100,000 pound steel ore car built by the Standard Steel Car Co., Pittsburg, for the Duluth, Missabe & Northern R. R. Of structural steel throughout. Weight unloaded, 32,200 pounds.

Section of standard bulb angle column, New York Subway.

The Rail.

By all odds the most important girder is the rail in railroad service. Let us glance at phases of its development in America, as illustrating the importance of a right form to efficient service. At the outset of its operations, in 1830, the Mohawk & Hudson Railroad, now part of the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, employed a rail which was a mere strap of iron two and one half inches wide, nine sixteenths of an inch thick, with upper corners rounded to a breadth of one and seven eighths inches; it was laid upon a pine stringer, or light joist, six inches square, and weighed about 14 pounds per yard. Thin as this rail was, its proportions were adequate to bearing a wheel-flange which protruded but half an inch or even less. Where the builders of that day sought rigidity and permanence was in the foundations laid beneath their stringers. Except upon embankments there were for each track two pits each two feet square, three feet from centre to centre, filled with broken stone upon which were placed stone blocks each of two cubic feet. On the heavy embankments cross-ties were laid; these were found to combine flexibility of superstructure with elasticity of roadbed, so that they were adopted throughout the remainder of the track construction and continue to this hour to be a standard feature of railroad building.

Cross Section