WHO HASN’T HAD the daydream? You buy the local branch line railroad and find a small switcher, and next thing you know, you’re the Commodore Vanderbilt of your town. But if your dream came true, chances are that your business plan (and wallet) would probably call for an industrial switcher, not an SD90MAC diesel. Industrial […]
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SOMETIMES O GAUGE products hit the market that aren’t quite as practical as you might first believe, but nevertheless score a 10 on the “Neat-Oh”scale. The K-Line operating voltmeter car is one of those products. The voltmeter car is exactly that: a boxcar that reads track voltage. While the model rolls along, an analog meter […]
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WHEN I WAS IN MY EARLY 20s, I remember being dazzled by a stereo receiver sold by J. C. Penney. It featured an unprecedented 241 light-emitting diodes on the faceplate. The product designers knew the way to snag a guy was with “eye candy.” Model Rectifier Corp. knows the appeal of “eye candy” as well, […]
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THE NEW YORK CENTRAL had many fine passenger trains, trains with a pedigree, so to speak. One of the most venerable was the New York City-to-Detroit Empire State Express. Service began way back in 1891. To celebrate the train’s 50th anniversary in 1941, the railroad upgraded its operation with two brand-new 16-car train sets built […]
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FEW OF THE locomotives that I’ve reviewed strike me as elegant. After all, in the real world these were just machines made to pull heavy loads. All the same, I would even forsake my beloved New York Central to say that the Southern Railway Ps-4-class 4-6-2 Pacific in that railroad’s wonderful green, gold, and white […]
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AMERICAN MODELS, laboring quietly in the background of the model railroad biz, has surprised us with the release of its new S gauge General Electric U25B diesel locomotive. It’s a dandy version of a “U-boat,” the locomotive that positioned GE to challenge then-giant General Motors in the battle for the road engine market. General Electric […]
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ONLY TIME WILL TELL if Flyer enthusiasts will move the setting of their layouts into the late 20th century. If they don’t, it isn’t because there are no contemporary diesels offered in S gauge. American Models has introduced the EMD SD60, the most modern American Flyer-compatible diesel on the market. Electro-Motive made the 3,800-horsepower SD60 […]
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OTHER THAN THE venerable train station, no structure says “railroad” in the minds of the masses like the roundhouse. It’s a term that easily rolls off the tongue, even from people who often have never seen this near-extinct locomotive servicing/storage facility. The traditional roundhouse is fast becoming a memory. Modern diesel locomotives are serviced in […]
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WHAT YOU’RE LOOKING AT is not a locomotive DNA experiment gone terribly wrong. It’s a steam locomotive known as a Garratt. A fellow named H.W. Garratt came up with a patented design for an articulated locomotive with a water tank up front, a boiler in the middle, and a coal bunker (and smaller water tank) […]
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K-LINE ELECTRIC TRAINS has added a new engine to its roundhouse of affordable, well-detailed O gauge locomotives – the Fairbanks-Morse Train Master diesel. In the world of toy train diesels, the brawny Train Master is something of an icon, probably second only to the Electro-Motive F3. Train Masters have been made by Lionel since the […]
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SOME OF THE FINEST American Flyer accessories that the A.C. Gilbert Co. developed in the late prewar and postwar eras fit as nicely on O gauge layouts as they always have on S gauge railroads. For that reason, many of you should consider one or both of the animated Flyer stations being reissued by Lionel. […]
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WITHOUT NEW YORK CITY’S Penn Station, there wouldn’t have been a need for the DD1 electric locomotive. And without the shoeboxed-shaped DD1, would Penn Station have been such a success?Nearly a century after the creation of both the station and the locomotive, it’s an interesting question to ponder. The DD1 was born of the need […]
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