Yeah, I went down that rabbit hole when mine said something like "dispatched from Industry" after being offloaded in Portland. Railroads use the term "Industry" to describe if it is actively moving/filling the job it was meant to do. In this case move some Mavericks. When it is something like "dispatched from Industry", it means it is done and probably empty and traveling somewhere to be filled back up with product. Think of them using the term "Industry" as the Railroad "Industry" . Weird way to explain it, but I hope that makes sense.UPDATE: Wondered whether maybe the Norfolk Southern tracking info was no longer updating properly. So, I called the Union Pacific line and here's what I got:
Dec. 3, 5:05 p.m. -- Placed at Industry, Port of Wilmington
So, it looks like maybe my truck has arrived at the final rail depot after all. Anyone know what "Placed at Industry" means?
"Placed at Industry" basically means "it is sitting there at the final stop waiting to be told where to go to be filled back up with product".
Here are some examples of how they toss around the word "Industry". From a railroad dictionary.
Average Demurrage Agreement (AKA Average Agreement) is defined as....
An agreement made between an industry and the railroad whereby the industry is charged for the time cars are held for loading or unloading beyond the free time and is credited for the time cars are released within that certain period in accordance with specified tariff or contract rules. Debits and credits are compiled and demurrage charges are assessed at the end of each month for any outstanding charges.
Advance Notice is defined as.....
A notification of an approaching event or intended action, such as notice to a customer that cars ordered will soon be placed at their industry.
Placement is defined as....
When the car is actually placed in the industry by the railroad.
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