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I've been trying to find a few parts for a detailing project but haven't had much luck.I am looking for locomotive marker lights in N scale, not the type that would be on a caboose and have a lantern shape. They were commonly found on first generation diesel power. I think they are called marker lights, also have seen them called class lights but haven't found much while searching either term.Here is a link to a HO scale version of what I am looking for: http://americanscalemodels.com/HO/HO_Detail_Parts?product_id=1732 Shapeways has over one hundred pages of items when I searched for this, if I missed a store of a trw member with them let me know!Nat
I think they are called marker lights, also have seen them called class lights but haven't found much while searching either term.
Terminology:Markers are displayed on the rear end of a train.Classification lights display classification signals on the lead locomotive of a train. Usually in conjunction with similarly coloured flags. White flags/lights for an extra train not on the timetable schedule, green flags/lights for a regularly scheduled train with additional section(s) following on the same schedule.
So, (and this is not meant to be a smart-a$$ question) - the terminology is based on direction? Lights at the front of the train are class lights, and at the back are markers? So if the locomotive is pushing the train, the lights on the locomotive are markers, but if it is pulling then they are class lights?
TL:DR explanation of why this part may be referred to as both class lights and/or markers, but technically class lights and markers are semantically different things with different functions and usage under different rules, even if physically the same.
Athearn offered their Big Boy classification lights as separate parts for a while, and I bought up several to replace broken parts. Maybe they've still got them in stock.
Yes, for example the Big-Boy "light fixture" (shown in reply #4 of this thread) would have 3 or 4 various color lenses (red. clear, green) and could be rotated to the desired color as the situation dictated.
Well, since we are talking about late steam era practices, not exactly. Classification signals (class lights) could only be white, for an “extra” train not in timetable, or green, for a following section of a scheduled train. They could only display one color at a time, white (clear) OR green, regardless of direction of the lens.Markers, normally red, marking the end of a train while running, had red, yellow (and sometimes even green lenses depending on railroad) permanently installed and could be physically rotated when stopped (you wouldn’t want an approaching train confusing a marker light with a red signal).In the very unlikely event of a Big Boy running in reverse behind a caboose as a pusher, the permanently wired electric class lights would be turned off and portable markers would be likely be hung somewhere on the locomotive.I’m attaching a couple of pics from a Santa Fe 1948 rulebook, which I believe is fairly typical of the era.Now if we could only get nice models of these fixtures....whatever people want to call them Otto K.