A Big Thank You to the First Readers of my Model Train Blog- first off. The Response was Great, and I am really glad to have you, and glad I started this project. Now, on to the New Post:
********
(Photograph by Nikolaus Bautista) |
Back about 7 or so months ago, they held the Puyallup Fair model train show (the biggest mess of nutty hilarity in model railroading, in the Seattle-Metro area!). I usually never go, as there's too little oddities anymore, and too much Puff and Circumstance (an intentional pun). My Pops hadn't been in ages, so we went to the show. While there, going through the wares of this nice couple from Oregon (pretty big in the independent dealer scene- NW model train show circuit-wise). I found a crudely custom painted TYCO C630, with custom paint. Having bought one with a Hobbytown Drive conversion, customized paint, and a strange sideframe truck mess- many years before (another post/another time), I thought, "Hey, may as well take a glance- IHC isn't bringing them anytime soon!" I noticed something though- it was heavy! Taking a closer look, it dawned on me, that someone had done more than a crude paint scheme; they did some weighting, and put TWO (2) Power-Torque Motors in the thing! I immediately asked to see the locomotive on the test track at the booth. Sure enough, the Power-Torque motors burbled to life, and you could hear and feel it could pull every car in the yard, and still have plenty of power to spare (TIP: a finger on the shell, to feel the vibrations of the motor at work, can tell a lot about the condition of the electrics of a model locomotive.). Getting the locomotive for a fair price, it's now awaiting a draft gear fitting, and No. 1016 will be ready to work.
When it comes to Diesel Locomotives, I love the "Other 3" on the American Front: ALCO, BLW, and FM; ALCO and FM are still around- FM still makes the 38-D engines, AND the ALCO 251! Why don't some of these newer Loco builders in America, power their locos with OP or ALCO power? Imagine an ALCO-powered commuter diesel on the Sounder, the FrontRunner, or on GO Transit... That would be an AWESOME Trip!
(Photo by Nikolaus Bautista) |
More on this Locomotive: The ALCO C630 locomotive presented here, would have had an origin on the Norfolk and Western, as they had the only High-Hood versions. They had some really sharp blue paint schemes. One of the charmers, is actually at the Virginia Transportation Museum, and is stablemates with N&W 611, 1218, and 2156!
(https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/ce/aa/f0/ceaaf059189386bce0a470fd12782d76.jpg)
Someone adjusted the draftgear on No. 1016, to take other kinds of couplers (Kadee on the truck-mounted coupler, most likely). So I'm going to have to rummage and experiment.
(Photograph by Nikolaus Bautista) |
(Photograph by Nikolaus Bautista) |
I'm betting, that once the drafting gear's set-up, it will be hauling manifest drag freights, unit trains, and maybe, may be, hauling hotshots of Apples, Wheat, and other Crop Trains. ALCO's always look good hauling freight. I'm from the Pacific Northwest, and as a kid, my first issue of "Trains Magazine," was found at the doctor's office. I was getting blood drawn, and my Pops found the March 2003 issue of "Trains Magazine" in the waiting room. Needless to say, a yet-to-be-diagnosed 8 or 9 year old- Autistic kid, with a strong fear of needles, and a "narrow focus" on Trains, a magazine about Trains, is pretty good bribery. (I now have a HUGE railroad and model railroad magazine archive- and my Pops only has himself to blame!). That waiting room, was one magazine short, after we were gone.
Anyway, where I'm going with this, is that the issue of "Trains Magazine," that's in question, had a whole article about the Wishram, Washington railyard, of the Spokane, Portland, and Seattle. Seeing those Black and Goldenrod ALCO diesel locomotives, and reading about their diesel roster in one of the sidebar boxes, was something special for a little kid. Those photographs stuck in my mind, and became visions in my head, of what kind of railroad, and later- model railroad I'd like to have. A Railroad, that had Locomotives that were Distinct and Different from the throngs of GE and GM-EMD locomotives that I saw everyday in my Suburban Seattle-Tacoma world (with the exception of the F-units at the head of the long-gone "Spirit of Washington" dinner train; mercy do I miss that train!). My first Train Ride, was either behind an ALCO RSD-4 or an early Fairbanks-Morse H-12-44 (a train ride that will live in infamy, as my Mom WASN'T present, and we ended up going back to Snoqualmie the Next Day! Again, my Pops only has HIMSELF to Blame, and I will tell that story at a future date- I Promise.), and pretty much, the 244, 251, and 38D 8-1/2, inspired me. So now, when I buy diesel locomotive models, I will most likely be buying a Baldwin, ALCO or F-M locomotive (or if I'm lucky, a Krauss-Maffei, or an EMD BL2!).
At the end of the day, I don't regret buying a "TYCO" ALCO C-630, but I would like to swap the "Vampire" Sideframes out with ones that are "More Realistic" for sanity's sake (maybe I could find some IHC/Mehano ALCO C-628 truck sideframes or something! Who knows?). Something about a High-Hood ALCO locomotive, that somehow seems regal (No knocks to the SP&S's C636 fleet; they were the Most Nobel 2nd Gen Diesel Locomotives in the Pacific Northwest. True Rebels against the "Parent" Road.). I hope that when my Pike is built, that ALCO's will be running fast Refer Trains- full of Apples, Cherries, and other great produce, from Spokane, Walla Walla, Pasco, Wenatchee, and Yakima, to the Ports of Seattle, Tacoma, Aberdeen and Vancouver, Washington; making great time, and kickin' the competition (Uncle Pete and Been Nothing Since Forever). That's the dream- a Pike operated better than America's Railroads today (all in 1/87th Scale.), with Steam, Diesel, and maybe a dash of Traction. With Passenger, Freight, Tourists, and TV and Movie Trains too! Mom, Pops, and I, running the trains as a family- with Mom highballin' a Hotshot Circus Train (her dream, that I've been helping her with for the last 6 years!). That's the dream, and I don't regret this ALCO, I don't regret this TYCO, and I don't regret the Power-Torque motor.
The lesson here, and paraphrasing the Piano-playing, ALCO-Loving Chief Mechanic of the Delaware-Lackawana Railroad, is "Anything is Crap if you DON'T Maintain it!" The first TYCO Power-Torque motor I seriously looked into, to maintain, I carefully went through it, and it became one of my favorite locomotives. Never do I regret buying it (from a man who was very ill- very kind family too). Never do I regret any purchase (buyer's shell-shock, but NEVER buyer's regret). Don't judge a book buy its cover- read the dust-jacket, both inside flaps, and maybe the sample pages available on Amazon, then pass judgement if it's something you want to invest your energy into. That's what I did with these motors, and that's why I have No. 1016.
One last thing, if anybody recognizes the paint-scheme, and the letters "SV&W," I would like to know more about whatever railroad this locomotive came from, and the person who made it the way it is today. Thank you for your time, and enjoy the rest of your day.
(http://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/Uo8AAOSwBahVRLui/s-l300.jpg)
Anyway, where I'm going with this, is that the issue of "Trains Magazine," that's in question, had a whole article about the Wishram, Washington railyard, of the Spokane, Portland, and Seattle. Seeing those Black and Goldenrod ALCO diesel locomotives, and reading about their diesel roster in one of the sidebar boxes, was something special for a little kid. Those photographs stuck in my mind, and became visions in my head, of what kind of railroad, and later- model railroad I'd like to have. A Railroad, that had Locomotives that were Distinct and Different from the throngs of GE and GM-EMD locomotives that I saw everyday in my Suburban Seattle-Tacoma world (with the exception of the F-units at the head of the long-gone "Spirit of Washington" dinner train; mercy do I miss that train!). My first Train Ride, was either behind an ALCO RSD-4 or an early Fairbanks-Morse H-12-44 (a train ride that will live in infamy, as my Mom WASN'T present, and we ended up going back to Snoqualmie the Next Day! Again, my Pops only has HIMSELF to Blame, and I will tell that story at a future date- I Promise.), and pretty much, the 244, 251, and 38D 8-1/2, inspired me. So now, when I buy diesel locomotive models, I will most likely be buying a Baldwin, ALCO or F-M locomotive (or if I'm lucky, a Krauss-Maffei, or an EMD BL2!).
At the end of the day, I don't regret buying a "TYCO" ALCO C-630, but I would like to swap the "Vampire" Sideframes out with ones that are "More Realistic" for sanity's sake (maybe I could find some IHC/Mehano ALCO C-628 truck sideframes or something! Who knows?). Something about a High-Hood ALCO locomotive, that somehow seems regal (No knocks to the SP&S's C636 fleet; they were the Most Nobel 2nd Gen Diesel Locomotives in the Pacific Northwest. True Rebels against the "Parent" Road.). I hope that when my Pike is built, that ALCO's will be running fast Refer Trains- full of Apples, Cherries, and other great produce, from Spokane, Walla Walla, Pasco, Wenatchee, and Yakima, to the Ports of Seattle, Tacoma, Aberdeen and Vancouver, Washington; making great time, and kickin' the competition (Uncle Pete and Been Nothing Since Forever). That's the dream- a Pike operated better than America's Railroads today (all in 1/87th Scale.), with Steam, Diesel, and maybe a dash of Traction. With Passenger, Freight, Tourists, and TV and Movie Trains too! Mom, Pops, and I, running the trains as a family- with Mom highballin' a Hotshot Circus Train (her dream, that I've been helping her with for the last 6 years!). That's the dream, and I don't regret this ALCO, I don't regret this TYCO, and I don't regret the Power-Torque motor.
The lesson here, and paraphrasing the Piano-playing, ALCO-Loving Chief Mechanic of the Delaware-Lackawana Railroad, is "Anything is Crap if you DON'T Maintain it!" The first TYCO Power-Torque motor I seriously looked into, to maintain, I carefully went through it, and it became one of my favorite locomotives. Never do I regret buying it (from a man who was very ill- very kind family too). Never do I regret any purchase (buyer's shell-shock, but NEVER buyer's regret). Don't judge a book buy its cover- read the dust-jacket, both inside flaps, and maybe the sample pages available on Amazon, then pass judgement if it's something you want to invest your energy into. That's what I did with these motors, and that's why I have No. 1016.
One last thing, if anybody recognizes the paint-scheme, and the letters "SV&W," I would like to know more about whatever railroad this locomotive came from, and the person who made it the way it is today. Thank you for your time, and enjoy the rest of your day.