Bob,

You have a great start on the PRR GLa hopper.  Did you make the end braces from 
drawings?  Surely, such items are not available on the commercial market.  
Yours are exquisite.

Tom
________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of Robert 
Frascella [[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2012 8:39 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} GLa hopper



In my box of unfinished S scale projects is a AM ribbed side hopper conversion 
to a PRR GLa.  Here are the major differences:


  1.  The AM hopper is 2-ft. longer (though visually not a problem)
  2.  The end sills are different.  This is the major difference.  Most Pennsy 
hoppers from that era had a projecting end sill.  Even the H21a that Peter 
Vanveiet scratch built  had a similar end with projecting sills.
  3.  The vertical end supports are double angles with triangular brackets 
attaching them to the hopper body instead of the typical single angles on most 
hoppers.
  4.  They had individual grab irons instead of ladders

These are the major differences.  So, if you can live with the length 
difference, the rest isn't too insurmountable.

Incidentally, a bunch of GLa's were lettered for the Berwind Coal Co. (served 
by the Pennsy).  I have a set of Berwind decals produced at one time by John 
Hall that will eventually find their way onto my completed GLa.  I just posted 
a photo of my conversion in-process.  Look under "New Photos" or here:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/S-Scale/photos/album/1806668591/pic/710572863/view?picmode=&mode=tn&order=ordinal&start=1&count=20&dir=asc

Bob Frascella
Wenham, MA


On Nov 7, 2012, at 10:11 PM, Bill Lane wrote:



The PRR had a ton of the GLa hoppers – truly in the thousands. You can’t do a 
PRR hopper train without them. They never really did anything for me though. It 
just looked like a ribbed 2 bay to me. Almost any other PRR hopper class was 
more interesting. The last I knew there was a GLa still in existence up in 
Buffalo with the group that has the I1.

Thank You,
Bill Lane

Modeling the Mighty Pennsy & PRSL in 1957 in S Scale since 1987

See my finished models at:
http://www.lanestrains.com<http://www.lanestrains.com/>
Look at what has been made in PRR in S Scale!

See my layout progess at:
http://www.lanestrains.com/My_Layout.htm

Custom Train Parts Design
http://www.lanestrains.com/SolidWorks_Modeling.htm

PRR Builders Photos Bought, Sold & Traded
(Trading is MUCH preferred)
http://www.lanestrains.com/PRRphotos.xls

***Join the PRR T&HS***
The other members are not ALL like me!
http://www.prrths.com<http://www.prrths.com/>
http://www.lanestrains.com/PRRTHS_Application.pdf

Join the Pennsylvania Reading Seashore Lines Historical Society
It's FREE to join! http://www.prslhs.com<http://www.prslhs.com/>
Preserving The Memory Of The PRSL






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