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Kato does have a Phase Ia GP35 in HO...
My 4014 which had run flawlessly for several years at the last train show I attended suddenly locked up, the motor hums, but the drivers do not turn and there appears to be no rods or linkage binding. Based on reports of awful challenger repair I would now not send it back.
Bob, while I'm a fan-boy of Kato and I even usually prefer cast-on grabs and ladders on N scale models (especially diesels), I have to concede that no matter how advanced Kato's plastic molds are, some cast-on details just don't look as good as when they are added separately. Also, the handrails on Kato steam locos use fairly thick shiny steel wire with plastic standoffs which don't look very realistic compared to the ones on Athearn. Another big peeve of mine is the plastic they use for the crosshead area. The silver plastic has a totally different shade than the metal valve gear and rods. They need to better match the metallic color of the plastic to the metal parts. Fleischmann locos use similar design and they match the color of the plastic parts much better.And if you want a Big Boy with a non-articulated rear engine, my Sakatsu brass model is built that way. And the front engine's pivot is at the correct location too (at its rear).
Wellll...dear Mr. Peteski Curmudgeon...as I stated in my post, the only N-scale Big Boys that didn't have the rear engine articulated were the brass ones. I had about half a dozen brass ones, and although they looked really good if you decided to super detail the Hell out of 'em...with that wonderful characteristic boiler overhang (the rear-engine articulated ones just don't look right when they're on a curve)...they still would only pull about 13 cars. No kidding.
I actually went and measured several handrails on a real FEF-2 on display at Ogden Union Station, and they were all covered with glossy black paint...so the shininess isn't non-prototypical. Also, I was quite surprised at the diameter of both the stand-offs and the railings themselves as being much thicker than what I had assumed they would be.
Hmm . . you had to "super detail the Hell out of 'em" your brass Big Boys? Usually brass steam engine models have lots of details on their surface. My Sakatsu Big Boy has lots of factory installed details on it. I guarantee that it has more details than the possible future Kato Big Boy will have. But like you said, the mechanism desing and the pulling power is poor (typical for a brass engine). I'm sure that possible future Kato's Big Boy will be excellent puller (just like the GS-4 and FEFs are).Um Bob, did you take a good look at your Kato locos? Those wire handrails on GS-4 and FEFs are shiny silver stainless steel (not black). Not very realistic. That is one of the details that I am disappointed in on those otherwise excellent models.But you convinced me: if Kato makes the Big Boy, I'll dump my brass, Rivarossi, and Athearn models.
UP has a 2-10-2 5511 in the roundhouse in Cheyenne.
UP has a 2-10-2 5511 in the roundhouse in Cheyenne. ... Supposedly UP won't restore it to running condition because its to slow.
Well, nothing is as impressive as a Big Boy. Let's just not bother modeling anything else Otto K.
(or even 2-12-2),
I hope you meant 4-12-2 UP type I hope to have a 2-10-2 chassis in a few months.
Well, nothing is as impressive as a Big Boy.