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A proto steam loco pulls its tender, so it would make sense that a prototypical model should do the same, which is one reason I prefer the motor in the engine.In a case where it is more efficient for the motor to be in the tender, I would at least expect that a drive-shaft be used to allow the drivers to be the source of the traction, as is the proper way.Even if a strictly tender-driven loco can out-pull one with the motor in the boiler, or a tender-motor with a drive-shaft to the drivers, I'd take one of the latter.Plus a majority of engines with motors in the boiler (or even a tender-motor with a drive-shaft), are not properly balanced, but rather they have weight crammed in wherever it will fit.As an example, one of B-mann's spectrum-line steam engines, from the factory, is a loco with excellent pulling power, but it is out of balance. I know of one person who has removed 1 gram of weight (IIRC it was from the smokebox end, but of what model of loco I cannot recall) which balanced out the loco. The process actually increased its pulling capabilities due to the fact that all the drivers were making full, and equal, contact with the rails.
I don't know if SMS software likes the secure HTTP protocol (https).