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Atlas - 50 006 271 - Flatcar, Logging - Boise Cascade - 1275

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Production Type Announced
Stock Number 50 006 271
Secondary Stock Number 50006271
Original Retail Price $29.95
Brand Atlas
Manufacturer Atlas
Body Style Walthers 45' Logging Flat Car
Image Provider's Website Link
Prototype Vehicle Flatcar, Logging (Details)
Road or Company Name Boise Cascade (Details)
Reporting Marks MDW
Road or Reporting Number 1275
Paint Color(s) Green
Print Color(s) White
Coupler Type AccuMate Magnetic Knuckle
Wheel Type Injection Molded Plastic
Wheel Profile Small Flange (Low Profile)
Announcement Date 2022-06-17
Item Category Rolling Stock (Freight)
Model Type Flatcar
Model Subtype 45 Foot
Model Variety Logging
Prototype Region North America
Prototype Era All Eras
Scale 1/160
Model Information: Introduced in October 1998, with a second run in 2007.
Walthers ready-to-run 45 Foot Logging Flat Cars feature a die-cast body, styrene details, free-rolling trucks and standard (Rapido) couplers - Accumate couplers for the second run.
Models were available in three-packs ($26.98) or as singles with a fourth road number ($8.98), in six road names and undecorated. In the second run, models were available as single ($10.98) or in two-packs ($21.98).

Re-run under Atlas brand in 2019 after Atlas purchased the tooling from Walthers.

Here is how Walthers described them:
The 45 Foot Logging Flat Car is the trademark of logging railroads. Based on converted flat cars, the cars have four log bunks, a center sill, and a partially open deck. Some logging railroads ran entire trains of such cars.
Walthers advertised concurrently its Mountain Lumber Company Sawmill (933-3236), with these words "Long trainloads of these cars will look great arriving at Mountain Lumber Company Sawmill, also available in October".
Prototype History: Among the earliest types of freight cars, flatcars continue to serve as a valuable part of railroading. Flatcars are used to move a wide variety of loads which do not require protection from weather. These cars, are constructed with steel underframes, wood floors and stake pockets on the sides and ends for fastening tie-downs that keep loads from shifting.

Logging flat cars are a specialized type of flatcar converted to carry logs, with the addition of log bunks or upright stake posts secured in stake-pockets available on the side of the flatcar.
Road Name History: Boise Cascade Company (NYSE: BCC), which uses the trade name Boise Cascade, is an American manufacturer and distributor of lumber & building materials.

Boise Cascade Wood Products manufactures plywood, engineered wood products, lumber, and particleboard and supplies a broad line of wood products and building materials through Boise Cascade Building Materials Distribution's 33 distribution locations. Boise Cascade Company is a public company traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol BCC.

Read more on Wikipedia.

Minnesota Dakota and Western Railway (reporting mark MDW) is a shortline railroad operating 4 miles of track between International Falls and Ranier, Minnesota as well as between International Falls and Fort Frances, Ontario via the Fort Frances ? International Falls International Bridge, which is jointly owned by MDW and Abitibi Consolidated. The railroad serves the paper mills in both International Falls and Fort Frances. The railroad interchanges with Canadian National Railway at Ranier.

In 2005 the railroad handled 11,841 carloads of wood pulp, pulpwood, chemicals, raw materials and finished paper. The railroad has a fleet of more than 3100 railcars.

Originally a subsidiary of Boise Cascade designed to serve its paper mills, the MDW was created in 1910.

Read more on Wikipedia.
Brand/Importer Information: In 1924 Stephan Schaffan, Sr. founded the Atlas Tool Company in Newark, New Jersey. In 1933 his son, Stephan Schaffan, Jr., came to work for his father at the age of sixteen. Steve Jr. built model airplanes as a hobby and frequented a local hobby shop. Being an enterprising young man, he would often ask the owner if there was anything he could do to earn some extra spending money. Tired of listening to his requests, the hobby-store owner threw some model railroad track parts his way and said, "Here, see if you can improve on this".

In those days, railroad modelers had to assemble and build everything from scratch. Steve Jr. created a "switch kit" which sold so well, that the entire family worked on them in the basement at night, while doing business as usual in the machine shop during the day.

Subsequently, Steve Jr. engineered the stapling of rail to fiber track, along with inventing the first practical rail joiner and pre-assembled turnouts and flexible track. All of these products, and more, helped to popularize model railroading and assisted in the creation of a mass-market hobby. The budding entrepreneur quickly outgrew the limitations of a basement and small garage operation. Realizing they could actually make a living selling track and related products, Steve and his father had the first factory built in Hillside, New Jersey at 413 Florence Avenue in 1947. On September 30, 1949, the Atlas Tool Company was officially incorporated as a New Jersey company.

In 1985, Steve was honored posthumously for his inventions by the Model Railroad Industry Association and was inducted into the Model Railroad Industry Hall of Fame in Baltimore, Maryland. In addition, Steve was nominated and entered into the National Model Railroad Association Pioneers of Model Railroading in 1995.

In the early 1990s, the Atlas Tool Company changed its name to Atlas Model Railroad Company, Inc.
Item created by: CNW400 on 2022-06-20 11:20:40
Last edited by: CNW400 on 2022-06-20 11:40:11


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