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Uncataloged RailKing O Gauge Lake State Railway MP15 Diesel Locomotives Announced

June 2, 2022 - M.T.H. Electric Trains has announced an exclusive RailKing O Gauge Lake State Railway MP15 Diesel locomotive for exclusive distribution by M.T.H. Authorized Retailers Dixie Union Station and E-Z Catch. The locomotive will be available in two cab numbers and will be available in very limited quantities on a first-come, first-served basis, with an anticipated arrival date of October 2022.
Item No. 30-20993-1 Lake State Railway MP15AC Diesel Engine w/Proto-Sound 3.0
Cab No. 1501
Early Order Price: $369.99 (FREE Shipping to Lower US 48)
Item No. 30-20994-1 Lake State Railway MP15AC Diesel Engine w/Proto-Sound 3.0
Cab No. 1502
Early Order Price: $369.99 (FREE Shipping to Lower US 48)
ABOUT THE EMD MP15 DIESEL ENGINE
The MP15 was the last in a line of EMD end-cab switchers that stretched back to the prewar SW1. By the time the MP15 debuted in 1974, the multipurpose road switcher, descended from the Alco RS-series and the EMD GP7, had become the universal locomotive. The cab unit was already a dinosaur and the single-purpose yard engine was rapidly headed for extinction. To create a more versatile switcher, EMD gave the MP15 a longer frame than its predecessor, the SW1500, in order to fit it with the same Blomberg trucks as a road engine. Those better-riding trucks, along with more weight, a larger fuel capacity, and bigger sandboxes, made the MP15 suitable for road duty as well as switching, and allowed EMD to sell more than 500 units before the last MP15 was delivered in 1987.
The MP15 came in two flavors, traditional and modern. The MP15DC used traditional electrical gear and shared the front-mounted radiator and air intakes that had characterized all previous EMD end-cab switchers. It was basically a beefed-up SW1500. The MP15AC, however, incorporated EMD's Dash 2 technology, with solid-state transistors and circuit boards replacing the wiring, switches, and relays found in earlier diesels. Its cooling system was borrowed from the "Tunnel Motors" EMD had created for the Southern Pacific.
The front of the hood was plain, like the rear of a Tunnel Motor, and the radiator air intakes were moved to the sides of the hood, low and at the front of the engine. Not surprisingly, the Southern Pacific was the first customer to order an MP15AC. Because the Dash 2 technology was relatively new and some railroads found it unnecessarily expensive for a lowly switcher, EMD continued to make both the DC and AC versions of the MP15 for most of its production run, and sales for the two models were about equal.
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