Pulpwood is not a specific type of wood, but actually tree limbs that are cut to a specified length, then turned into wood pulp and used in the paper industry. Early paper making had the trees near the paper plant. As timber resources were diminished, the need for transporting pulpwood began to rise. Railroads were seen as an efficient method of transporting pulpwood. Pulpwood in the Southeast and Northeast is generally cut into four-foot or less lengths and loaded onto V-deck bulkhead flat cars. This model is representative of an early 1950s General Steel Castings V-deck design.
- N Scale
- Master Line
- Ready to Run
- Finely detailed
- Rugged die-cast chassis
- Plastic deck and bulkheads
- Stirrups
- Air reservoir
- Triple valve
- Brake cylinder
- Open or closed bulkheads as appropriate per railroad prototype
- Simulated pulpwood load
- Plastic wheelsets
- AccuMate operating knuckle couplers