0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
How does the Kato E8 match up with IM cars?
The above posts are correct; the IM coaches are a prototypical version of the "400" coaches. All the kato cars are total foobs with the possible exception of the RPO and the diner (not in this paint job however - they had some of the kato diners which are AC&F cars because of their joint venture on the "City" trains - when Milw took this over from CNW, the CNW cars were released into general service - some of them made their way into "400" consists - the "City" diners would occasionally find their way into the Dakota 400 consist still in their original UP paint but lettered for CNW). Nate
Actually the Kato RPO is dead on for C&NW 60 foot RPO/storage cars #8225-8226. These were built in 1949 by ACF and are identical to UP #5900, 5901 and 5902 which the Kato model is based on. The Kato model has 5 windows on one side and 4 on the other as per the prototype.
Re the dining car, Jim Scribbins writes this in his "The 400 Story" (p 107) - In the summer of 1956, an ex-City ACF diner ran in the Dakota 400, along with a tavern-lunch counter car. From then on, either those diners or ACF ex-City cafe-lounges were operated on the Dakota in preference to the 400-type cars. By fall of 1957, the ex-transcontinental diners were newly painted in C&NW yellow and green, but Union Pacific "Streamliner" livery remained at least until summer 1958 on the cafe-lounges.Does that not imply that the Kato scheme is correct for the dining car (at least as of 1957)?Thanks,-Mark
The problem is that by the time the cars were repainted from UP colors to yellow and green, C&NW was using a simplified scheme without the pin striping. So Kato could have done the later scheme and been prototypical on two cars, but they picked the flashier early scheme which is incorrect for the cars.
The lettering on the E8 is also incorrect; it is a combination of two different paint jobs. The green lettering on the side would not have been on the units the same time as the elaborate nose emblem. When they went to the green lettering on the side, they went to a simple CNW herald on the nose. In order to match the paint job on the cars, the E8's would have to have silver lettering on their carbodies. The nose emblem is correct as to time period with the lettering on the cars. Strip the green lettering off the E8's and replace with silver lettering, and it will be close to correct (micro scale has decals that you can do this with). Nate