Skip to main content

Looks like the last time anyone wrote about these was in 2018.  The O gauge Beeps that are out there, at least the ones I have been finding, seem to have only 4 wheels, while the real Beep had 8 with two Type B trucks.  Plus it looks like the SanteFe was the only railroad to create one, but they are available as a model in a couple other road names.  What is the deal with the O gauge Beeps?  Is it like a 4 wheel industrial switcher in the model version?

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Closest thing to a Beep in real life is a Brookville Locomotive two-axle industrial switcher (I think it's designated BLO-6). It's considerably blockier-looking though.

The "Beep" has no actual prototype. The name (short for "baby geep") is one that Ready Made Toys gave the model when it resurrected the Kusan/Williams dies for a budget-priced switcher. I don't know if Kusan had its own name for it.

---PCJ

CALNNC, you are way off track in your assumptions.

First of all, regarding the name. The Kusan model wasn’t called a Beep. Williams called it a Mighty Mite. RMT first called it a Beep.

Secondly, the model’s inspiration. Look at the typical Lionel postwar GP9. Now look at the Beep. It’s clearly a truncated Geep.

Finally, the information on Beeps. You haven’t been looking too closely. This item is in almost constant discussion on the forum, certainly since 2018.

Interesting story of the prototype.

The model designation that appeared for it in timetable special instructions and in the summary tables of Santa Fe Locomotive Folio Section K was SWBLW, apparently from Switcher, Baldwin Locomotive Works. The actual locomotive diagram in the June 1987 edition of Section K identified the unit merely as "Switcher." Railfans, however, quickly dubbed the unit a "Beep," or occasionally a "Bleep."

The whole story here.

http://atsf.railfan.net/beep/

But that looks very little like the RMT BEEP.

Correct.  But you can understand the confusion if you are one of the railfans who understand that engine to be a Beep and then look at the RMT engine and raise a question.

Much the way, like you, I thought that prototype looked nothing like a beep model at all.

As Paul Harvey used to say, now we know the rest of the story.😉

Last edited by Ron045

pd... RMT BEEPs were set up and designed so that when applying power, the locomotive always started in the same direction and the BEEP bodyshell was attached with long hood forward. Any railroad that was short hood forward was assembled in that manner at the factory. The letter F on the bodyshell signified the FRONT depending upon long or short hood.

The Santa Fe diesel prototype created from a Baldwin switcher and an EMD GP diesel actually was designed AFTER the original o-gauge BEEP (Mighty Mite) was created if you look at actual production dates.

Some RMT BEEP diesels also used prototypical EMD style nomenclature such as BP-7 in bodyshell lettering.

AMTRAK #1971 CC BP-7RMT4561-4562 D&H #7623-7624 BP-7RMT4571 Ma&Pa Jct. MAPA #1502 BP-7

Walter/RMT

Attachments

Images (3)
  • AMTRAK #1971 CC BP-7
  • RMT4561-4562 D&H #7623-7624 BP-7
  • RMT4571 Ma&Pa Jct. MAPA #1502 BP-7

Add Reply

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×