
HO 40' Pfaudler Milk Car C&NW #1950 Plastic Model (ATH84707)
HO scale 40-foot Pfaudler Milk Car, C&NW No. 1950, is a detailed model designed for realistic operation on HO layouts. It features screw-mounted trucks, machined metal wheels with RP25 contours, and body-mounted McHenry operating scale knuckle couplers, with a weighted chassis for steady running. The injection-molded body is painted and printed for authentic decoration, and it handles HO curves with a minimum radius of 11 inches.
Historically, these milk cars date back to the 1920s and were built by the Pfaudler Company and General American Car Company. They carried two 6,000-gallon glass-lined tanks and a brine cooling system designed to keep milk at 38 degrees Fahrenheit, riding on passenger-car trucks and often finished in Pullman green to match passenger cars, continuing in service into the 1950s.
HO scale 40-foot Pfaudler Milk Car, C&NW No. 1950, is a detailed model designed for realistic operation on HO layouts. It features screw-mounted trucks, machined metal wheels with RP25 contours, and body-mounted McHenry operating scale knuckle couplers, with a weighted chassis for steady running. The injection-molded body is painted and printed for authentic decoration, and it handles HO curves with a minimum radius of 11 inches.
Historically, these milk cars date back to the 1920s and were built by the Pfaudler Company and General American Car Company. They carried two 6,000-gallon glass-lined tanks and a brine cooling system designed to keep milk at 38 degrees Fahrenheit, riding on passenger-car trucks and often finished in Pullman green to match passenger cars, continuing in service into the 1950s.
Original: $36.99
-65%$36.99
$12.95Description
HO scale 40-foot Pfaudler Milk Car, C&NW No. 1950, is a detailed model designed for realistic operation on HO layouts. It features screw-mounted trucks, machined metal wheels with RP25 contours, and body-mounted McHenry operating scale knuckle couplers, with a weighted chassis for steady running. The injection-molded body is painted and printed for authentic decoration, and it handles HO curves with a minimum radius of 11 inches.
Historically, these milk cars date back to the 1920s and were built by the Pfaudler Company and General American Car Company. They carried two 6,000-gallon glass-lined tanks and a brine cooling system designed to keep milk at 38 degrees Fahrenheit, riding on passenger-car trucks and often finished in Pullman green to match passenger cars, continuing in service into the 1950s.











