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That's kinda my point, the loco release should be a multiple choice thing. I love the GS4 in Daylight colors just as much as the next guy, more so in WP black, but don't force feed it as the defacto AFT loco. Especially since it was the late-comer to the AFT roster and in and out of the shop so often while performing its duties. Besides, it's a great excuse for someone to make a T1 finally (no, not me, for all those tempted to advise me to enter the N scale manufacturers ranks). They can paint it in Chessie System Steam Special colors for Lee, too. Actually, I won't bash the CSSS, it was what hooked me as a kid into MRRing, despite its LGBT paint scheme. Maybe they could even paint it in Reading colors for Rich.
Are we allowed to critque Kato in this hobby.....? I mean; "can we"....? ;D
You critique would be so much more credible if you actually identified the loco correctly......The GS-4 is a 4-8-4; considered a "Northern".A Mountain is a 4-8-2. Kato doesn't / hasn't made a Mountain.
Come on; take a pill; the "designation" isn't the issue. Ken is stating a valid point on the poor product he received. Kato gets a serious pass way too often. Yep; they are great; a lot of their stuff is number one but they are not perfect and they are far from infalable...They have been "caught" by some and they need to step it up or risk being "one of the gang"....... I know some will burn me for such a statement; the "Katoites" are everywhere but let's not judge a fair and measured response by a mistake in nomenclature.....really............ >Wanna splash me for this ? - knock yourself out..................
I may be mixing up my steam locos here, but wasn't the Reading T1 similar in design to a PRR loco (not the PRR T1)?
Nope. The T1 was a 4-8-4, a wheel arrangement the Pennsy never owned. Moreover, the T1s used the famous Wooten firebox, whereas almost every Pennsy steam locomotive used a Bellpaire. Cabs, tenders, smokebox fronts, etc. were all dramatically different between the Reading and the PRR.Incidentally, the T1s were built by splicing together obsolete 2-8-0s.
IIRC Pennsy had a 4-8-4, but it was electric, not steam. It was the R1 prototype that was considered along with the GG1, which of course was the one that they went with.
I think he's confusing the RDG T1 with the C&O T1, which was the basis for the PRR's J1s.
I was guessing we were talking about steam. So technically the PRR did not own any reciprocating steam locomotives of the 4-8-4 wheel arrangement. ....