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Builder: Pullman and Standard
Steel. Year Built: 1923, 1924, 1927
The Southern Pacific 72-foot suburban
steel coach was first built in 1923 by the Pullman Company. The
Southern Pacific Railroad ordered them specifically for San Francisco
Bay Area commuter service to replace their aging fleet of wooden
passenger cars. The first order was for 60 coaches, seating 96 passengers
each. They were an instant hit with commuters, so another 10 were
ordered in 1924. Five more were ordered from the Standard Steel
Car Company in 1927. These coaches were used in commuter service
until 1985.
Although many people now refer to the coaches as Harrimans,
most people used call them Subs. The term Harriman refers to railroad
equipment built in the 1900's and 1910's to a set of common standards
that were used by the Harriman controlled Southern Pacific and Union
Pacific. A quick way to identify a Harriman car is to look at the
letterboard. On a true Harriman coach, the letterboard continues
over the doors. Although Subs are quite similar to Harriman coaches,
they are technically not true Harrimans because the letterboard
stops at the doors.
The coaches are 72'0" long over the end sills,
9'9-7/8" wide, and 14'0" from rail to top of roof. They
are 80'8-7/8" long from coupler to coupler. Each coach weighs
119,900 lbs. without passengers. The coaches are constructed on
a steel frame with steel channel and plate used throughout. The
coach floor is poured concrete, which provides a smoother and quieter
ride. Interior lighting is powered by an electric generator or by
batteries. A generator is connected by belts to one axle, and it
charges the batteries while the coach is moving. Each coach has
overhead fans for ventilation, and is heated by steam vapor supplied
by the locomotive.
Even though the Subs were all built to the same specifications,
there are minor differences between the orders. The first two orders
were built by Pullman, and were designated as classes 72-IC-1 and
72-IC-2. Class 72-IC-2 had slightly different window sills, but
was otherwise an exact duplicate of the 72-IC-1 class. The third
order was built by Standard Steel Car Company (before Standard Steel
was part of Pullman), and it is class 72-IC-3. Nicknamed "Cream-Puffs",
the cars in this class had a smoother ride. They used cast steel
trucks with integral journal pedestals cast as part of the truck
frame, instead of the older style with bolted pedestals.
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