Some 44 wagons were converted and they appear to have had questionable success in traffic. Some commodities that the wagons have been noted carrying include Limestone, Calcified Seaweed, China Clay, Petroleum Coke and Chipped Tyres for use at Aberthawe Cement Works.
Following the sale of the three shadow privatisation companies to Wisconsin Central the CEA hoppers became the responsibility of English Welsh and Scottish Railway. The company was very pro-active in attempting to grow rail freight across the United Kingdom, both in terms of block train and wagonload traffic. EWS obviously saw some value in the CEA fleet and a large number received a coat of EWS maroon along with new matching flexible covers.
Oddly, for such a small fleet of wagons the repainting wasn’t uniform and two distinct styles appeared. In one case the wagons received EWS maroon on the hopper body area only, the lettering and notices were in the same style applied to the wagons when converted by Loadhaul and no EWS branding was carried. Other wagons also received maroon paint on the top face of the under-frame and on the buffer beams, EWS branding was applied and other lettering above under-frame level was moved and applied in gold using Gill Sans.
The EWS CEA Covered Hopper Wagon Pack for Train Simulator includes:
- Branded and unbranded EWS liveries.
- Clean and weathered versions of both wagon body and livery types
- Loaded and unloaded versions with suitable physics. Other features include:
- ‘Intelligent’ tail lamps
- Animated hand brakes
- Body variation switching based on vehicle number as per the prototype.
The pack includes a user manual with further details about the rolling stock and the customising of some of the features when using the wagons in scenarios.