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HO 53' Wabash Plate Trailer (ATH72822)

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HO 53' Wabash Plate Trailer (ATH72822)

This HO-scale 53-foot Wabash Plate Trailer is a detailed model for HO railroading, designed to represent a 1990s-era plate trailer used in piggyback service and ideal for modern intermodal TOFC trains on a layout.

It features separately-applied landing gear and mud flaps, a highly detailed injection-molded body, and is painted and printed from prototype photos to mirror real equipment. The in-service look is enhanced by faded base colors, providing a solid starting point for adding grime and rust. Notable for its uneven spacing of exterior ribs, this plate trailer was a common choice in the 1990s and 2000s before being replaced by the DuraPlate trailer, making them a faithful slice of intermodal history for your layout.

This HO-scale 53-foot Wabash Plate Trailer is a detailed model for HO railroading, designed to represent a 1990s-era plate trailer used in piggyback service and ideal for modern intermodal TOFC trains on a layout.

It features separately-applied landing gear and mud flaps, a highly detailed injection-molded body, and is painted and printed from prototype photos to mirror real equipment. The in-service look is enhanced by faded base colors, providing a solid starting point for adding grime and rust. Notable for its uneven spacing of exterior ribs, this plate trailer was a common choice in the 1990s and 2000s before being replaced by the DuraPlate trailer, making them a faithful slice of intermodal history for your layout.

$15.75

Original: $44.99

-65%
HO 53' Wabash Plate Trailer (ATH72822)

$44.99

$15.75

Description

This HO-scale 53-foot Wabash Plate Trailer is a detailed model for HO railroading, designed to represent a 1990s-era plate trailer used in piggyback service and ideal for modern intermodal TOFC trains on a layout.

It features separately-applied landing gear and mud flaps, a highly detailed injection-molded body, and is painted and printed from prototype photos to mirror real equipment. The in-service look is enhanced by faded base colors, providing a solid starting point for adding grime and rust. Notable for its uneven spacing of exterior ribs, this plate trailer was a common choice in the 1990s and 2000s before being replaced by the DuraPlate trailer, making them a faithful slice of intermodal history for your layout.