Tank Car History - Union Tank Car Company
Transcription
Tank Car History - Union Tank Car Company
Union Tank Car Company Click “Enter” to advance presentation. In the Beginning, There Was Oil … Union Tank Car Company traces its beginning to August 27, 1859, the day Col. Edwin Drake brought in the first drilled oil well at Titusville, Pennsylvania. The subsequent rush to move the $20/bbl oil to market resulted in rapid development of a transportation system and specialized equipment to handle and transport liquids in bulk. 1859 Help Wanted: Coopers… As the number of wells increased, the abundant supply of oil drove down the price. Four years after Drake’s strike, oil had slipped to 10¢/bbl. Not surprisingly, the cost of a new 42-gallon pine barrel had jumped to more than $3.00! Even with new rail service right to the oil fields, the cost to ship a barrel of oil to refineries in Cleveland was much greater than the value of the crude at the well. 1863 …Capable of Building 50 Tight Barrels Each Day… The 42-gallon barrel was developed as a matter of necessity to contain the oil. At a just-manageable size, a barrel could be rolled into place on wagons or flat cars, which carried them to the river for the barge trip to the refinery. But building barrels was labor intensive and the relatively small containers required much handling. Leakage and theft were problems and, too often, empties did not make it back for a second load. 1863 …Or, a Couple Really Big Ones… Brother inventers, Amos and James Densmore, are credited with the transportation idea that relegated “barrel of oil” to a unit of measure. Their “Densmore Car,” also know as the “rotary oil car,” contained 20—25 bbl. in two iron-hooped pine tubs that were attached to “the platform of an ordinary railway-car.” They patented the design in 1866. However, even better ideas doomed the Densmore Car to obsolescence within four years. 1865 Bulk Liquid Transportation: An Industry Is Born. The same year rotary oil cars arrived in Titusville, a “longdistance” pipe line was put into service. As much as 800 bbl. of crude per day was pumped through the 2” iron pipe — almost five miles! From the start, crude oil shippers could choose: teamsters, railroad, pipeline or barge. But often, transportation to the refinery involved several modes. 1865 Refined Products Move to Market By the close of the Civil War, demand for kerosene, used chiefly for illumination, stimulated bulk liquid shipment by rail. But now the move was to market. Here was an early solution to the problem of barrels. This rack car allowed a shipper to increase the number of barrels … and the volume of product per car load … with a much higher likelihood of getting the shipment to market.. 1865 Innovation: The Horizontal “Boiler” Type Tank on a Flat Car… In 1869, the forerunner of the present tank car was introduced. A horizontal, cylindrical iron tank replaced the wooden tubs. Engineering wisdom of the day suggested that surge forces on the tank heads would be reduced if the tank was completely filled. To allow for product expansion, the tank was fitted with a large, vertical “dome.” The first riveted cars had a capacity of 80 bbl of product. Soon, capacity was increased to 100 bbl (4,200 gallons), which became the standard. 1869 Wooden Flat Car “Underframes” and a Customized Deal With Railroads Oil companies tried to convince railroads to furnish tank cars, but conservative council won out. Beginning as early as 1867, railroads and refiners agreed to handle tank car loads like dry goods shipments … except the shipper provided the railcars. The railroad would pay rebates—called mileage allowances—to compensate The riveted, iron tanks were cradled on wooden flatcar for the use of the cars. underframes and strapped down with iron bands. Railroads, still follow that Wooden head blocks were used to limit longitudinal tank decision today. movement. 1869 John D. Rockefeller Corners the Market Thirty-year-old refiner, John D. Rockefeller, recognized the economies of tank car transportation. In 1869 he secured the cars of the Star Tank Line for the exclusive use of his petroleum products company. He used bulk shipments to great advantage – by concentrating on markets where his retail competitors used barrels. Four years later he purchased Star for the exclusive use of Standard Oil. 1873 Union Tank Line U T L By 1878, Standard Oil’s Tank Car Trust had acquired 3,000 of the 3,200 cars in existence. Included was a small rail line handling oil shipments into Chicago – the Union Tank Line. In 1880, Standard’s entire fleet was placed under the name Union Tank Line and the cars were restenciled with reporting marks that are still in use today. 1880 Union Tank Line Company Union Tank Car Company To sidestep anti-trust litigation against Standard Oil, Rockefeller had the Union Tank Line incorporated. July 14, 1891 is acknowledged as the birthday of the Union Tank Line Company. That day it became one of the original Standard Oil companies. A typical UTL car rented for 11¢ per diem or less – within the family. In 1909, the Federal government broke up the Trust and Union Tank Line Company became a publicly held corporation. The typical fee for furnishing a car rose to $3 and the rental was 75¢ per loaded day. In 1919, to avoid the inference that it operated a railroad line, the company’s name was changed to Union Tank Car Company. 1891 John Van Dyke, Innovator Union Tank Car employee, John Van Dyke, designed a steel tank car that had no through frame. Elimination of the underframe significantly reduced the weight of the car, allowing a greater pay load. Van Dyke calculated the riveted steel tank shell to be sufficiently strong to carry the train loads of starting and stopping … as well as the weight of the commodity. 1901 The Van Dyke Cast Iron Saddle. The double-riveted steel tank sections were riveted directly to cast iron saddles. The “V-car”, named for the shape of the saddles, tested successfully, but old-time railroad men were skeptical. It looked … fragile! The market place was not ready and only about 100 V-cars were constructed. 1901 This Design Seemed Much Safer Van Dyke went back to the drawing board. He designed a car with a steel through-sill underframe that obviously could stand up to the train loads of the longest trains and the most powerful locomotives. Because the design used steel for both tank and sill, he was right. Again. Orders for the “X-car” were placed immediately. 1902 A Through (Or Center) Sill Transferred the Train Loads. An innovative center connection between the tank and the underframe proved Van Dyke’s genius. It securely limited fore-and-aft tank movement. With the technical problem of securing a steel tank to an underframe solved, market demand for cars with the Van Dyke Anchor was immediate. Union Tank Car patented its winning design. But, with thousands of iron tank cars in its existing fleet, the X-car’s popularity gave Union Tank Car a hard lesson in market obsolescence. The subsequent scramble to provide all-steel cars gave competition a foothold in what had been – almost exclusively – Union Tank Car’s market. New Markets Spark Product Improvement. “Innovations” sometimes had to be added after a car was constructed. This 1907-built car was retrofitted in 1914 with steam heater pipes. The hair-felt insulation was protected with wooden spacer rings and a steel jacket. This system allowed viscous products to be shipped -- and unloaded -- in cold weather. 1914 The Advent of Regulation Detailed specifications for cars were laid down by the Association of American Railroads under the authority of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Car design standardization and industry regulation began with Car Classifications. Tank cars built before 1903 were identified as Class I. The newer steel cars were identified as Class II, III or IV. This photo shows a Class IV insulated car that was built in 1923 for flammable liquids. Lacking its own construction facility, it was difficult for Union Tank Car to introduce improvements – including its own innovations – ahead of the other tank car companies that supplied UTLX cars. 1923 Interstate Commerce Commission In 1927, the Interstate Commerce Commission took over the duties of setting regulations and safety standards … and changed the car classification system. Class III, IV and V cars became ICC 103, 104 and 105 cars. This ICC 103 car has three compartments and three “domes” to allow for product expansion. Note that the car has six tank heads. Separating compartments with a void is a practice that continues today. 1927 Pioneers in Fusion Welding In 1931, Union Tank Car engineers began testing a new welding process. The results showed that fusion-welded tanks were sturdier than forge-welded tanks and that they could be manufactured more efficiently. High stresses introduced during welding could be relieved by heating each completed tank in a giant oven. X-ray inspection could insure weld soundness. However, it was five years before government construction specifications were changed to accommodate electric fusion welding – and then just ten test cars were allowed. Exhaustive and conclusive tests proved the design and one of the cars miraculously survived a bad train wreck. However, the ICC did not hand down new tank car construction specifications that included fusion-welding until 1941. 1931 until 1941 Union Tank Car Goes to War American oil moved to port in long-haul trains in the summer of 1941 provided the just-in-time energy to “save” England. Old tank cars queued for the scrap heap were recalled for the emergency service. They were expedited to the nearest car repair shops where crews worked around the clock to seal leaks, lube journals and unstick valves. Soon, 20,000 cars, including many of the old VanDyke “V” cars, were in continuous movement between the Midwest and East Coast ports. Then came Pearl Harbor, and the real pressure began. All oil tank cars in the U.S. assigned to under-200 mile moves were diverted to emergency long-haul use. The short haul market was abandoned to the trucking industry. Almost 50,000 more cars were assigned to government service. Cooperation of the railroads, tank car companies and the petroleum companies resulted in a democratic “revolution in transportation.” 1941 Tank Car Assembler Since the beginning, Union Tank Car had depended on car builders for its supply of new tank cars. Some suppliers were also leasing competitors. It became apparent that any plans for market expansion would require an investment in self-reliance. In 1950, an agreement with Graver Tank & Manufacturing Company secured delivery of a supply of tanks constructed to UTLX specifications. With frame and running gear components supplied by other steel companies, Union Tank Car began assembling its own cars at the Whiting, IN and Philadelphia car repair shops The association prospered. 1949 PROCOR Products Tank Line, a UTLX subsidiary that had been established in 1926 to lease cars to non-Standard Oil refiners, made inroads into the Canadian tank car leasing market in the mid-1940’s. To meet the demands of the emerging Alberta petroleum industry, the operation was reorganized as a full-scale leasing company and incorporated in 1952. Acquisition of the 2.200 car Imperial Oil Fleet under a purchase/leaseback in 1953 confirmed the wisdom of the international expansion. Over the next few years, PTL constructed a series of repair shops across Canada to maintain its growing fleet. To secure a domestic source for new cars, Ontario-based Sparling Tank was acquired in 1958. PTL Canada, known in company slang as Procan, was renamed in 1962. Today, Procor Limited and UTLX mount the largest and most comprehensive tank car leasing effort in the world. The companies’ international services include railcar design, manufacturing, maintenance, and interior coating and lining services. 1952 Tank Car Manufacturer Union Tank Car became a full-fledged builder of tank cars when it purchased its tank supplier, Phoenix-Graver, in 1957. The decision was underscored in 1958 by the acquisition of the Lang Company, a plate fabrication company located in Salt Lake City and, later in the year, Sparling Tank Manufacturing Company, Ltd. In Toronto. Close to U.S. steel production in Northwestern Indiana, central location became important in tank car production. The alliance with Graver proved itself with UTLX customers. Management recognized the requirements for a full service lessor to design and manufacture its 1957 Railcar Repair for the 20th Century In 1956, when necessity demanded a new repair facility, Union Tank Car gave the shop concept a creative review. An engineering task force recommended a radical departure form the traditional long, linear, covered railroad track. The shop built at Baton Rouge, LA arranged the repair tracks radically around a central parts and office area. A circular transfer table switched the cars from the inbound tracks to one of 30 repair tracks. A long “tail” attached to the circular floor enclosed the blast and paint facility and the outbound track for cars that required painting. 1958 Railcar Repair for the 20th Century The largest circular building in the world was constructed to house the shop. Using R. Buckminster Fuller’s justpatented geodesic principle of design, an immense, domed structure 384 feet across at its base and 120 feet high was built. Constructed of 321 sixsided steel panels welded together and strengthened with a network of steel rods and pipes, the novel building required no interior supports. The trend to greater tank capacities eventually obsolete the shop, which could not be efficiently modified to accommodate longer cars. Union Tank Car sold the facility in the early 1980’s. 1958 The Hot Dog Car Working in secret between 1954 and 1956, a task force of young Union Tank Car engineers developed a radically different tank car. Their perfectly cylindrical, all-welded design was revolutionary because of what it did not have. Like the V-car from 50 years before, the HD-car (so-designated because of its resemblance to a hot dog) had no under frame. Tank bands, running boards, and the long-standing expansion dome were eliminated, too. Tests had proven that surge pressures at the tank heads were reduced in less-thanfull cars. Two percent vapor space above the product was allowance enough for expansion. The tank car dome was history. Elimination of running boards caused the most debate. It was 1961 before an ICC ruling upheld that UTLX design change. 1954 The JUMBO! The first HD car had a capacity of 100,000 lbs and weighed about 50,000 lbs. Economies associated with greater capacities made railroads quick to offer incentive freight rates to shippers who provided the new, larger cars. Shipper demand spurred the new car market and a race to even greater capacity. The first 20,000 gallon car was introduced in 1958. 1958 The Race Is On! 30,000 Gallons. The HD design was efficient to produce. The outside diameter of the tank could be standardized for a range of capacities so larger pay loads could be obtained simply by building longer cars. This 1960-built UTLX car, designed for liquefied petroleum gas, was the largest and most efficient ever produced … until 1961 when a shorter, fatter car – the UTLX Compact-30 – made it obsolete. 1960 Marketing Confidence. When shippers expressed reluctance to lease or buy cars that might soon be “too small,” Union Tank Car introduced a car design that could be altered to a larger or smaller capacity. The promise was that the car could be changed easily to optimal capacity by adding or removing tank rings. The “Changeable Car” strategy reassured the marketplace, but it was three decades before there was a call to “stretch” the first cars. As might be expected, the conversion in 1985 of 8 MG corn syrup cars to 10 MG general chemical service cars was skillfully accomplished … as proposed in … 1961 Union Tank Car’s Biggest, Ever! Able to transport 50,000 gallons of liquefied petroleum gas or anhydrous ammonia, the largest UTLX car – ever – is 89 feet long, weighs 175,000 lbs, and rolls on 16 wheels. The mammoth car was successfully tested by major petroleum companies. But, with a GRL of 440,000 lbs, it proved to be too big and was on display at the Galveston Texas Center for Transportation. 1963 Sandwich Car: In-Transit Temperature Control. Appealing to shippers of products that are sensitive to heat gain or loss, the UTLX Sandwich Car is insulated with up to 12” of urethane foam. The tankwithin-a-tank design eliminates metal-tometal contact between the inner and outer tank to maintain product temperature within a narrow range during transit. 1965 Funnel Flow: Fast, Complete Unloading. Elegantly simple, the UTLX Funnel-Flow® sloping tank innovation facilitates complete product unloading. The edges of the two rings that are joined at the middle of a car are contoured to produce a bevel. The standard ¼” per foot slope gives a Funnel Flow car a unique swaybacked silhouette, with the tank shell sloping from head seam to center seam. Cars can be designed with steeper slopes to aid unloading of more viscous products. The design enables more complete unloading and insures that minimal residual product (or heel) is left in the car. 1967 East Chicago Plant No. 1 During its 40 year history it built over 70,000 tank cars of various car types and capacities. Centrally located, the plant could efficiently ship to any location. Simuloader™ Accelerated Life Cycle Testing Testing technology Union Tank Car developed in 1980 allowed UTLX engineers to predict longterm product performance in “real world” operating conditions – in a very short time. A computer-equipped passenger car coupled electronically to a gauge-encrusted tank car collected “real life” strains during a cross-country rail trip. Back in the lab the damaging loads were concentrated – electronically – and reintroduced into a test car mounted on a hydraulically-actuated damage simulator, the Simuloader. Life cycle profiles of UTLX tank cars and their components let engineers optimize car designs, while preventative maintenance schedules were focused to ensure reliability. After the UTLX car designs were profiled, the Simuloader was given to the AAR Test Center in Puebla, Colorado to be used to examine other freight car types. 1980 Union Tank Car Company leading the tank and plastics car industry with personalized leasing service. Incorporated on July 14, 1891 the first 100 year anniversary was celebrated with stenciling on some of our cars. 286 Gross Rail Limit New UTLX tank cars are designed to carry the maximum load limit allowed by the railroads. 1996 Utilization efficiencies have improved Built tough, UTLX Cars work harder and last longer A Quiet Revolution No accidents, injuries, or harm to the environment Service, Service, Service “The Tank Car People” make the difference Internet service: utlx.com / Link-Net Internet service: utlx.com / Link-Net Investing in Maintenance Union Tank Car provides maintenance facilities including shops, mobile repair units and mini shops in many locations. Plant No. 6 Sheldon, Texas In addition to constructing new tank cars, Sheldon also manufactures components and parts for the Alexandria Manufacturing plant. Union Tank Car Alexandria Louisiana Manufacturing Built in 2006, it is the most modern tank car manufacturing facility in the world using specialized equipment and techniques to produce tank cars efficiently. UTLX cars have been engineered for safety and reliability. UTLX commitment to build the safest and best cars possible