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A new long tendered Decapod has joined its stable-mate on the PRR Panhandle Division!!

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The new kid on the block joins its older short-tendered version.

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I am planning to double-head them in front of long ore trains, the way my father saw them in the 1920's and 1930's.

George

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From what I remember of the PRR ore trains, as covered by a fantastic photo documentary in Trains Magazine of the mid 1950s, there were usually two decapods on the head end, and two more pushing on the rear. There was even an excellent 1957 16mm movie of an ore train with two decapods on the headend, and an A-B-B-A set of F Units pushing on the rear. Those ore operations were in the Shamoken/Mt. Caramel Pennsylvania area.

So,,,,,,,,,,,depending on the era you are modeling, you need two more decapods.

@PRR8976 posted:

Nice George...a big test for your bridge!

Tom

Thank you.

You know what?  That thought never occurred to me. 

It might be a test, but I don't think so.  That bridge could probably hold 10 locomotives that size without flexing.

Unfortunately, I'm not going to be able to test it any time soon.  I've got the bridge's tracks covered with butcher paper again due to all the construction dirt being generated.  And to do so would mean hooking up all the track feeders for several power districts.  When the entire Staging Area is wired (both switches and track), I will back both I1s' down the mainline into Staging and cover them up to protect against dust.

George

@Hot Water posted:

From what I remember of the PRR ore trains, as covered by a fantastic photo documentary in Trains Magazine of the mid 1950s, there were usually two decapods on the head end, and two more pushing on the rear. There was even an excellent 1957 16mm movie of an ore train with two decapods on the headend, and an A-B-B-A set of F Units pushing on the rear. Those ore operations were in the Shamoken/Mt. Caramel Pennsylvania area.

So,,,,,,,,,,,depending on the era you are modeling, you need two more decapods.

That sounds awesome!!!  Two more decapods - count me in!   

My father grew up across the street from Weirton Steel on Avenue B.  There was no mill wall then to obscure the view - ore bridges and blast furnaces.  He had seen 3 large locomotives attempting to start a 100 car ore train (more than likely these were gondolas half-filled w/ iron ore, not ore jennies).  He was born in 1916 (the year the Decapod was first outshopped).  By the time he was a boy, the Decapod was the standard freight locomotive for the Pennsy (1924).  He didn't know the type of engine, but my money's on the I1s.

Thanks for the info!

George

The gear box of the Thirdrail Pennsy I1 Decapod is one of the better, slow running gear systems, in a larger locomotive, IMO. The first/front driver set, and the 4th driver set, are flanged, other drivers are flange-less, (blind drivers), to allow operation on small radius, O72 or less, layouts.  The 4 axle trucks, on the tender, can also be a problem, on small radius layouts.    Middle Shelf.

Right in this picture.  Third rail, manufactured, the I1 Decapod, with a short tender as noted above. Thank you for the great pictures. Mike CT.

Last edited by Mike CT
@G3750 posted:

Tom,

Which shifters do you have?  I know you have a B6sb, right?

George

George,

What I call my "modern ones" are the Williams model which is a B6sb and MTH put out an A5 several years ago and Lionel's 1989 reincarnation of the prewar B6.

The rest are Lionel's prewar models which were based on the B6 and came out from 1939-1942. There is something to be said for the prewar war ones, before circuit boards (although the wiring is for someone with 5-6 hands) which are now 78-81 years old and can easily go another 80 years. 

Good luck and hope you rack up many miles on your Decapods!

Tom

@PRR8976 posted:

George,

What I call my "modern ones" are the Williams model which is a B6sb and MTH put out an A5 several years ago and Lionel's 1989 reincarnation of the prewar B6.

The rest are Lionel's prewar models which were based on the B6 and came out from 1939-1942. There is something to be said for the prewar war ones, before circuit boards (although the wiring is for someone with 5-6 hands) which are now 78-81 years old and can easily go another 80 years.

Good luck and hope you rack up many miles on your Decapods!

Tom

I have the Williams B6sb, which has been converted to TMCC with ERR boards and sound.  Awesome little shifter!  Interesting little tidbit - the locomotive will run on O31 in reverse, but needs O42 (as stated on the box) if it is pushing cars.  That's because of the limited swing of the front coupler!

The earlier Lionel (pre- and post- war) locomotives are probably some of the most rugged, reliable engines on the planet.  The Carnegie Science Center (home of the Buhl Planetarium layout, aka the Miniature Railroad & Village) tends to use postwar Lionel steamers to pull its trains.  They are in continuous daily operation and like the Energizer Bunny, just keep going and going and going!

George

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