of the first mass-commodity shipments to make the jump to trucks - end-to-end time was critical.
I will procure one non-sound Pennsy car, to support the cause. Also will obtain one of the NYC USRA boxcars when they are released.
I can't speak to other roads, but being a Western line UP had hundreds of stock cars, ran entire trains of them and was the last RR to run livestock service - even into the '70s!
Ugh. A PRR prototype car, in CK paint... that I have zero need for... I should probably get some to support the cause anyway. I can always assign them to a through train with no on-layout destination.
You may want one or two anyway. My Pennsy expert friend told me that after refrigerator cars hauling meat replaced cattle cars hauling livestock (meat is much easier to handle than live animals), the Pennsy regularly used stock cars in place of boxcars when hauling goods not damaged by rain or wind. Examples would be terra cotta tiles and pipes, etc. That's why I'll get one...