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Hello Everyone,

 

My original American Flyer is long gone.  However, I would like to have the same set again.  

 

The oldest picture here is dated Christmas 1960.  I was born in 1958 and my brother in 1954.  So, I would expect this set was made sometime between 1954 and 1960.

 

Can anyone tell me:

1. The number of the engine and every car.

2. Do you see a variation I need to know about?

3. What was the set number?

4. What cars are in the set, and what cars might have been purchased separately?

 

I would appreciate any other information you can tell me.

 

Sincerely,

Rick

 

 

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Very nice layouts you had. The engine is a pacific style and the tender appears to be a Northwestern road name from the slanted white lettering. A possible set would be a 1957 20320 with some extra cars. I was keying on sets that had both a C&NW Pacfific and a MKT yellow/Tuscan boxcar. There are a number of sets made through the late 50's and early 60's that are possibilities if extra cars were purchased. Gilbert also made a large number of uncatalogued sets that are also possibilities. Hopefully someone more familiar with 5 digit sets can help. 

I know little about Flyer, except for seeing it in stores as a kid, and neighbor kids

had Atlantic sets, but as in the case of a Marx engine on another thread, that second

picture shows me a four wheel rear truck on the near loco in the second picture,

That means the loco is a Hudson.  No sets came with that many cars, so...add-ons,

or combined sets.  If you had only one engine, I'd say the base was a Hudson freight

set.  In the fourth view, the engine is far away, and looks smaller, maybe an Atlantic,

but that just might be the photo....

That Pacific appears to have a diecast trailing truck like the one that's on the Pennsy K-5.  The Chicago and Northwestern 21085 from 1958 and a few years after that had the diecast trailing truck instead of the plain/exposed wheel version like the 282 and 283 that were produced before the 1957/1958 switch to 5 digit numbers in the Flyer line.  I got out a magnifying glass and it looks like a C&NW herald in the 2nd and 4th picture.  There's a tuscan colored Union Pacific 3 bay hopper - that was 24216 from 1958-1960.  The black lumber load flatcar is probably a 24516 NH that ran from 1957-1959, or possibly the 928 NH that ran through 1957.  Yellow boxcar with tuscan roof is a MKT numbered 937 that ran until 1958 or the hyper rare 24016 from 1958 only.  Single dome Gulf tankcar is either a 925 that ran through 1957 or a 24310 that was in the line from 1958-1960.  Yellow generator on a depressed center Erie flatcar is either a 946 from 1957 or 24529 from 1957-1958.  3rd picture looks like a rocket launching flatcar in front of the caboose that's either a 969 from 1957 or a 25045 from 1957-1960.  Caboose looks like a Reading 930 from 1953-1957 or 24603 1957-1958, 24608 from 1957, or 24610 from 1958-1960.  Transformer is indeed a Lionel TW.  Those are very educated guesses on the engine and cars based on what I could make out with the magnifying glass and a couple Greenberg illustrated books on Flyer.

 

Gilbert mixed 3 digit cars with 5 digit cars to fill out sets in 1957 and 1958; 1957 had a number of 3 digit cars appearing in the new 5 digit numbered boxes.  A handful of 5 digit cars like the 24016 MKT boxcar are in the mid to high hundreds for a VG or better car.  Good luck on your hunt - most of the items can be had for not too much $$$.

Last edited by MTN

Thanks everyone.  

 

Just so you know:  I am familiar with trains.  I have a few Flyer and a lot of Lionel postwar and MPC.

 

Yes. The transformer is a Lionel TW.  I never got to ask Dad why that was. . .

 

Also, the caboose had a (blue?) man that moved in with track power and back out when off.  It was brown.  Does that help identify the year?

 

The engine was stored in a brown, corrugated roll.  The chug chug and smoke were awesome.

The rocket launcher car was a blast.  Broke many rockets, and a few knick knacks trying to catch it!

We had a re-railer section of track.

 

I remember both yellow/blue and red/white boxes in Dad's storage box every Christmas.  

Blue and yellow boxes up to 1957, red and white boxes will be 5 digit items.  Sounds like you had an action caboose - I'm out the door in a minute and don't have a number for that.  That Lionel transformer was great for your Flyer trains - your dad probably got a good deal on it instead of getting a Flyer transformer.  The set probably came with a small transformer that was adequate for a small loop of track and the train, maybe a low powered accessory.  The corrugated wrapper is how your engine was packed for inclusion in its set - good job on remembering those details...

With the new information about the caboose and the great magnifying glass examination by MTN the only possible starter catalogued set would be the the 1957 20320 Mountaneer. It contained the 925 Gulf tank car, 937 MKT box car, 928 New Haven lumber car and the 979 Action caboose. The engine was the C&NW Pacific. Since yours appears to have the die cast trailing truck it would be a 21084, indicating a late production set. The 21084 was an uncatalogued engine packed in some of the 20320 sets. The more common engine in that set was the 283, but it did not have the die cast trailing truck. 

The cars above would have been in blue/yellow boxes in the set box. The other cars if purchased in 1958 or later to add to the set would have been in red/white boxes. This set also included a 50 watt transformer. Someone decided the larger Lionel transformer was better. 

A major caveat is Gilbert made hundreds of uncatalogued sets, some with as many as 13 cars. Robert Tufts published a book detailing these. It is not computer searchable so I have not been able to quickly see if one of those is a closer match to your train set. 

All the Gilbert catalogs are posted online at www.myflyertrains.org if you want to see the catalog listing. 

Rick, these are really interesting pictures. There is a nice selection of Plasticville on the layouts. The Christmas '59 Layout is on grass mat that was common then. The '65 layout did not appear to use the grass mat. In the '59 pictures one track switch is visible, in the '65 layout none are visible but the controller is on the control panel. It appears to be a standard two switch comtroller, not the rare single switch controller. The Gilbert control buttons above the switch controller were likely for the action car (rocket launcher) and an uncoupler. Not sure what the 3rd one would have operated. Was there a billboard whistle Or another accessory?

Mark, thank you for the information. I do not have a 21084 so I looked at the Doyle book. It is silent on the trailing truck style. I pulled out an older book, 1991 by Deger and sure enough it states the 21084 has the one piece drawbar/trailing truck. No variations are listed. No pictures are included of a 21084. There is a flyer website that has a picture of one but i did not trust it because some of the pictures on that site are apparently photoshopped, the 21084 picture is clearly photoshopped from the 1956 283 picture. I have several 21085's all with the diecast truck.

If you have the set number of your set but not the Tufts book I can look it up for you and tell you who sold it.

Originally Posted by AmFlyer:

With the new information about the caboose and the great magnifying glass examination by MTN the only possible starter catalogued set would be the the 1957 20320 Mountaneer. It contained the 925 Gulf tank car, 937 MKT box car, 928 New Haven lumber car and the 979 Action caboose. The engine was the C&NW Pacific. Since yours appears to have the die cast trailing truck it would be a 21084, indicating a late production set. The 21084 was an uncatalogued engine packed in some of the 20320 sets. The more common engine in that set was the 283, but it did not have the die cast trailing truck. 

The cars above would have been in blue/yellow boxes in the set box. The other cars if purchased in 1958 or later to add to the set would have been in red/white boxes. This set also included a 50 watt transformer. Someone decided the larger Lionel transformer was better. 

A major caveat is Gilbert made hundreds of uncatalogued sets, some with as many as 13 cars. Robert Tufts published a book detailing these. It is not computer searchable so I have not been able to quickly see if one of those is a closer match to your train set. 

All the Gilbert catalogs are posted online at www.myflyertrains.org if you want to see the catalog listing. 

I took another look at the Deger Greenberg book (I have the 5th edition from 1997).  The 21084 is described as having the one piece trailing truck/drawbar assembly.  Seems odd that Flyer would upgrade the plastic boilered C&NW Pacific in 1958 with the diecast trailing truck when it was renumbered to 21085.  Cost cutting must not have gone into full effect at Gilbert as that diecast assembly would have been more expensive to make than the stamped steel drawbar with the bare plastic wheelset.

Lots of info here, most right, some wrong. The guess that the base set might be the 20320 from 1957 makes sense, but the 5620T from 1956 was identical. Both sets came with the 928 lumber car, 925 Gulf tank car, 937 MKT box car, and the 977 action caboose. The 1957 catalog incorrectly shows the caboose as the 979 action caboose but this is incorrect as all known sets supposedly had the 977. The third picture appears to show the brass railings and ladders on the caboose, a tip-off that it's a 977. The locomotive is definitely a plastic C&NW Pacific. Most sets had the 283, but a few 1957 sets had the identical locomotive numbered 21084.

 

As far as boxes go, the set quite possibly was originally packed with the blue/yellow boxes (the ones with the 1947 copyright date), but the later red/white boxes were also used with 3-digit components. Several of the 1956 sets came with the red/white boxes.

 

It's great that the photos were saved to remind everyone of those wonderful trains!

Last edited by Craig Donath

Thank you again for all the information Guys!  This is also taking me on a trip dowm memory lane.

 

Here's a little more information to try to help nail this down even more:

 

My parents kept a record book of every "major" purchase they ever made.  From their log: Our American Flyer was pruchased in November or December, 1957.  

For . . . $37.50.

 

So, that puts my set right at the 1957/1958 transition that many of you mentioned.  That doesn't help with identifying it . . .

 

Also, we had a local hobby store; but, we also had a hardware store that had a huge inventory of trains only around Christmas.  So, I'll assume this could have been a new 1958 set, or a 1957 set from last year's inventory.  

 

More info:

I remember the pair of switches were in a red/white box.  I believe some or all of the track was also in red/white boxes.  I do not know if all the cars were in blue/yellow boxes.  

 

I do not know if the extra cars were purchased at the same time, or later.  I would think "later" because $37.50 was a fortune to Mom & Dad in 1957.  The picture shows we had them all (at least) by January 1960.

 

MTN:  You are probably right about Dad buying the Lionel TW because the Flyer transformer probably couldn't handle the extra track or cars.  I attached one of the full pictures at the end of this.  It shows my brother using a black American Flyer transformer in the 1960 picture.  Good Call!  That also leads me to believe Dad initially bought a set.

 

AmFlyer:  Good catch on the different platforms.  I'll explain that in a minute.  Yes. Ours had a single switch controller with 2 switches.  We had an inside figure eight (some years).  Dad built the control box.  On the left is a white fuse holder, a white power (household 120 volt) switch with a red lamp next to it.  The 3 buttons were for the rocket launcher car and the whistling billboard.  I don't remember what the 3rd button was.  I'll assume an uncoupler but I don't remember ever using an uncoupler.  The brown household switches on the right were to turn on the lights he put in the O27 Plasticville buildings and the Christmas Tree lights.  I loved the whistling billboard!  I have 2 different versions on my current layout.  Also, you are correct.  It was not a bay window caboose.

 

Plastic engine?  That surprises me.  I am definitely not saying you're wrong.  It just surprises me.

 

Okay, at this point I must announce:

"Forgive me people, for I have sinned."

 

Apparently (or so I am told) around the age of 5-6, I said I wanted HO.  

I know, I know, I know. . .

Dad bought someone else's existing HO platform and trains.  The 1965 pictures are the 3/4" plywood, HO platform, cut down to fit on top of our homasote platform.  It came with painted roads, glued-down grass and dirt, and HO Plasticville.  The 1965 pictures show the HO on the inside and our American Flyer running on the outside loop.  Sometime after those pictures, Dad sold the Flyer.  A very, very sad memory indeed. 

 

 

 

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Last edited by rick s

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