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Offline auntmartha  
#1 Posted : 18 July 2025 12:17:22(UTC)
auntmartha

Denmark   
Joined: 29/09/2011(UTC)
Posts: 38
Location: Græsted
Found these photos while searching about VW transports on rail :




Does anyone know more about these Swedish un-usual and out of loading gauge additions ( "shoes" ) to a normal wagon ?

And then this popped up about OPEL autos - also in Sweden :



where it is not shoes but long width additions.

And - Does anyone know what kind of wagon it is - surely some kind of timber car ?

Any additional information / pictures are welcome.

/Christian
Yours sincerely / Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Bien cordialement
Mr. Christian Vinaa
http://www.vinaa.dk/trains
...... Meanwhile, aunt Martha, having taken a tramp in the woods,
is lying in a ditch at the edge of town .........................
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Offline kiwiAlan  
#2 Posted : 18 July 2025 14:44:48(UTC)
kiwiAlan

United Kingdom   
Joined: 23/07/2014(UTC)
Posts: 8,513
Location: ENGLAND, Didcot
Those wagons were presumably made for a narrower loading gauge, if, as you suggest, they are ex-timber transport wagons then maybe they were originally built to go into forests on tight twisting logging tracks, and so built to a reduced width. A beetle or t1 van isn't that wide, so they wagons must be very narrow to require supports for the wheels both sides.

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Online hxmiesa  
#3 Posted : 18 July 2025 14:51:48(UTC)
hxmiesa

Spain   
Joined: 15/12/2005(UTC)
Posts: 3,601
Location: Spain
Originally Posted by: kiwiAlan Go to Quoted Post
Those wagons were presumably made for a narrower loading gauge, if, as you suggest, they are ex-timber transport wagons then maybe they were originally built to go into forests on tight twisting logging tracks, and so built to a reduced width. A beetle or t1 van isn't that wide, so they wagons must be very narrow to require supports for the wheels both sides.

I´m not so sure. There are actually 4 cars on each waggon. So actually VERY wide!
Best regards
Henrik Hoexbroe ("The Dane In Spain")
http://hoexbroe.tripod.com
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Offline osoraku  
#4 Posted : 18 July 2025 18:34:25(UTC)
osoraku

Portugal   
Joined: 22/01/2025(UTC)
Posts: 61
Location: Setubal, Palmela
Not really a roll-on - roll-off loading scheme … crane or forklift rather.

Osoraku
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Offline bph  
#5 Posted : 18 July 2025 18:38:02(UTC)
bph

Norway   
Joined: 04/08/2018(UTC)
Posts: 1,174
Perhaps Oms or Oe cars with the sides removed?. eg 47730 and 45084

More pictures can be found here: https://digitaltmuseum.org/search?q=bilar+godsvagn

(digitaltmuseum.org is an official site for Norwegian and Swedish museums, including the railway museums)
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