HO Truss Loads for HO Gondolas

I would like to know what size of Plastruct warren trusses would look best in 50’ through 54’ HO gondolas. I am planning to put a truss load into an ATLAS Trainman HO Evans 52’ gondola. I have a fleet of HO gondolas from the various HO manufacturers, all of them with different loads. I feel that the truss load would be excellent to compliment some other HO gondola loads. David Briel

Use something that’s longer than the car itself. Remove the end walls (or can they be dropped?) and let the load overhang, and place “idler” flats on each end, just to make it interesting.

Your load will look best if you hunt some pics of loaded gons and copy the way the trusses are secured in the car.

IIRC the largest Plastruct truss is about 1" = 25.4mm = 7’3" in H0… which would be a good size load.

Trusses have their main strength up and down through the web… so they tend to be carried (and loaded/unloaded) in their strong position - on edge… which is great for us as it looks better. If carried flat/on its side arrangements would have to be made to support the truss so that it didn’t get a curve set in it… that said… they can be carried both flat and - to keep them in height limits - secured at an angle on supporting frames.

Loaded in a normal standing position trusses would sit on timbers… probably wedged square across the car and possibly with lumps of timber nailed either side of the bottom flange of the girder to stop it shifting sideways. It’s possible that there may be some lengths nailed to these and through the gaps in the truss… BUT such a large lump of load would be held down by chains (or nylon ratchet straps in a modern loading). The ends would also be blocked to stop the load shifting and smashing through the end if the car stopped suddenly. For this reason you might find some of the chains were run at an angle from about mid car to the end tops.

The end would not be broken out of a Gon as this would cost a repair and weaken the car. Gons did come with drop ends to allow over length loads. there is a limit to how much over length you can go without fouling adjacent tracks. On models this tends to be a greater restriction than the real thing because of the sharp curves we use.

If you can get trusses with rivet/bolt and/or any other detail the load will look better.

Presumiably your trusses will be new so they will want nice new paint rather than weathering… but you could add on delivery marks and codes for where they bolt/weld together on site when they ar