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You folks are probably aware, but just in case not, there's a centipede, a like-new K-4S and a weathered H-9 or -10 (I can't tell); as well as some K-4 parts.Harry
It's an H8. As evidenced by the lack of excess piping and such on the boiler.-Cody F.
Well, the running characteristics, and the fact that many of them have the word "Pennsylvania" painted crooked on the tenderand the cab number is crooked also. I don't know if they are all that way, but many are, and the 3 I have here for repairsall have crooked lettering. That really hurts the appearance.
The PRR 2-8-0 with #8014 is a H10. We had two of those before we sold one. The H8 we have has #7475 and the H9 #1132. I may be wrong, but I haven't seen any other numbers on the Key 2-8-0's.Marc
I agree that it hurts the appearance, but I do not believe that all had crooked lettering. The lettering on my 3770 is nice and straight, but is fading/coming off. The previous owner did work to mine that makes it run very well, but the pilot spring needs to be stretched so that the pilot truck stays on the track. Anyway, to avoid thread drift and otherwise rambling, I will stop.
Interesting. The piping looks like the H8 I've seen and from what I can recall, having deleted the listing from my watch list to make room for antique miniature books, the tender is not the one which comes with the H10w. The factory tender has a distinct sort of covering type thingy that I can only gather has to do with the fact that the H10w has an automatic stoker.It could very well be that the engine was beat up beyond just weathering (and a so-so weathering job at that) and is missing a few detail parts.-Cody F.