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One thing to mention about those old AK EMDs: the hoods are too wide and the number boards too short. This problem persists with the China versions too.
You forgot that the wheelbase on the GP-7/9 is incorrect. This is because they put a GP shell onto an RS-3/RSD-4/5 chassis and changed the truck frames. N Scale of Nevada did sell a kit to fix this. I never did try it. The one or two people whom I know that tried it mentioned that you had to break in the thing once you changed the frame halves. It did not change the performance one way or the other.Are the hoods too wide on the A/K SD-7/9? if so, that would be a shame, as my two A/K SD-7s are still among my best running locomotives.
You forgot that the wheelbase on the GP-7/9 is incorrect. This is because they put a GP shell onto an RS-3/RSD-4/5 chassis and changed the truck frames. N Scale of Nevada did sell a kit to fix this. I never did try it. The one or two people whom I know that tried it mentioned that you had to break in the thing once you changed the frame halves. It did not change the performance one way or the other.
Well, not only the trucks were spaced way too close together, the Geep's bodies were elongated, which exaggerated the weird appearance.
https://www.therailwire.net/forum/gallery/32/medium_146-160223104643.jpeghttps://www.therailwire.net/forum/gallery/32/medium_146-160223104643.jpegDoes the box end show GP9 and a Kato part number?Kato-packaged version of this model doesn't show in Spookshows locomotive encyclopedia either. No GP9s sold by Kato at all. Only the Atlas version.http://spookshow.net/loco/atlasgp79.html
It looks like the part number and model description was added onto the paper insert as a sticker? Typed up on a typewriter?