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MTH PAs are bad news

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MTH PAs are bad news
Posted by ATSFPA51 on Friday, June 21, 2013 6:44 AM

Hello, I too have recently purchased a set of MTH PA-PB-PAs in ATSF livery. When they arrived, the two A units looked lob sided on the track, and none of the couplers lined up. After examining them with the shells removed, it appeared there was flash on the chassis that was not allowing either the trucks to sit well, or the shell to sit well. carefully machined the chassis (with it stripped down so as not to damage the running gear and electronics, removed the couplers and fitted proper KDs (not the ones supplied), bodies now straight, couplers now line up and work. Take them to my local club to run after programming them with their road numbers. Bummer, no go, they sucked out the power from the layout, shorted just putting them on the track, and the crappy sound when I finally got them going were most disappointing. Further the rotten decoders did not respond to the same sound on or off commands as all my other sound decoded locos. Both my home layout and the club run NCE. Ripping out the crap MTH decoders tonight, and replacing them with ESU Select  sound decoders and high base speakers. Very expensive and time consuming fix, but at last a well running set. I will never purchase MTH again!

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Posted by fkrall on Friday, June 21, 2013 10:11 AM

Although I've never owned MTH, I've always understood them to be good locos. I'm interested in anything Alco, including the MTH PAs.

It sounds like you had problems out of the box.  Did you advise MTH, and, if so, what was their response?

Rick Krall

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Posted by BroadwayLion on Friday, June 21, 2013 10:23 AM

MTH has a good rep (as far as I know) with O Scale. They tend to be a bit proprietary, but then in O scale you have to be. I have heard of issues with HO MTH, but the people who run O scale seem to like them, and they do (er did) make O scale subway cars. Alas, no more, they went over the line again with some graffiti cars, and MTA pulled their license to make the products.

Leastwise this is the story the LION had heared.

They do not make HO scale transit equipment, so that cuts them out of my railroad.

ROAR

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Friday, June 21, 2013 11:39 AM

ATSFPA51

Hello, I too have recently purchased a set of MTH PA-PB-PAs in ATSF livery. When they arrived, the two A units looked lob sided on the track, and none of the couplers lined up. After examining them with the shells removed, it appeared there was flash on the chassis that was not allowing either the trucks to sit well, or the shell to sit well. carefully machined the chassis (with it stripped down so as not to damage the running gear and electronics, removed the couplers and fitted proper KDs (not the ones supplied), bodies now straight, couplers now line up and work. Take them to my local club to run after programming them with their road numbers. Bummer, no go, they sucked out the power from the layout, shorted just putting them on the track, and the crappy sound when I finally got them going were most disappointing. Further the rotten decoders did not respond to the same sound on or off commands as all my other sound decoded locos. Both my home layout and the club run NCE. Ripping out the crap MTH decoders tonight, and replacing them with ESU Select  sound decoders and high base speakers. Very expensive and time consuming fix, but at last a well running set. I will never purchase MTH again!

Interesting report.  I have the orginal Santa Fe Sets by BLI, which were made from the same tooling as the MTH uses now.   Can you post pictures of the units?  I would like to compare those against the BLI imported version to see if any other changes besides the problems with the chasis.

I am interested in the B units since the ad shows the B unit looking like it is warped. 

Thanks

CZ

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Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Friday, June 21, 2013 11:43 AM

ATSFPA51--

I owned an HO MTH Erie PA-1 for awhile, and it was a great running and looking unit that did everything MTH said it would do.  My only issue was the rear of it sat just a little low on the frame, which from the many photos I've seen appears to be rather common.  (It is also common with Intermountain F units).

Since that height difference mattered to me, I sold the PA-1 and very nearly got out of it what I had invested in it.  I also sold an Intermountain F-7A for the same reason.

Though I once loved Alcos, I read too much of the company's history for me to want to own them anymore, and instead am buying BLI E units (3 ATSF and 1 ACL so far) to power my passenger trains.

John

 

 

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Posted by dominic c on Friday, June 21, 2013 11:50 AM

I have a pair of pa's also. I wasn't to thrilled with them either. Especially the sound. I can say this because I have several MTH HO's. Steam and diesels. And the proto 3 sound is quite exceptional. But for some reason not so great in the pa's

Joe C

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Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Friday, June 21, 2013 11:52 AM

Both the advertisement photos and many of the models I've actually seen in person are actually bowed slightly in the middle--ie the pilots at each end can be slightly low.

Also--I love love love clean ATSF red warbonnet paint--but the MTH ATSF units appear to be way too shiny, even for my tastes.  Other roadnames were done with a nice satin finish--but not the Santa Fe ones.  They have so much bling a rapper would be envious.

John

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Posted by rrinker on Friday, June 21, 2013 2:51 PM

 I find the sound in my FA's to be quite good - when it works. Those gimmicky remote uncouplers - yes, they have to go, and normal couplers put on, because even withotu pressing the function key they have a tendencey to open up which results in my A unit running ahead of the train with the B unit pulling it alone - at least theyhave decent pulling power even without resorting to traction tires. My biggest gripe (see first sentence) is that if there is a power interruption, and on the club layout there are plenty, the sound stops. It starts up again when you press the finction key - however if the A unit stopped making sound but the B unit was fine, now it flips - the sound shuts off on the B and starts on the A. Repeat a half dozen times for every trip around the layout and you can see why at the last show I was at, I was reading to throw them across the hall. A shame because they are otherwise nice locos and run well mechanically, mine were fine right out of the box. No power issues, the drop outs on the club aren;t the fault of the locos but rather then fitter pieces between modules which are powered only via the joiners connecting them to the powered track on either side. If the sound would just come back as it was after an interruption rather than running through a restart, it would be fine. The sounds themselves do a good job of capturing an Alco chug, and the single chime horn sounds right for the prototype. Too lound for home use, the volume needs to be cut back, but ina  noisy public place, turned up all the way makes them audible - and doesn;t seem to distort. SOunds WAY better than an MRC Alco decoder I tried. Not as good as the Loksound though.

                      --Randy

 

                     


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Posted by snarematt on Friday, June 21, 2013 3:16 PM

I have an A-B set in SP. I got the "DCC ready" (which it's not - lots of soldering) so I can't speak for the decoder issues - my digitrax decoders work very well.  Also no problems with body fit or coupler height.

I have, however, had a lot of problems with gear noise. I've lubricated everything that I can get to without doing a complete disassembly and seen only minor improvement. 

I also have this issue with an ABBA set of intermountain FTs. 

I'm just not comfortable doing a complete tear-down on a set of locomotives that i've paid several hundred dollars for. I also don't feel that I should have to for a "ready to run" product that costs this much.

My Genesis locomotives make these things sound like lawnmowers. 

Is this common? Am I missing something here?

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Posted by Paul3 on Friday, June 21, 2013 9:09 PM

Hmm... Maybe this is why less than 5 of the 1200 locos we have registered in my 70-member club are MTH.  And we've been DCC since 1999.  Their toy-like appearance and reputation do them no favors, either.  At least Bachmann's toy-like appearance is counterbalanced by their cheap prices.  MTH has a top-end price for a not-so-top of the line product.

As I tell people at my club, if one wants DCC and sound, but a DCC & Sound engine.  Don't buy MTH with their DCS.  They are more trouble than they're worth, IMHO.

LION,
Actually, there's no need for the proprietory nonsense that MTH (and Lionel, for that matter) brings to the table.  Our hobby should be based on compatibility at the railhead, which is why the NMRA was created.

John Mock,
Oh, c'mon, are you back on that anti-Alco kick again?  I thought you had moved past that.  Railroads that wanted to be Alco customers didn't have nearly the number of problems that other roads had that were less interested in preventive maintenance (and didn't really want Alcos, either, just using them to beat down EMD on price).  For example, the NH had over 140 Alco 244's, yet suffered only one crankshaft failure in over 20 years of use on RS-2's, RS-3's, FA-1's, FB-1's, FB-2's, and PA-1's, and that was due to misaligned crankshaft supports.  Yet crankshaft failures plagued other roads.  Why did the NH not have these problems? 

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by Rastafarr on Friday, June 21, 2013 11:28 PM

Not a fan of bashing threads, but the truth is the truth. My ABA set of MTH NYC PA's are shelf queens, all three of 'em. Never again.

Stu 

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Posted by ChadLRyan on Friday, June 21, 2013 11:55 PM

I do not have those models, I do have an ACE, but no real track to test it. When I did, the sound was loud, & the elec couplers worked, but not a real true layout test in 5 feet... Doh..
I am on the experimental side tho, & would like to try some of those Elec Couplers on other projects, one being those new Sound Reefers, but I doubt the Reefers DCC have extra outputs... I would have to mill in the Coupler Board to the car floors & fit them. 
I also have not tested the couplers on the ACE to see if it has to have any keep alive current to 'hold' the coupler closed..  My ACE was not the initial run, but maybe a continuation, I did alter the DCC Couplers by some light filing to be 100% Kaydee #5 compatible, but they work even better with the Scale Head versions.

I did experience the sound dip where it had to do the entire 'Start Up Sequence' operation on me. I took it as annoying... Just my opinion..
I want to try playing with their newer GP35's, as I have a little GP friendly Switch yard.

I hope MTH will address your issues, it is a real let down when a new unit is not up to expectations.
Please let us know how it turns out.
I wish you the best of luck.

Chad L Ryan
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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Saturday, June 22, 2013 6:32 PM

Paul,

Your post, for me, is so ironic.

I was planning on posting a thread either here, or on another forum asking New Haven / northeastern modelers how they would feel about suggesting to MTH to consider producing an HO scale GE EP5 "Jet".  I expected that you would reply with your thoughts on this, but I'm sorry to read of some quality control issues with HO MTH units. I had heard many positive comments on them (minus the price tags and some detail issues).

Seems that MTH would be the logical manufacturer to produce a "Jet" since they tend to lean towards northern roads just as Athearn slants heavily towards the west and midwest. 

Paul3

Hmm... Maybe this is why less than 5 of the 1200 locos we have registered in my 70-member club are MTH.  And we've been DCC since 1999.  Their toy-like appearance and reputation do them no favors, either.  At least Bachmann's toy-like appearance is counterbalanced by their cheap prices.  MTH has a top-end price for a not-so-top of the line product.

As I tell people at my club, if one wants DCC and sound, but a DCC & Sound engine.  Don't buy MTH with their DCS.  They are more trouble than they're worth, IMHO.

LION,
Actually, there's no need for the proprietory nonsense that MTH (and Lionel, for that matter) brings to the table.  Our hobby should be based on compatibility at the railhead, which is why the NMRA was created.

John Mock,
Oh, c'mon, are you back on that anti-Alco kick again?  I thought you had moved past that.  Railroads that wanted to be Alco customers didn't have nearly the number of problems that other roads had that were less interested in preventive maintenance (and didn't really want Alcos, either, just using them to beat down EMD on price).  For example, the NH had over 140 Alco 244's, yet suffered only one crankshaft failure in over 20 years of use on RS-2's, RS-3's, FA-1's, FB-1's, FB-2's, and PA-1's, and that was due to misaligned crankshaft supports.  Yet crankshaft failures plagued other roads.  Why did the NH not have these problems? 

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, June 22, 2013 7:33 PM

"Their toy-like appearance and reputation do them no favors, either.  At least Bachmann's toy-like appearance is counterbalanced by their cheap prices.  MTH has a top-end price for a not-so-top of the line product."

Paul,

Since the topic here is diesels, I will assume you are referring to Bachmann regular line diesels? True in the past, you should take a look at most of the new ones.

As for the toy like appearance of most MTH stuff, I agree. steam or diesel, new tooling or stolen Broadway tooling, they find a way to make them look like high rail toys.

As for ALCO's in real life, I agree with you on that one. Sure they had an early turbo cooling problem, but once that was fixed, those locos ran fine. Even though they did not buy more later, the B&O got great service from theirs, as did the Western Maryland.

We love them here on the ATLANTIC CENTRAL with a large fleet courtesy of Proto2000 models at bargain prices.

Back when MTH was just getting into HO, I often expressed my concerns about their product and thier business practices on this forum - but what do I know, I'm just a hick with a pickup, some guns and some little trains without brains.

Sheldon

 

    

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Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Sunday, June 23, 2013 12:35 AM

Paul Cutler--

Apparently you haven't read the excellent Joe Strapac series of books on SP diesels.  I have (read more volumes of that series of books just recently)--and SP was an Alco fan--they bought plenty of Alcos, longer into the '60's and more units of those models than most western roads--indeed more of some models than most roads, period.

SP also had severe mountain grades and tunnels that NH just did not have (nor any other American railroad to the extent of SP), and the Alcos, even brand new 251-engined Century units, just could not hold up in SP's demanding service--even brand new they failed way too often.  The problems are actually quite well documented, and cannot be blamed on unsatisfactory maintenance as some have alleged.  They did run their RSD-15's, on the Cotton Belt, at higher speeds than Santa Fe, which had a shorter route--and at the higher speeds SP ran them, they had overheating issues (which Santa Fe evidently did not experience, or definitely not to the same degree).  It should also be noted the GE U-boats failed too often as well, but apparently were more reliable than Alco Centuries, and SP bought the U-boats to "keep EMD honest".

As I said, I basically liked my MTH PA-1 but didn't think I could satisfactorily fix the uneven body "sit" on the frame.

I don't hate Alcos or I wouldn't have bought the PA-1, the all time classic of diesels.

 

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Posted by locoi1sa on Sunday, June 23, 2013 9:51 AM

Be careful with the MTH bashing. They have a propensity to sick the lawyers on people. Remember that is how they got the tooling from BLI!!!  Our club has 70 HO scale modelers and only one person has an MTH locomotive.

         Pete

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Posted by Paul3 on Sunday, June 23, 2013 11:28 AM

Antonio,
Personally, I'd rather have BLI do an EP-5.  MTH...not so much. 

Sheldon,
Yep, I'm talking about Bachmann diesels (not steam or electric).  I have seen the S-4 and the RS-3 in person, and I'm not impressed.  The RS-3 is particularly bad with some of the worst renditions of AAR Type B trucks since AHM's Yugoslavia-made RS-2.  The S-4...I'm not a real fan of beause I just don't like the way the cab windows look to me.

Hey, we agree on something with Alcos and MTH!  I think someone's warming up the snow machines in Hades right now...  :)

John,
And apparently you didn't read the NHRHTA's Shoreliner, Volume 14 Issues 3 & 4 where they quoted not only road crews but also shop foreman about the NH Alco FA's.  About how they ran and how they serviced them.  About how every morning, every loco in the shop got oil samples taken and analyzed.  If the spectro came back showing higher than normal deposits of different materials, they knew what to fix.  And the spectro machine was right there in the shop, with results after lunch and repairs started that afternoon before the power went back on the road.  The NH believed in preventive maintenance...at least while they still had money (which they didn't after 1961, but that's a whole other story).

And sorry, but SP was not much of an Alco "fan".  Sure, they had a total of 449 Alcos, but Alcos made up just 15% of their entire 1st Generation diesel roster.  On the New Haven, Alcos made up 64% of their 1st Generation roster.  Now that's a railroad that wanted to be an Alco road and wanted them to succeed.  Meanwhile, it looks like SP wasn't really that interested in Alcos.  Certainly not on the roster.  On a road where they had almost 2000 1st Gen. EMD's, less than 500 Alcos isn't that much for the SP.  Let me put it this way; the NH, with it's longest run of just 250 miles, only had 105 fewer Alcos than SP, a transcon, did.

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Sunday, June 23, 2013 9:45 PM

Paul--

The New Haven was relatively flat by comparison, and as such just about any make might have been reasonably successful for them--just as Santa Fe's three relative "orphan" Alco DL-109's ran out their miles on the eastern, flat portions of the Santa Fe and lived to relative old age (something like 22 years of passenger service).  Even brand new, the DL-109's failed on one of Santa Fe's hottest passenger trains on their very first trip--it's well documented.  They realized the DL-109's simply were not built for the mountainous portions of the railroad--but they could really run on the flatlands--so they sent them there and let them grow old there. 

By contrast to New Haven, the SP in California had some of the most brutal terrain of any railroad in America, with steep grades and tunnels of 4000 feet in length that caused both overheating and smoke issues.  They invested in reasonably large groups of second generation Alcos (large as compared to most other purchasers)--late in the game compared to most other American railroads.  Those Alcos and the competing GE U Boats simply could not match the availability for service record of the EMD's, though the GE's held up better/longer, and some U boats lasted into the mid 1980's before they had a career ending failure (many years after SP put in place a policy that a major failure was the end of a GE U Boat).  According to Joe Strapac, SP wasn't even totally happy with the EMD motive power until they got the tunnel motor constructed (several years after Alco was already gone).

I'm not an SP fan, but their operating conditions and operating practices certainly seem to qualify as one of the most brutal environments for motive power in America (if not the most brutal).  For anyone to say that Class 1 railroads knowingly under-maintained a given manufacturer's locomotive (as some have suggested quite often in defense of Alco) is ludicrous, because on Monday mornings the motive power people would be called on the carpet for any and all road failures on hot trains (freight or passenger).

I think it is pretty well known that New Haven got great service out of their DL-109 fleet--commuter trains by day and freight service by night--truly remarkable.  It seems that the New Haven was perhaps ideally suited to the strengths of that particular model.

However, in the high Sierras it would have been a far different case.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Monday, June 24, 2013 11:50 AM

You know what, in the make believe world in the top of my garage, on the ATLANTIC CENTRAL RAILROAD in September of 1954, all the ALCO diesels run just perfect. They have all had their turbos updated, and have no cooling problems and are even tuned so well they don't blow any black smoke - and I like them just fine that way.

And the nice people of Proto2000 have supplied great numbers of them at bargain prices..........

Sheldon

    

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Posted by Paul3 on Monday, June 24, 2013 12:27 PM

John,
The issue here is maintenance, or the lack thereof.  Alcos needed more preventive maintenance than EMD's.  The rule of thumb is that with EMD's you run them until they break, then fix 'em (and the fix isn't that expensive).  With Alcos, if you ran them until the broke, the expense was quite high because the failures were more damaging.  Railroads that didn't understand that had problems.

As for the DL-109's, they also had issues when new on the NH.  But then they were new; teething problems are only to be expected.  And BTW, I thought ATSF only had 1 DL-109 and 1 DL-110 (B unit)?

For example, the Rock Island put EMD's in their lone DL-109 (the famous "Christine").  Not exactly a mountain railroad, the RI.  Why did they do that?

Actually, the NH DL-109 fleet was used on mainline passenger & freight trains from 1941 to 1948.  Only after the PA-1's and CPA-24-5's arrived did the DL-109's go into commuter service (and then they were also removed from most mainline freights due to the arrival of the RS-3's).  The NH got, overall, 18 years of service from their 60 DL-109's (1941-1959).  Not bad for what were, essentially, switcher prime movers.

And yes, I am telling you US Class I's did deliberately under maintain their loco fleets.  The grimy condition of SP diesels throughout their history is evidence enough of that.  It's all about the bottom line.  And RR's are famous for cutting corners when they think they can get away with it.  Why did the NH deactivate the dynamics on most of their engines in the 1960's?  Because they couldn't afford it, that's why.  Now I'm not saying that any RR shop worker saw the Alco in his shop and said, "I'm not gonna work on that!"  It was more like all diesels got the same care from the shop forces, and Alcos simply needed more preventive maintenance than EMD's.  The NH provided that extra preventive maintenance.  Other RR's did not.

 

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Monday, June 24, 2013 1:34 PM

Paul3

John,
The issue here is maintenance, or the lack thereof.  Alcos needed more preventive maintenance than EMD's.  The rule of thumb is that with EMD's you run them until they break, then fix 'em (and the fix isn't that expensive).  With Alcos, if you ran them until the broke, the expense was quite high because the failures were more damaging.  Railroads that didn't understand that had problems.

And yes, I am telling you US Class I's did deliberately under maintain their loco fleets.  The grimy condition of SP diesels throughout their history is evidence enough of that.  It's all about the bottom line.  And RR's are famous for cutting corners when they think they can get away with it.  Why did the NH deactivate the dynamics on most of their engines in the 1960's?  Because they couldn't afford it, that's why.  Now I'm not saying that any RR shop worker saw the Alco in his shop and said, "I'm not gonna work on that!"  It was more like all diesels got the same care from the shop forces, and Alcos simply needed more preventive maintenance than EMD's.  The NH provided that extra preventive maintenance.  Other RR's did not. 

Paul A. Cutler III

Maintenence or not, how a locomotive holds up in good mainenence or low maintenence is a major part of the picture.  If ALCo's needed more preventative maintenence, then they were more costly to operate, and in the end, most costly means less desirable to the RR bean counters.  RR's are businesses after all!

My reading of the post 1940's D&RGW indicated the Rio Gande gave ALCo locomotives a try and found them more expensive to maintain and more prone to troubles and breakdowns in the field.  D&RGW had some RS3 road switchers, 2 PA/B/A sets, some switchers ...  The ALCo PA's were purchased about the same time as the EMD F3ABBA sets (1946) and the D&RGW pulled one PA set off of the California Zephyr around 1950 after only 4 years, the second set was pulled from CZ service around 1958 because they had more than an acceptable rate of road failures.  The EMD F3's by contrast ran under the same condtions until retirement in Jan 1966. 

I love the "lordly Alco PA's too, but the fact that ALCo couldn't compete and closed up in 1969 is telling.   From the ALCo wiki: Alco products had neither the market position or reputation for reliability of GM-EMD's products nor the financing muscle and customer support of GE, and profits were not forthcoming. Alco gradually ceased locomotive production, shipping its last two locomotives, a pair of T-6 switchers to the Newburgh and South Shore Railroad (#1016 and #1017) in January 1969.[3] Alco closed its Schenectady locomotive plant later that year, and sold its designs to the Montreal Locomotive Works in Canada."

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Posted by Burlington Northern #24 on Monday, June 24, 2013 1:41 PM

BN's Alco's only made it so far post merger because the company alco had disappeared, Alco's HI-ad trucks were also trouble as well as crankshaft issues. The newer BN locomotives operated in the wyoming coal fields leaving the pacific northwest region as a safe haven to the last C636's, RS3's, NW5's, F7's, F9's, GP7's, RS11's, and various others. all the alcos were bundled up in dead line's in 1980 just in time for the St. Helens eruption. One Alco C636 escaped the scrappers torch and was sent to Australia.

The BN did not follow through very well on the FRA's required guidelines on loco maintenance , railroads are about money and the BN liked buying locomotives as much as I do. The locomotives were run until they broke down, they were fixed then rinse and repeat.

SP&S modeler, 1960's give or take a decade or two for some equipment.

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Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Monday, June 24, 2013 5:17 PM

Paul--

Yes, I misquoted and you are quite correct--Santa Fe only had one A unit DL-109 and the one B unit.

However, there's preventative maintenance, and then there's an obvious case of "not suited for mountain service".  When a brand spanking new unit fails on a high priority passenger train, well it just isn't likely going to earn itself a second chance on said train for that to happen again.

As for why Rock Island put an EMD engine in an Alco DL-109, Santa Fe did the exact same thing to one set of PA's--installing a 567B? (I think) in the 51-LAB set of Alco PA's, which was then renumbered (oddly) 51-LAC.  The problem was that Santa Fe did not like the derated 1750 horsepower engine that resulted, and thus instead chose to rebuild the other PA's in kind as the experiment was not cost effective enough versus the actual usable horsepower realized in the completed 51LAC set.  51C operated until wrecked, and 51L operated up until pretty nearly the final shutdown of all ATSF PA's, but the set of rebuilds spent much of their time in Southern California, operating on the San Diegans and horse race passenger specials.

Regarding my comments about railroad maintenance staff not willingly undermaintaining their motive power (regardless of make), those comments were printed by Diesel Era Magazine after they interviewed various Class 1 railroad maintenance foremen for their (multiple) Alco Century articles.  These actual railroad personnel were absolutely emphatic that neither they nor their staffs would do such a thing--because it would be risking a firing. 

They further elaborated that one additional reason the Alcos did not make it on the largest, most far flung railroads in America is that they needed to be able to fill up a diesel with fuel and oil and send it to some remote terminal where it was expected to wait until needed to complete whatever task.  With EMD's you could do that--leave the engines idling until called upon to perform a task.  However, with Alco's many times they just failed--the lube oil would leak out, or something else would break--far too often--such that they could not be trusted to stay running.  This earned Alco the derogatory nickname "All Liquids Coming Out".  (This is in the Alco Century Series Volumes 1 and 2 books, published by Withers Publishing, for anyone to read).

Also--SP's penchant for not washing their motive power did not occur until the late 1970's when they were financially strapped.  Up until that time, they actually did a relatively good job of washing and painting their engines--which by the way saw extreme dirt in the multiple tunnels.  Additionally, in the late 1970's new California laws about rolling stock painting went into effect, and the environmentally friendly paint SP was required to use would not stick to the primer and literally came off in sheets.  The terrible paint quality at the time combined with the extreme conditions in the long tunnels made their fleet look absolutely terrible--but the Alcos were pretty much gone before all that occurred.

Just like Sheldon's railroad, on my model railroad, the Alcos were always spotlessly clean and in working order. 

John

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    July 2006
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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Monday, June 24, 2013 8:56 PM

locoi1sa

Be careful with the MTH bashing. They have a propensity to sick the lawyers on people. Remember that is how they got the tooling from BLI!!!  Our club has 70 HO scale modelers and only one person has an MTH locomotive.

         Pete

Pete

The tooling for the BLI PA and other models was owned by the manufacturer who was sued, not BLI.  That Korean manufacturer owned the tooling and BLI purchased the models from that tooling. The tooling for the Big Boy, GG1, FA and EMD F units were all given to MTH since the manufacturer used other tooling for O scale models to build almost identical models for the big L??   Settlement below.

I don't believe it is bashing to report problems.

CZ

 

 

ORMOND BEACH, Fla. AUGUST 15, 2008 -- Broadway Limited is pleased to learn of the settlement of a

long-running lawsuit between its primary manufacturer, Model Korea Trading Company and Mike’s Train House (MTH). While Broadway Limited was not directly involved in the suit, the company cooperated with the settlement to ensure the  financial health of its supplier. As part of the settlement, Broadway Limited delivered 5 sets of tools for some of its older products to its manufacturer in exchange for 5 new tools to be delivered at a future date. The  rest of these is the HO Pennsy I1sa, which will be delivered next month.

“We are never pleased to lose old tooling, but we felt we had sold as many of these products as the market

wanted, and we are excited at the opportunity to have 5 sets of new tools at no additional cost.“ said Bob

Grubba, Broadway Limited’s president and owner. “From our manufacturer’s perspective, I am sure they are thrilled to settle the long running legal dispute and will now concentrate on supplying Broadway Limited

with new products and tooling.“

The tools involved are the HO Union Pacic Big Boy, HO Pennsylvania GG-1 electric, HO Alco PA and FA

diesel and HO EMD F3/F7 diesel. Broadway Limited will no longer produce products made with these old

tools, but would not rule out creating updated versions of these products in the future. No other products

are effected.

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Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Tuesday, June 25, 2013 7:34 AM

MTH products in general have been of very high quality--they do the things MTH says they will do (which is a lot), and they do it well.

However, sometimes the QA/QC process fails, and the PA is a long bodied engine that even in some of their catalogue photos can be seen to not sit quite right on its frame.

One more thing about prototype Alco operations:  The Reading Railroad (which had much experience owning and maintaining Alcos) conducted a very detailed study of second generation diesels to determine which was the best to order more of.  It was called the 5-5-and-5 study.  They took 5 brand new C-630's, 5 U30C's, and 5 SD45's and followed them for their first five years of ownership.  Although the C-630's were impressive performers right out of the gate, the maintenance costs climbed each year.  Even considering the fuel sucking nature of the SD45's, they were by far the cheapest to own, operate and maintain, and they were available for service nearly twice as often as the Alco Century 630's.  It was no contest--the maintenance costs and constant road failures made the actual cost per mile significantly more for the Alco's versus the EMD's--and the GE's also outperformed the Alcos by a significant margin. 

Of course, by the time the study was complete, Alco was already gone.  Reading got basically good performance out of the C424's, but the C430's and C630's were problem engines, and were the first to be stored during any economic downturn (while older engines of other models were kept running).

  • Member since
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  • From: Northfield Center TWP, OH
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Posted by dti406 on Tuesday, June 25, 2013 8:40 AM

UP 4-12-2

Of course, by the time the study was complete, Alco was already gone.  Reading got basically good performance out of the C424's, but the C430's and C630's were problem engines, and were the first to be stored during any economic downturn (while older engines of other models were kept running).

The reason they were stored were not necessarily maintenance or running problems, the Alco lease/purchase agreements were such that if the engine was stored the railroad did not have to make any payments on the lease.  The NKP has a sizable stable of Alco units and they were the first units stored as they did not have to make lease payments which was not the case with EMD units, you paid whether they were stored or not. And the NKP preferred the Alco Units as they could out pull and out stop the comparable EMD units.

Rick J

Rule 1: This is my railroad.

Rule 2: I make the rules.

Rule 3: Illuminating discussion of prototype history, equipment and operating practices is always welcome, but in the event of visitor-perceived anacronisms, detail descrepancies or operating errors, consult RULE 1!

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Tuesday, June 25, 2013 10:22 AM

 

UP 4-12-2 wrote the following post at Tue, Jun 25 2013 1:34 PM:       

MTH products in general have been of very high quality--they do the things MTH says they will do (which is a lot), and they do it well.

However, sometimes the QA/QC process fails, and the PA is a long bodied engine that even in some of their catalogue photos can be seen to not sit quite right on its frame.

 

The problem is hard to understand since the BLI/PCM version of the PA's did not have this problem.  MTH models normally run very well as you said so this model is not the normal for MTH.  I purchased the MTH SP AC6 since it is a model that is very good for the price.  The smoke feature is amazing.

CZ 

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    November 2005
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Posted by prralco on Tuesday, August 13, 2013 10:28 AM

I run an all MTH sd70 roster and their performance and sound quality is infinitely superior to Athearn and I have owned both.

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    January 2010
  • 699 posts
Posted by UP 4-12-2 on Tuesday, August 13, 2013 12:13 PM

As I said, most MTH products run very well and do what they say they will do.  The ACe's are great engines.  I had one that was defective (bad motor) and they fixed it, no problem.

Even my one Erie PA-1 actually ran well--it just didn't "look" right, being slightly nose-high...

  • Member since
    March 2013
  • 450 posts
Posted by EMD.Don on Tuesday, August 13, 2013 1:14 PM

prralco

I run an all MTH sd70 roster and their performance and sound quality is infinitely superior to Athearn and I have owned both.

I guess it's subjective to the individual modeler. I have four Athearn Genesis SD70ace's in the various UP special scheme's and two MTH BNSF versions. All came factory equipped with DCC and sound. I love all six of the locomotives and would be happy if I only owned one specific manufacturers product. But I feel that the Athearn SD70ace's are superior to the MTH versions, especially in the quality, realism, and fidelity of the overall detail. I haven't had any issues with either of the products that would justify staunchly supporting one over the other. However, if given the choice between the two, I would go Athearn. But, as I mentioned in my very first sentence, it's purely subjective and each to their own. 

Happy modeling!

 Don.

"Ladies and gentlemen, I have some good news and some bad news. The bad news is that both engines have failed, and we will be stuck here for some time. The good news is that you decided to take the train and not fly."

N Scale Railroader.

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