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I have seen some of the new release silver series (DC, no sound) Atlas GP7’s for sale on eBay recently. Any word about the DCC sound equipped version?
Yay! Mine arrived tonight. I have more than a passing interest in all this, this will determine if I keep making CF7 kits. I'm really not into making new masters at this point.So, here's what I can report, no time for photos tonight, but I'll do those up shortly.Now mind you, I've now got five of these Atlas GP7's (4 converted to CF7's) this is the sixth, so it's really easy to compare generations here.1) Beautiful model, I got NYC, it's a phase 1 but surprise, no torpedo tube. I thought it would be. Doesn't matter. Beautiful paint and lettering. 2) Pulled the body shell off. Wow, they didn't mess with the fuel tank at all. There are now metal 'lips' at each end instead of the tiny nubs that can be used to pry the body shell off. The chassis is completely different, no split frame now which makes the wipers impossible. I got a DC, and there still appears to be a speaker in there right under the radiator fans. Hmmm. That's where they put it. It's not big but its not small either.3) I tried an old body shell on it, and it snapped right on. In studying the body shell castings, the only ??? change is the cab is now held on with melted-over studs instead of clipped on, but everything else in there looks pretty much the same. Getting the cab off will require work.4) Performance. Boy is it quiet. That's always been the curse of the old Atlas classics, and up until they went away from the hex nut universals, every other one. This one is as dead silent as you'll ever see. Very, exceptionally smooth. They didn't solder the pickup wires onto the top lugs, surprise, they are still there! The wires are deep in the trucks. But the casting looks the same to me. I'm not freaking out about the wires, at least not yet.5) My issue. No change on the fuel tank, but my nose casting won't fit unless that new front metal 'lip' is cut off the frame. It's not that thick, and I think I can just cut if off with flush cutters without having to resort to grinding the frame or disassembling. The front round frame nubs will have to be ground off, I suspect. So first glance, this will work without changing my kit, so I'm happy.6) Now for the bad news. It's funny, it doesn't feel lighter, but boy, it is. For comparison, an old Classic that I own as my primary yard and local GP comes in at 77 grams - pulls 16. Two 'slow speed' 2010 chassis with the DCC cutouts weigh in at 66 grams, and also have what I call 'slippery wheel syndrome' with pulling power of 9 grams. This one weighs in only 61 grams but pulled in a 7.5, so it has slightly better adhesion from the slick wheel days. But yeah, my classics will lift a train up the hill and this just sits there and spins. That's the result of all the frame loss from the electronics as at least it's not the wheels now. So it pulls less than half of the same unit from the 'Classic' era.I keep looking at that speaker and wonder what it would do with a hunk of lead in there instead.... but it's certainly not a necessity. If you're really into sound this should be a winner, if you've got a 2.5% grade and a solid 10-car train, not so much.I will definitely rebuild this one into a lab rat test of a CF7. I'm thinking Allegheny 303 for this one. Overall, I'm good, I'll give it a solid A but a C- on relative pull. Remember it's a 'compared to what?' and I have a 1987 Kato GP38 that snaps in at 28 grams of pull, 4X this unit, same basic locomotive size.
So it pulls less than half of the same unit from the 'Classic' era.
If it's going to be a lab rat, why not put lead or tungsten in the speaker area and test the weight/pulling power?Rich K.
I'm photographing this as I mess with it, and for kit purposes, the object of the game on the chassis is to not do any more than absolutely necessary to fit my parts. So what I can do vs. what others can do is an issue. Yeah, if this were a 'front line' unit, I'd add weight. But it will probably be a display and demo unit.The 2010 chassis required no modification at all to fit my kit. The Classic took a little grinding off of the top headlight clip for the LED mount.This one? Discovered last night that even removing the cast 'lip' off the nose that they added still leaves me 6" too long to fit the CF7 nose casting on, and there's no way can make that nose casting thinner or longer. The entire shell is already stretched a bit right behind the cab to fit. So, yeah. The new chassis nose is more pointy than the old one by about 6 scale inches.Oh, and for those that grump about wires to the truck and getting the trucks off easily, they couldn't have made it much easier. The truck wires plug into the PCB board, and the trucks drop right out without having to do much. I'm going to have to grind the nose a bit and the last thing I want are metal chips in the truck gears. So seeing how easy it is to get the trucks out of harms way, I'm going that way for this one.Looking at the exploded parts diagram you can see that the DCC decoder version is intended to replace the daughter PCB board in the nose, under the basic PCB board. It 'looks like' it sticks out farther in the nose. If anybody gets a DCC one, I need to know EXACTLY how far out that decoder sticks out down to the millimeter, because it may not fit inside my cab. The DC one does, and there's a little space, but not much. It would also appear that if you want to do a chop-nose GP7, it would absolutely be in the way of that.Late update, well they haven't changed the paint formula either, 91% alcohol strips it clean as a whistle, sorry NYC folks.
As of right now there is only 1 decoder that works with this model, the ESU Loksound Nano. The non-sound decoder, Lokpilot 59925 have been released overseas, I'm not sure when they will be arriving over here and from what I've read it will be the same footprint as the sound decoder. The motherboard uses a e24 connector that currently only ESU supports. I'm fairly certain other manufacturers will release a decoder that supports e24 but I've not heard of anything as of yet.