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Lionel O Scale
Has not been tested but is still in original outer shipping box and engine is factory wrapped.
- Body
- Die-cast metal tender body
- TrainMaster® Command Control equipped—able to run in Command Control Mode or in Conventional Transformer Control Mode
- Odyssey® System for speed control
- ElectroCoupler™ on rear of tender
- Die-cast metal locomotive frame
- Directional lighting including operating headlight, operating back-up light on rear of tender and operating marker lights
- Authentically detailed and illuminated cab interior
- Flickering firebox in cab
- Wireless Tether connection between locomotive and tender
- Scale front coupler with interchangeable O-Gauge coupler
- Spoked pilot wheels
- Fan-driven smoke unit
- Separately applied metal details
- Painted exterior valve handles
- Accurate, separately applied builder's plates
- Variable ashpan glow
- Cab window glass
- Engineer and fireman figures
- High-torque Pittman® motor with momentum flywheel
- RailSounds™ sound system with CrewTalk™ communication, TowerCom™ announcement and DynaChuff™ synchronized chuffing
- Four traction tires
- Die-cast metal tender trucks
Control
Couplers
Frame
Lighting
Miscellaneous
Motor
Sounds
Traction
Trucks
- Rail Line: Santa Fe
- Road Number: 1795
- Gauge: Standard O Scale
- Brand: Lionel
- Min Curve: O-72
- Dimensions: Length of locomotive and tender: 28"
In 1919, the American Locomotive Company built
forty-five 2-8-8-2 steam locomotives to the specifications of the United
States Railway Administration. These locomotives were the biggest that
the USRA had ever designed and were destined for the Norfolk &
Western Railway. Built for slow, steady drag freight service up steep
mountain grades, the 2-8-8-2 locomotives were a perfect choice for
Appalachian coal hauling service. Among these articulated giants, known
as the N&W Y-3 class, was ALCO construction number 61097, a
locomotive that would have a long career on both Eastern and Western
railroads. Lionel is proud to introduce c/n 61097 in both of her later
liveries, as Santa Fe #1795 and as Virginian #741. ----Many
railroads adopted the USRA-designed 2-8-8-2 locomotives, but the master
mechanics of N&W's Roanoke Shops made further refinements that gave
their Y-3 class a distinctive N&W "look" throughout their long
lives. The modifications included: mounting Worthington feedwater
heaters on the fireman's side, moving the air pumps from the smokebox
front to the fireman's side, replacing the restrictive oval smokebox
door with a large, maintenance-friendly, round door and exchanging the
small eight-wheel USRA tender with a distinctive twelve-wheeler of
N&W design. ----Unlike most
railroads, the ever-frugal N&W was able to maintain a surplus of
steam locomotives during the Depression years of the 1930s. After almost
a quarter century on the N&W, nineteen Y-3 locomotives were sold to
other railroads at the behest of the federal government. World War II
had begun and the rail traffic of fighting men and material had reached a
fever pitch. Especially hard hit by the motive power shortage were
Western railroads such as the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe.----The
Santa Fe was not particularly fond of articulated mallet locomotives
like the 2-8-8-2, but had little choice as the war heated up in the
Pacific and their overwhelmed mainline threatened to come to a
standstill. Our prototype became #1795 of the Santa Fe 1790-class. As
the accurate repaint stencil on the rear of the tender shows, she began
her new life in 1943. The 2-8-8-2 locomotives were used in helper
service and on both passenger and freight runs. They shared trains with
big steam engines such as 4-8-4 Northerns and with new passenger diesels
such as early EMD passenger F-units. The toughest grades, including the
4% Raton Pass, were no problem for the 1790-class, but the 2-8-8-2
locomotives were deemed too slow by Santa Fe's operating department. The
1790-class did do their part for the war effort, freeing up other
locomotives from helper and mountain service. However, by war's end,
Santa Fe was anxious to be rid of their "boomer" 2-8-8-2s.----In
1947, the Santa Fe found a buyer for its 1790-class when the Virginian
Railway purchased seven of the locomotives. Our prototype, formerSanta
Fe #1795, became #741 of the Virginian US-E class. Wanting to wring
every ounce of power from their investment, the Virginian spent almost a
year giving the 28-year-old locomotives a complete overhaul. We have
faithfully reproduced many of these modifications on our model of #741.
These include: a lowered headlight, vertically slotted pilot and
lighted, boiler-top mounted number boards. For almost a decade, the
Virginian ran its US-E class in revenue service. Back in the South, the
locomotives were back to doing what they did best—slowly and steadily
hauling a hundred or so loaded coal hoppers up and down a sawtooth
mainline. These incredible locomotives, including our prototype, were
finally retired in the mid-1950s after close to four decades of
railroading.