0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
Forget what has been said about the airliner. It does not look line the 737 that has been previously made. It looks like engines on the rear of the fuselage. That might make is a DC 9. Tom
Definitely not a DC-9; there’s not enough room between the rear door and the end of the APU. Also, check out the blanked out window at the leading edge of the wing root. That’s an AC duct typical of a 737, and not present on a DC-9. I think that’s a 737 classic body, and those ports in the back are the pivot point and jack screw slot for the horizontal stabilizer.
TBOXes are looking sharp! Nicely done MTL and @Shipsure
Yeah, thanks @Shipsure . They are great looking cars (ride height and proportions appear to be correct) and will make a nice canvas for future graffiti releases.
Based on length in relation to the flat car and window arrangement, I'd say they are trying to replicate a cross between a 600 and 700, but if you added a window ahead of the wing, you'd have a 300Length seems like it's in the 110' range.. not the 100' range (remember nose is missing on the MT model compared to diagram lengths.)And, agreed on the TBOX.. They look great.. too new for me, but gives me great hope for what is in store for the future.. ~Ian
Neville, thanks for the research and photos.
So Brown TTX Flat doesn't mean 1960s/1970sBut I agree I can't find any yellow flats either.~Ian
In true TRW fashion we are putting way to much thought into this considering the other major announcement was a Solar System locomotive.Based on the following assumptions:I assume Micro-Trains didn't produce a 2nd fuselage mold for an earlier generic (Boeing ish) airplane body to go on an flat car with an earlier paint scheme. (and I assume the model isn't a true Boeing design for licensing reasons.) The artist rendition is accurate enough to represent the window arrangement of the paint scheme. (while we are lucky if the other renditions have the correct trucks under the railcars let alone in the correct scale and position of those trucks.)So that brings in scale of the plane on the flat in the drawing.. so I reverted back to product photos of previous releases. Depending on how far forward the plane is on the flat, the rear hangs over the 2nd flat roughly 1/8 to 1/4 of the way.. including long coupler distance between the cars. So I estimate the plane is at least 110' long (So that makes it a 300 or a 700.. maybe a 400).It's likely 'NOT' a 100' plane because without the nose, it would barely extend past the first 90' flat, so that rules out 100, 200, 500, and 600... Excess length (and 4 exit doors over the wing) rules out 800, and 900...4 exit doors rules out 400 (but it could be done)The window and door arrangement most closely matches the 500 and 600 but those planes are likely too short.. So that leaves 300 or 700.. If they removed 1 window next to the entry door, they would match the 700If they added a window in front of the wing, they would match a 300FWIWHere is the MTTX in brown.So Brown TTX Flat doesn't mean 1960s/1970sBut I agree I can't find any yellow flats either.Nor can I find any photos of 'painted' plane bodies moving on rail.~Ian
https://www.railcarphotos.com/PhotoDetails.php?PhotoID=64633Yellow flat with used fuselage.Jason
Jason,The following error message appears when the link is clicked:ForbiddenYou don't have permission to access this resource.Additionally, a 403 Forbidden error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.Can you upload a copy of the photo.