Hopper car

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Two-bay hopper cars of the Reading Railroad.
Two-bay hopper cars of the Reading Railroad.

A hopper car is a type of railroad freight car used to transport loose bulk commodities such as coal, ore, grain, track ballast, and the like.

This type of car is distinguished from a gondola car in that it has opening doors on the underside or the sides to discharge its cargo. The development of the hopper car went along with the development of automated handling of such commodities, with automated loading and unloading facilities. There are two main types of hopper car: open and covered.

Covered hopper cars are used for cargos that must be protected from the elements (chiefly rain) such as grain, sugar, and fertilizer. Open cars are used for commodities such as coal, which can get wet and dry out with no harmful effect. Hopper cars have been used by railways worldwide whenever automated cargo handling has been desired.

Recently in North America the open hopper car has been in a terminal decline due to the advent of the rotary car dumper (which simply inverts the car to unload it, and has become the preferred unloading technology). A rotary dumper permits the use of simpler, tougher, more compact (because sloping ends are not required) gondola cars instead of hoppers. Covered hoppers, though, are still in widespread use. For loads that are less dense (such as grains) or susceptible to damage in the weather (such as unmixed cement), covered hoppers are normally used.

New hopper cars outside the Trinity Industries plant where they were manufactured in Winder, Georgia.
New hopper cars outside the Trinity Industries plant where they were manufactured in Winder, Georgia.

[edit] External links

  • Union Pacific #7801 — photos and short history of an example of a typical self-clearing, open-top triple hopper.


Rail transport freight equipment
Enclosed equipment: Autorack · Boxcar · Coil car · Container · Covered hopper · Refrigerator car · Roadrailer · Stock car · Tank car
Open equipment: Flatcar · Gondola · Hopper car · Schnabel car
Non-revenue equipment: Caboose
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