Car spotting (service)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Car spotting is a service in rail transport operations.

A 1920 book on railroad freight defines the term as follows:[1]

Spotting service is the service beyond a reasonably convenient point of interchange between road haul or connecting carriers , industrial plant tracks and includes: (a) One placement of a loaded car which the road haul or connecting carrier has transported, or (b) The taking out of a loaded car from a particular location in the plant for transportation by road haul or connecting carrier, (c) The handling of the empty car in the reverse direction.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Edgar Watkins (1920) "Shippers and Carriers of Interstate and Intrastate Freight", p. 429