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I also feel funny criticizing this type of model (since I have never built anything like this), but sine nobody mentioned it yet, I will. The shell seems to sit way too high over the chassis. And by quite a bit. I thought it was just a test photo and the shell was not fully seated on the chassis but when I mentioned it going to the paint shop I think this is its final location. It just doesn't look right in my eyes.
Part of it may be because as Max said, the drivers are too small.The Pennsy loco did have 63" drivers; while the light usra had 57".I've no idea what size the bachmann ones actually scale out at, but they look small.Maybe there'd be room to use the drivers from a consol or kato "Mike- they'd be about right.No criticism implied here...
Did the original Bachmann one have a metal shell? That's the only concern I'd have about this project - trying to get the weight up to get any real tractive effort out of it. My GHQ conversion out of an Kato Mike (L1) is an absolute beast with the traction tire, but that's with a heavy cast-metal boiler shell.
Did you solder the plumbing on the engineers side? what did you use to cut out your styrene block?and did you drill it out to put the wire into it?
First, the boiler sits at exactly the correct height. I spent a lot of time getting this right. It appears to sit high because the drivers are undersized, and I think that this is accentuated by the white wall drivers. (For a visual comparison, check out Nate Goodman's recent post of his Con-Cor 2-10-2 in "Let's see the Steam").
the drivers are smaller than they should be by about half the 1/16th I just mentionedso lower the shell about 1mm and it should look a lot better as a model.victor