0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
FYI from scaletrains.coms -"The only physical change was to the screws that retain the fuel tank to the frame. They were shortened just a bit so that they don't bottom out before the tank is tight. The other thing was for the factory to make sure the paint wasn't too thick on the bottom of the chassis so that when the screws were put in place the paint around the hole didn't pucker and keep the tank from seating properly."-Mark
Got mine today. Wow! ST showing some of the other mfg's how it's done in terms of road accurate details and not shipping junk. I feel that some thought went into these as they seem to be at the least a well executed model without the glaring flaws seen with other attempts at road specificity. I wish ST made models that fit my prototype, because I could really go for a bushel of CP Rail SD40-2's or CN SD40-2W's, but CR showed up in my turf often enough repaying HPH (maybe not in my era but a minor detail). They also run very nicely, which can seem to be a sacrifice made in favor of details.Bravo to ST for putting in the effort and getting it right. Now I'm not saying that they're perfect matches of each road (I honestly wouldn't know), but MILW have the short fuel tanks and the CR's have the flexicoils that Big Blue's fans have craved for so long. To me this is how it's done, and I get why Ed's smitten with his... they're smitten ready
Not only that, but they even got little things right on them. Sure, including a cab signal box is nice, but ALSO replicating the non-standard placement of the nose grab irons that they required means they paid attention. But you know what REALLY got me? The plows. The Conrail units all have the little debris kickers like I modeled on my 6366. I was a bit surprised that ALL of the ST units came with them instead of the bigger ones that seemed more prevalent and at first thought "well that's lame". But then I started digging up photos of each of the three units I got and you know what? They all had the smol bois. Another point to ST. They did their homework.
It certainly shows that it can be done if the mfg choses to. ST certainly has made an impression on me.
And don't even get me started on the "luxury feel" of the always lit number boards. That's just freaking cool.
Yes, even a feature in my DC world. About the only issue I've noted is they're hard to control at the low end of the throttle... I assume this is either due to the Kato power pack that mine are DC versions of a model that's designed to be DCC.
Not sure how that would work. Every DCC medel lis DC model with a decoder added. It uses a DC mechanism (gearing and motor). It is not like there is a special DCC motor. I don't know which specific motor Scale Trains uses in that model, but it is just a plain old permanent magnet DC motor (likely not even a coreless motor). Should work just as well on DC as on DCC.
I don't know which specific motor Scale Trains uses in that model, but it is just a plain old permanent magnet DC motor (likely not even a coreless motor). Should work just as well on DC as on DCC.
Speaker wire routing, I did this, not factory. (See where BLI gets brownie points? Speakers already installed in stealth)