THE PULLMAN
PROJECT
Branchline Pullman Underbody Variations
Copyright 2001 – 2007 Thomas C. Madden
All six new
Branchline Pullman kits use the same body core - a one-piece molding consisting
of both ends and the floor/underframe. Bosses are
molded in for mounting a single 18” UC brake cylinder and the UC control
valve. Other underbody components can be mounted as appropriate for the
prototype. Included in all Branchline’s Pullman
kits are two 8-cell battery boxes, one APWS water tank, one UC valve, one
18” brake cylinder with levers and rodding,
four air reservoirs, and air conditioner components.
The supplied parts
will let the modeler construct representative underbodies. But not all possible combinations of brake
and a/c layouts can be modeled from the kit parts. Here are some helpful hints.
Brakes - cylinders
A UC brake system
with a single 18” brake cylinder was the most common one used on the Pullmans Branchline is
doing, but there were many cars with two 16” brake cylinders. The Milwaukee Road
specified two-cylinder UC systems on most of its heavyweight Pullmans. Two-cylinder underbody layout
drawings will be added to this web site eventually, but those wishing to
install one will find very few of the kit brake parts will be useable –
only the UC valve, and the hand brake rodding.
Two-cylinder brake systems even have different numbers and sizes of air
reservoirs than single cylinder systems.
Brakes – UC valve
The mounting lug for the
UC valve is correctly located for many cars, but not all. The easiest fix is to
make a new lug out of styrene and remove the molded-on one.
Brakes – air reservoirs
Branchline has molded
the Service and Auxiliary air brake reservoirs as a co-joined pair. This is fine for most cars with PM or PMB a/c
systems, but in most other cases the two were mounted in separate locations.
New tanks can be scratchbuilt, or the Branchline
tanks can be cut apart and mounted so the cut sides are not visible.
PM or PMB A/C
Highly accurate Pullman mechanical a/c systems with or without brine
auxiliary tanks can be modeled with kit parts. Pullmans
assigned to the New York
Central did not have brine tanks. PMB-equipped cars that were later reassigned
to the NYC had their brine tanks removed. Pullman
began removing brine tanks in late 1947, and by late 1952 they had been removed
from virtually all in-service heavyweight Pullmans.
Check the CCR database for the dates your model would have been equipped with a
brine tank.
Ice A/C – cold water sumps
Cold water collection
sumps are seldom modeled in HO, and the Branchline kit does not include one.
These were suspended from the center sills and were the lowest-hanging pieces
of equipment on the cars save for steam and air hoses. Pullman used three different sump designs.
The 1933 version featured an insulated tank that looked like an upside-down
rural mailbox hanging from the center sill, with the circulating pump mounted
nearby. The 1934/35 and 1936 designs placed the tank and sump into a common
rectangular housing. There were minor differences between these latter two, but
they are of little consequence on an HO model. New England Rail Service offers
a cast resin 1936 sump housing, part number 253. The 1933 sump has not been
offered as a separate part.
Ice A/C – battery boxes
Pullmans retrofitted with ice a/c systems usually
had both 8-cell battery boxes removed and replaced with a single 16-cell box.
Not a box twice as big as an 8-cell box, but one that was 10” deeper. No
one has offered this as an aftermarket part, but when viewed from the car side
it is identical to a standard 8-cell box.
Database Home
Tom Madden
tgmadden (at) worldnet (dot) att (dot) net