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But the Penn Central photo is of another U28C phase (the one I need- one made it to CSX).http://www.aat-net.de/bmz_cache/8/8fa3c66389bd57e02d0781cb6898a40c.image.230x93.jpg
The Railwire is not your personal army.
...The SW-1 is certainly needed and was used by everyone (literally - I think nearly anything that could be called a "railroad" had one at one time or another). ...
That's what I meant by being lazy. Wrong photo.
So I wonder - will the mechanism be like the old Arnold S-2?While there are certainly weaknesses (the springs on the motor vs. a real worm gear; the plastic gears that cracked and caused "limping," etc.), the S-2 was heavy for a switcher, owing in part to the metal shell, but also to the fact that it was basically just a slab of frame material. The pickup did use wipers on one side, while the other side had power going through the entire frame. But it ran great (and in fact, still runs great, two of them on my layout, with Lenz silver mini decoders in the fuel tank area and NWSL wheelsets for Code 55 track). Given the "old school" design of the U25, I'm wondering if they will dust off the S-2 mechanism, make decoder installation a bit easier, and that's that . . . The SW-1 is certainly needed and was used by everyone (literally - I think nearly anything that could be called a "railroad" had one at one time or another). But if they were going to do a switcher . . . the FM H10/H12-44's . . . sigh . . . John C.
I agree... and the fact they're calling it a U28C... could be the dealers mistake, and semantics either way...
So I wonder - will the mechanism be like the old Arnold S-2?
In a word, "no". Charlie Vlk states "Brand new from the flanges up. State of the art. 3D CAD design. Intelligent product design for today’s market. All important variations tooled. Heavy die-cast chassis."Cheers,-Mark
Not the UP. They waited the six months for more HP (no surprise, huh?) - their first switchers were NW2s.
Thoughts, anyone?