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Athearn passenger cars: how accurate

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Athearn passenger cars: how accurate
Posted by caboose63 on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:02 PM

I have several athearn streamliner and heavyweight passenger kits and i was just curious how accurate are they? are they based on prototype cars or the whimsy of model railroad car designers. the heavyweight round roof cars remind me of some similar looking coaches i saw in late 1960's on the C&O near bellaire or brutus michigan.

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Posted by wholeman on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:05 PM

Athearn cars fill a niche market.  That being said, they are not full length.  They are intended for people who have really sharp curves (usually less than 22").  They are fair in detail.  I don't personally own any but know of several people that have them.  They are not based on any particular prototype.  They do roll smoothly and you can add an interior.

Will

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Posted by rjake4454 on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:16 PM

I have 7-8 Athearn streamlined passenger pennsy cars and I absolutely love them. They have weight (unlike IHC), they don't wobble, they look great. The only tips I have are to replace their couplers with Kadee couplers, this is an easy task and it makes all the difference. Also, on some of the eastern roads like the PRR and N&W, the car sets come with dome cars, which I have heard is not prototypical, so I don't use the dome car, instead I replace it with another regular passenger to make the train longer.

The passenger cars are a little on short side compared to the prototype, but this doesn't bother me, they run on virtually any curves, no overhang, very reliable, sturdy cars. Some of them come with light bulbs inside, some of the bulbs work, some don't out of the box. When the cars do light up, they look amazing and you can't beat athearn when it comes to prices. Very affordable and reliable.

In this ever changing hobby, sometimes vintage is indeed better. If you hook up 6 old athearn santa fe streamlined passenger cars to a super chief, you won't be disappointed.

 

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Posted by onequiknova on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:24 PM

The sreamline mail and baggage cars are based on ATSF cars and are the correct lenth. I think I've heard the coach is correct for some eastern road, but I'm not sure. Every other stremline car is too short.

  As far as the heavy weights go, the mail and baggage cars are based on a prototype that slips my mind, (probably ASTF), but the rest of them are too short to match any protoype cars AFAIK.

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Posted by mobilman44 on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:26 PM

Hi!

Some of the Athearn cars are based on Santa Fe prototypes.

I built up two trains lettered for the ATSF, one heavyweight and one streamline.  The heavyweights got KDs, American Limited diaghrams, and Intermountain wheelsets.  I sprayed and relettered a few to be more ATSF specific, and ended up with a 13 car "train".

The streamline cars were similarly upgraded, and I ended up with a 12 car train.

Funny thing......  I have a lot of Walthers ATSF light/heavy passenger cars which are more prototypical (spell?).  However, having a BLI 4-8-4 pull that string of Athearn heavyweights is one of my favorite sights.  I suspect its because "I built them", but in any case, they get used a lot.

ENJOY,

Mobilman44

ENJOY  !

 

Mobilman44

 

Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central 

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:31 PM

caboose63

I have several athearn streamliner and heavyweight passenger kits and i was just curious how accurate are they? are they based on prototype cars or the whimsy of model railroad car designers. the heavyweight round roof cars remind me of some similar looking coaches i saw in late 1960's on the C&O near bellaire or brutus michigan.

First lets seperate the two:

Streamliners - these are totally freelanced and selectively compressed for sharper curves. Virtually all streamlined cars where/are 85' long. Everyone has their own views about this aspect of the hobby but I use shorter passenger cars like Athearn even though I have 36" radius curves. Remember, a 36" radius curve in HO is a VERY sharp, restricted speed curve on the prototype.

Heavyweights - these cars are also freelanced and do not directly represent any specific prototype - BUT they are closer to many prototypes than the streamliners for several reasons. One, Pullman and other heavyweight builders used standard parts like underframes, ends, vestibule doors, and side panels to make up most cars. Two, not ALL heavyweights where 85' long, in fact, take away Pullman sleepers and Pullman built diners, lounges and observations and you find more than half the coaches, baggage cars, combines, RPO's, where less than 80', with many beng in the 70' to 75' range. The Athearn cars are 72'.

Those arch roof cars are very close to a number of prototype 70-75' arched roof cars that did exist. So are the clerestory roof coach, baggage and RPO.

And, there where several 70' business cars very similar to the Athearn observation. So only the Pullman and Diner are totally without a close prototype.

The Athearn cars run well and are easily detailed into very nice models if you are happy with their freelanced nature. I prefer them until and unless I can buld a layout with all 60" radius curves.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:40 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
Streamliners - these are totally freelanced and selectively compressed for sharper curves. Virtually all streamlined cars where/are 85' long.

As some other have mentioned, ATSF did have some short streamlined RPO's and baggage cars which do appear to be very well represented by the Athearn cars. There has never been any word from Athearn that they where the basis for the streamlined cars.

The details of the heavyweights are typical Pullman car company construction and similar to most all heavyweight cars.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, July 25, 2009 3:51 PM

Additionally, I too detail my Athearn cars with working diaphragms from American Limited, close couple them with body mounted Kadee couplers on Jaybee mounting pads, install Intermountain wheelsets, Kadee brake shoes, vestibule interior doors and/or tail gates, mail hooks on RPO's, ad underbody details from Cal Scale, lighting to some, custom paint them for my freelanced ATLANTIC CENTRAL or the roads we interchange with and they look and run great.

I have also kit bashed the following body types: Combines, full RPO's, mid train lounges, dome obervations, parlor cars and solarium observations.

Sheldon 

    

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Posted by wjstix on Saturday, July 25, 2009 4:52 PM

The Athearn heavyweights are pretty good representation of Santa Fe cars - not surprising for a company located in California.Smile

In the heavyweight days, unlike later streamliners, RPO and Baggage cars were usually 70' or less, Coaches and Combines were normally right around 70' long, though some 80' certainly were made. IIRC the Athearn RPO is 63', the Baggage car is 67', and the Coach is 70' or 72' - all quite correct for heavyweight cars. The Diner, Sleeper and Observation cars are 80' cars shortened to the same length as the Coach.

BTW the Walthers/Rivarossi/Whoever 60' cars are all full-size models of real CNW cars. Many railroads used 60' Baggage cars and 60' RPO's were common too. The Coach and Combine are based on CNW's "Utility Coach" and "Utility Combine" which were used to fill in where necessary, and I guess were often used as smokers. 

They're good running dependable cars, and in recent years have excellent paint and lettering. Palace Car Co. makes interiors for many of the Athearn cars.

 

Stix
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Posted by wjstix on Saturday, July 25, 2009 4:55 PM

I believe all companies that make decoder-equipped engines use decoders that allow DC use also - at least I can't think of any that don't allow DC use, but just DCC.  

Interesting, I was replying to a different post...not sure how it ended up here?? Dunce

Stix
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Posted by Robt. Livingston on Saturday, July 25, 2009 4:58 PM

 I have a number of Athearn heavyweights that I bought in the days when they and the Rivarossi cars were the best heavyweights you could buy in plastic.

A baggage car has had the sides and roof re-sectioned, letterboards replaced, and door windows re-done to be a close model of a certain series of NH cars. This car was cut into many pieces and re-assembled like a jigsaw puzzle.  An interesting exercise. 

A business car was made from the observation, with inspection lights, plenty of hoses on the platform end, and prominent kitchen vents added. This car always looked like it was inspired by an AC&F prototype. 

Two clerestory coaches were combined to make a longer parlor or chair car which is close to a C&O deluxe coach.  For unknown reasons it is lettered for CRR of NJ, car name "Raritan".  A shorter combine was created from the leftover body parts, and a New England Models (?) baggage door.

I also bought a streamline observation, and lengthened it with a section of streamlined diner, to simulate a specific PRR observation (again, with modified letterboards made from.010" styrene).  The actual PRR car was #1126, type POC85, Budd-built in 1940.  Mine is named "Cdr. Ren Hoek"

The Athearn Pullman is very odd indeed, as the window layout on the sides are identical, leaving no provision for compartments or rooms on one side, and the corridor on the other. There were never any short Pullman sleepers. It is an approximation. 

The Athearn round-roof coaches resemble Reading cars, but are off in a number of minor ways. 

The six wheel Pullman trucks on the cars were all scrapped, as the wheelbase is less than scale length. I used one pair under a Lehigh Valley well-hole flat car built from a Wabash Valley kit.   

 

 

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Saturday, July 25, 2009 6:31 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
. . . . . . . . . . not ALL heavyweights where 85' long, in fact, take away Pullman sleepers and Pullman built diners, lounges and observations and you find more than half the coaches, baggage cars, combines, RPO's, where less than 80', with many beng in the 70' to 75' range . . . . . . . . . .

I believe you intended to say

not ANY heavyweights were 85' long

From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, July 25, 2009 7:03 PM

 

R. T. POTEET

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
. . . . . . . . . . not ALL heavyweights where 85' long, in fact, take away Pullman sleepers and Pullman built diners, lounges and observations and you find more than half the coaches, baggage cars, combines, RPO's, where less than 80', with many beng in the 70' to 75' range . . . . . . . . . .

I believe you intended to say

not ANY heavyweights were 85' long

Well maybe I should have said not ALL where 80' long. Most of the Pullman sleepers/diners had measurements over the buffers between 82' and 84'. I was generalizing a little but there is a missconception among some modelers that all post 1900 steel passenger cars are 80'-85' long and that all models shorter than that are "selectively compressed".

Point still remains - many heavyweight cars where shorter than the 80' plus length of a Pullman sleeper. And there was actually no "standard" length in heavyweight days. Even the Pullman cars that where in the 80' range varied in length from plan to plan by a foot or two.

Only in the days of ACF and Budd streamliners did car length start to be more standardized.

Sheldon

 

    

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, July 25, 2009 7:20 PM

wjstix
IIRC the Athearn RPO is 63', the Baggage car is 67', and the Coach is 70' or 72' - all quite correct for heavyweight cars. The Diner, Sleeper and Observation cars are 80' cars shortened to the same length as the Coach.

Close, but actually, regarding Athearn heavyweights, the RPO is 67' and uses a unique floor. All the rest are 72'. The Baggage and Diner share a floor with no steps, the two Coaches and Pullman share a floor with steps at both ends and the Observation has a unique floor for the open platform. The Coach floor and the Baggage floor will interchange with the obvious mismatch regarding the lack or presence of steps. Having done many kit bashes these facts have long been ingraned in my data banks.

Sheldon

 

    

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Posted by dstarr on Saturday, July 25, 2009 7:39 PM

 The heavy weight clearstory roof cars are quite convincing to my eye.  I rode plenty of locals, commuters, and intercity passenger trains with clearstory heavyweight cars that looked a heck of lot like the Athearn models.  Some selective compression was done to improve performance on 18 inch curves.  But it isn't much and the result is very realistic.   The round roof and streamline cars are perfectly respectable models but the clearstory heavyweights are my favorites. 

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Posted by nbrodar on Saturday, July 25, 2009 10:19 PM

 While the majority of the Athearn cars aren't based on specific prototypes, with the exception of the heavyweight Pullman, they capture the flavor of a number of cars.   They are also shorter then most prototype cars, a concession to the sharp curves common to many model railroads.

Having said that my entire passenger fleet is Athearn cars, both streamlined and heavyweight.  The cars remain a bargain compared with the Walthers, and Rapido cars.   Through careful bidding on E-bay, I acquired enough equipment to outfit three 4 car trains for around $100.  So for the cost of two to three Walthers or Rapido cars, I got 12 Athearn cars.

Nick

Take a Ride on the Reading with the: Reading Company Technical & Historical Society http://www.readingrailroad.org/

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Posted by EM-1 on Saturday, July 25, 2009 11:26 PM

Hate spending 15 minutes typing a post, hitting the post button, and getting a message that Yahoo encountered an error and had to close the page!SoapBox 

I was mentioning how I have been building (and bashing) the Athearn Streamliners since my grade school days, when they first came out under the Globe name, had cast metal dummy knuckle couplers, and the bodies had 2 sides, 2 ends, a floor, and a roof as the major parts.  Maybe they aren't 100% prototypical, are shorter than most similar full scale streamliners (and heavy weights), but look good on the 18" curves.  In fact, they operated trouble-free on 15" curves on one of my early 4' X 6' Layouts.

They are quite easy to use for kit bashing.  In fact, I have an Athearn Combine, a two-unit Articulated Chair Car, a three-unit Articulated Diner, a four Roomette with Lounge car, and a Dome-Observation.  Also, I have a couple floor sections that can be set up with chair details and maybe some siding, replicating some open-air railfan cars I've seen photos of.  Maybe with the addition of some wire 'U's and Northeastern hollow caboose roof.

Main trouble is, if I set up all my Athearn Streamliners on my main behind my Alco  PA-1 or F-M C-Liner Passsenger units, both A-A lash-ups, a passenger in the Dome-Observation could just about stick a hand out the tail end and touch the nose of the lead loco.

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Posted by doctorwayne on Sunday, July 26, 2009 2:50 AM

A few Athearn ex-Pullmans:

A shortened Athearn observation car:

And a modified Athearn baggage car:

Wayne

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Sunday, July 26, 2009 8:22 AM

Very nice work Wayne.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by Robt. Livingston on Sunday, July 26, 2009 10:39 AM

 Dr Wayne demonstrates to the class that a silk purse can be made of a sow's ear. 

 The more work you put into them, the more craft, the better the result.  Excellent!


 

 

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Posted by Mr. SP on Sunday, July 26, 2009 12:04 PM

The Athearn Streamline passenger cars are loosly based on Santa Fe cars. Only the RPO and Baggage are the correct length. The Coach, Diner, & Observation are shortened by about 12 scale feet.

The Dome is a shortened version of the Pleasure Dome used on the Super Chief.

The Heavy weights are about the same. The RPO and Baggage are close to prototype length but the rest are shortened. The heavyweight Pullman has one side reversed. The car is a 12-1 with the 1 Drawing Room missing making it a 12 section car. The washrooms were diagonal from each other on hte prototype Pullmans not across from each other. It would be quite a project to correct the reversed side of the car. Looking at the car the washroom would be at the end on the left.

There are several Athearn passenger cars in the collection. I've even made a two unit coach in SP Daylight using Athearn coaches and MDC Challenger trucks. The only thing correct about it is the length of 134 scale feet.

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Posted by doctorwayne on Sunday, July 26, 2009 4:24 PM

Thanks to all for the kind words. Smile

The steel baggage car was the easiest, made from the leftover halves of two Athearn baggage cars - you'll notice that the doors are the same size.  I don't recall where the other two halves went, but most likely to make another wood-sided car - for them, only the roof and ends were used.

The wood-sided cars, as noted, use only the Athearn roof and ends - the sides are removed, although I sometimes salvage some of the window frames, as windows in baggage cars were fairly common in my modelling era.  The sides are Evergreen styrene car siding, along with various sizes of styrene strip, and the doors are built-up mostly from sheet styrene.  The floors and underframes are scratchbuilt, with added details from PSC and New England Rail Service.  I got a half dozen-or-so used Athearn Pullmans and coaches, along with two baggage cars and modified them all at the same time, so I couldn't say how long it took for any particular car.  The CNR cars probably took the longest, as I had photos from which to work, so included some additional underbody detail:

 

The shortened observation car, now a business car, was cut-down, but not re-assembled, about 50 years ago.  I "rediscovered" it while looking for something else and decided to make use of it.  The air conditioning duct is .010" sheet styrene, and a new floor and underframe was built-up from .060" styrene, with underfloor detail from various sources.

While some may turn up their nose at the old Rivarossi passenger cars, they're also useful fodder for kitbashing.  This combine was formerly a diner:

The standard Rivarossi coach, as shown below,


is a great starting point for many other cars, including wood-sided baggage cars:


Horse express cars:

Steel-sided conversions of coaches to baggage cars:

Or even CNR's so-called mountain observation cars:

The Rivarossi combine is another useful favourite, either with a few additional windows:

Or completely reworked as a diesel-powered railcar:

Wayne

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Posted by Silverpalm on Monday, July 27, 2009 12:26 AM

Many modelers would answer to the question "how accurate?" - "not very." Aside from the incorrect length, the choices are somewhat limited, and Athearn hasn't added any new variations for a long time.. For example, there are no combines (combination baggage/passenger car), lounge cars, parlor cars, dormitory cars, etc. The Pullman car is a 12-1 whereas there were many variations of the Pullman interior layout. On the positive side, Athearn cars are available in a wide variety of road names, come in steam era and streamline versions, are affordable, and operate on narrow radius curves.

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Posted by SteamFreak on Monday, July 27, 2009 2:03 AM

Dang it Wayne, you have a way of making everybody forgetting what the heck the thread was about in the first place. Smile,Wink, & Grin My jaw finally hit the keyboard when I got to the Rivarossi Doodlebug. Is it powered by a NWSL truck? Awe-inspiring work! Bow

I'm also intrigued by the 4 wheel trucks you used on the modified Athearn baggage car -- where did they come from?

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Posted by Robt. Livingston on Monday, July 27, 2009 11:39 AM

I think those trucks have roller bearings! Id like to know what they are, too, as I seem to have a pair, acquired used.  They roll and equalize well.  Origin unknown. 

It is interesting to read about people's priorities.  The Athearn cars seem to appeal to kitbashers as raw material, or to guys who are not that concerned with passenger car accuracy, being more concerned with other things.  Not that there's anything wrong with that!

When I designed my railroad, the object was to use full length cars, on the broadest radius possible that would fit in a typical room.  I ended up with a 12' by 14' double track mainline, with yards in two of the outside corners; a great big oval.  It was inspired (in part) by a circular British portable RR called "The Bishop's Egg".  Eventually I could build a proper basement (with a house over it) so I re-designed the railroad to fit a somewhat larger space.  But really, the whole thing is designed to "support" (silly computer word) fast passenger trains of the WWII era, not only full length cars but full length trains.  It is still an oval (and no, I don't like NASCAR).

   

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Posted by wjstix on Monday, July 27, 2009 1:47 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL

wjstix
IIRC the Athearn RPO is 63', the Baggage car is 67', and the Coach is 70' or 72' - all quite correct for heavyweight cars. The Diner, Sleeper and Observation cars are 80' cars shortened to the same length as the Coach.

Close, but actually, regarding Athearn heavyweights, the RPO is 67' and uses a unique floor. All the rest are 72'. The Baggage and Diner share a floor with no steps, the two Coaches and Pullman share a floor with steps at both ends and the Observation has a unique floor for the open platform. The Coach floor and the Baggage floor will interchange with the obvious mismatch regarding the lack or presence of steps. Having done many kit bashes these facts have long been ingraned in my data banks.

Sheldon

 

The 63' and 67' lengths are from the Athearn listing in an old Walthers catalogue from the nineties...not that Athearn has always labelled everything correctly of course!!

Stix
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Posted by markpierce on Monday, July 27, 2009 2:10 PM

wjstix

Walthers/Rivarossi/Whoever 60' cars are all full-size models of real CNW cars. Many railroads used 60' Baggage cars and 60' RPO's were common too.

The Post Office practice was to have Railway Post Offices in lengths of 15 feet, 30 feet, and 60 feet.  Thus, with little exception, RPO cars with postal sections less than 60 feet were combination cars which included a non-RPO baggage/express section.  Undoubtedly, that's why the SP/T&NO 40-foot pure RPO cars were modified to reduce the RPO length and a baggage/express section substituted.  If a train included what looked like having more than one RPO car, most likely the other ones had been converted to mail storage cars unless they were being deadheaded.

Mark

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Monday, July 27, 2009 2:33 PM

Just so everyone is clear, the Athearn heavyweight RPO is 67 scale feet long and is actually a RPO - baggage combine. The RPO end is close, but not exact for a 30' RPO section. Closing up a window or two makes it closer.

Athearn has always just called it an RPO, and I don't think I've ever seen Athearn literature discribe the length. Walthers catalogs have contained a misprint or two over the years.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by wjstix on Monday, July 27, 2009 2:47 PM

OK, I checked the Athearn website and they do call the RPO (which I agree is an RPO - Baggage combine) a 67' car, and it calls all the other cars (including the baggage car) 70' cars. Of course, many people say these cars are 72' long...??

Stix
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Posted by markpierce on Monday, July 27, 2009 3:19 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL

Just so everyone is clear, the Athearn heavyweight RPO is 67 scale feet long and is actually a RPO - baggage combine. The RPO end is close, but not exact for a 30' RPO section. Closing up a window or two makes it closer.

Before you close up any windows, be aware that baggage/express portions of the cars may contain windows.  Also, for instance, at least one class of Southern Pacific RPO/Baggage cars was built exterior-wise as a 30-foot RPO section, but only contained a 15-foot section interior.  This would allow for an expansion to a 30-foot RPO easier, if needed.

If windows aren't protected with bars on your models, you might consider adding that detail.

I'm sure expressmen appreciated windows while performing their duties aboard the train.

Mark

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