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Thanks Paul.

Dallas as I said in the Alex M thread about his fantasy Pacemaker Mohawk, in our little world steamers are extremely exciting action wise but how much hulking black iron is enough?  Diesels are much more appealing to the eye, especially first generation, when railroads took advantage of those great big sides and decorated them with some awesome paint schemes.  Some railroads did dress up some of their steam varnish, like Southern and GN streamlining steam in the art deco period gave many railroads that first canvas to add some color.  The many different attempts at streamlining also added to the visual appeal.

  Eric, It’s a Weaver Light Pacific. They came in multiple road names and were done in diecast. From what I gather. These were originally built for K-Line and when they ran into trouble Weaver took over the order. They may have even decorated them. They are built similar to the K-Line Mikes detail wise and feature K-Lines cruise. I  got pretty good deals on both that I own. They show up every now and then on the auction sites. One I own was a Lehigh Valley. The other was a military one. Both featured the white striping on the running boards. Other than re lettering the only other mod. was  I moved the bell using a stock Lionel one from the boiler front to the center. They are somewhat close enough to the Rutland’s K1’s. Not sure but the new Lionel ones look longer than these. Not sure where the tooling went for these.

There’s one on eBay now. A CN with the white striping. Cab windows though are red. I paid less for my 2 than this ones going for. Still way cheaper than the latest prices of new steamers. Factor in at some point the K-Line cruise will probably give out. Adding ERR and maybe a better sound set they aren’t a bad deal. They have a mechanical puffer that you may want to upgrade if your into smoke. Probably not the best puller as it has a small motor. But the Rutland ran short passenger trains. If your pulling a milk train. The new cars maybe the best rolling cars I’ve ever run. It should easily handle them.

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@coach joe posted:

Thanks Paul.

Dallas as I said in the Alex M thread about his fantasy Pacemaker Mohawk, in our little world steamers are extremely exciting action wise but how much hulking black iron is enough?  Diesels are much more appealing to the eye, especially first generation, when railroads took advantage of those great big sides and decorated them with some awesome paint schemes.  Some railroads did dress up some of their steam varnish, like Southern and GN streamlining steam in the art deco period gave many railroads that first canvas to add some color.  The many different attempts at streamlining also added to the visual appeal.

I agree Joe.

The CEO and I do like the look of the Pennsy steamers with their tuscan colored cab roofs and tender water tank tops and the all tuscan Pennsy Pacific.

      We just bought a WM Challenger with the tuscan treatment and fireball decor along with the Allegheny DM&IR with the greenish gray  top end and the UP Challenger in light gray with the silver stripe.       A little added color does help out with the all black theme.

I'll have to hold off on purchases right now, but like I said, the photos you posted gave me a renewed interest in steamers.

I've been specializing in streamlined steam, but have a whole bunch of other engines. Not all shown here, as I've gotten way behind in taking photos of my engines. These are all in the living room of my one-bedroom apartment, along with the books, artwork, and other collections.

DSC_7156

Absolutely amazing collection, Andrew - thanks for sharing. I see several of my favorites, especially the T1.

@Dave_C posted:

  Eric, It’s a Weaver Light Pacific. They came in multiple road names and were done in diecast. From what I gather. These were originally built for K-Line and when they ran into trouble Weaver took over the order. They may have even decorated them. They are built similar to the K-Line Mikes detail wise and feature K-Lines cruise. I  got pretty good deals on both that I own. They show up every now and then on the auction sites. One I own was a Lehigh Valley. The other was a military one. Both featured the white striping on the running boards. Other than re lettering the only other mod. was  I moved the bell using a stock Lionel one from the boiler front to the center. They are somewhat close enough to the Rutland’s K1’s. Not sure but the new Lionel ones look longer than these. Not sure where the tooling went for these.

There’s one on eBay now. A CN with the white striping. Cab windows though are red. I paid less for my 2 than this ones going for. Still way cheaper than the latest prices of new steamers. Factor in at some point the K-Line cruise will probably give out. Adding ERR and maybe a better sound set they aren’t a bad deal. They have a mechanical puffer that you may want to upgrade if your into smoke. Probably not the best puller as it has a small motor. But the Rutland ran short passenger trains. If your pulling a milk train. The new cars maybe the best rolling cars I’ve ever run. It should easily handle them.

Dave, thanks for the background on this one. The video looks great! I like your custom milk cars as well. I’ll keep an eye out for these light Pacifics. Agreed the one on eBay is too much if it has the small k-line motor and cruise.  Thanks for the help

@CAPPilot posted:

I see you still need the Penny’s two streamlined K4s; the Torpedo and Streamlined.

I've got those. Way behind on taking individual photos of my trains, and I've pretty much given up. Still have some in boxes, and received this from a member on the Forum this week:

20-20357-1

I think I will just take new photos of what I have, on the shelves, and be done with it.

Old photo of some of my shelves (two made by Classy Woods, no longer in business):

Train-Case-2

I also have these wooden trains from the 1940s by Strombecker, all assembled and painted and now, after many decades, on display:

Strombecker-3Strombecker

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