Look, I honestly don't mean any disrespect, and I apologize in advance if I've got it wrong, but from your tone it appears you're ignoring the thrust of my question (or don't know) to show off how much you DO know.
Not at all, the thrust of your question(s) where not ignored and answered objectively with good engineering sense. Lets review your questions in the thread and see what the thread gave you:
Q: Were they just not big enough? A: They were too long for 2 axles and would cause premature wheel failure.
Q: Too far ahead of their time? A: No, they were a commercial failure that was not proliferated .
Q: Too expensive to build? (We didn't answer that one, no data)
Q: What? A: We gave several specific design drawbacks (weight per axle, derailment reliability, and excessive wear in short radii).
Q: you run 2-axles at the end, but would that be the cause of a (presumably) good design's demise? A: It was a presumptive question because the drawbacks outweigh the novel features.
Q: But since the physics were already understood, why not run a bunch of them at the end of the train? A: Standard freight cars do not impose that demand, and so that directive would add new impact to yard efficiency.
As far as the "person x didn't state that" clauses, the corrections were only fair to those who may appear misquoted.
1I applaud your knowledge, but I also know that they only produced 50 in 1956. I also already know the web covers this subject poorly and I've already seen the photos you posted. That's why I posted here.
Ok that's fine, I (or we) did not know what you had gathered previously on those specific points. Our contribution of them to the thread was effort expended in the spirit of rounding out your thread, or potentially giving the matter more public coverage for passers-by. Why interpret a positive as a negative?
I already suggested that if it made switching or consist make-up more difficult, that would be a strike against it.
No sir, in post #6 you state "I can't..." <-- i.e. cannot "... imagine it would be inconvenient to pop containers on a flat and tack it on the end of the train?" That suggests you could not imagine it being a strike against it to require rear of train assignment.
Then you concluded with "just sayin, I don't really know." If you state you don't know, you are looking for an explanation or discussion, so be cheerful, and not dismayed, if you receive such in response.
If you know and can explain why the car didn't last, great. If not, just forget I asked.
We did explain it, I wish it were received well. I don't think there would be any more points to add anyway, so it's too late to retract.