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A tribute to Athearn's Blue Box locomotives

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Posted by Whatcher01 on Thursday, June 18, 2015 1:33 PM
I have I very similar story including joining the Navy however my old trains rotted in a box from 1986 to 2013 when I took them out to show to my youngest. The only ones that worked (and not great) were the BB. I cleaned them up and was hooked again. since I have been having a great time rebuilding and kit bashing. I still remember buying my first BB Athearn and how well it was made compared to most of the stuff available at the time. For those who would rather dump their old BB in favor for something done and ready that's great but HO was the choice for Modelers and it was the scale for those who wanted to make it their own. Toy collecting was always the O scale guys. I have bought a few of the Athearn Genesis w/ sound and there nice however they have nothing on one that I have cut sanded upgraded and rewired.
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Posted by 16-567D3A on Thursday, March 19, 2015 11:34 PM

 ,                    

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Posted by chatanuga on Thursday, March 19, 2015 7:23 PM

One of the first pics I took with my digital camera of the layout back in 2011 was one of my Chessie System SD40-2 locomotives in my Columbus (OH) staging yard.  Last month, I finished converting all of my rolling stock to Kadee couplers, which look much better.  :)

My first Athearn locomotive was my Amtrak SDP40F (actually an FP45), which still runs.

watch?v=YnHPPiKY7Kc

Three of the four trains in this video were pulled by blue-box Athearn locomotives.

watch?v=hoTU5Bp4kyw

Kevin

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Thursday, March 19, 2015 1:17 PM

doctorwayne
Kadee also offers the boxes separately, although many of them nowadays are engineering plastic, which is difficult to use if you wish to cement them together or cement them in place.  When I last checked, I believe that the #5s were still styrene.

Wayne

I won't need to buy them separately.  Heck, in the early days I bought so many envelopes of KD#5's where never needed the draft gear box, that I'm sure I have a bunch of them around here somewhere.  I never threw them away.  Any time I have used them I used screws to hold them on - either in the center spot or the two side holes - last time I mounted a set was a few months ago on a brass caboose - thats how they are done.

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Posted by jecorbett on Thursday, March 19, 2015 12:58 PM

doctorwayne
 
riogrande5761
...These days I buy KD's in bulk 90% of the time so my draft gear boxes are getting hard to find!

 

Kadee also offers the boxes separately, although many of them nowadays are engineering plastic, which is difficult to use if you wish to cement them together or cement them in place.  When I last checked, I believe that the #5s were still styrene.

Wayne

 

I'm in the process of converting a number of my old passenger car fleet with truck mounted couplers to body mounts using Jay-Bee coupler pads. In conjunction with that I bought a couple envelopes of KD draft gear boxes. They are plastic. The Jay-Bee coupler pads come with mounting screws and I use those to mount the draft gear boxes but for added stability I use a drop of liquid cement to hold the two pieces of the box together as well as lock it into place on the coupler pad. I find if I just use just the screw if it's a little too tight, the coupler won't swing and a little too loose and the coupler box swivels. It was hard to get it just right.  

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Posted by doctorwayne on Thursday, March 19, 2015 10:42 AM

riogrande5761
...These days I buy KD's in bulk 90% of the time so my draft gear boxes are getting hard to find!

Kadee also offers the boxes separately, although many of them nowadays are engineering plastic, which is difficult to use if you wish to cement them together or cement them in place.  When I last checked, I believe that the #5s were still styrene.

Wayne

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Thursday, March 19, 2015 10:17 AM

doctorwayne
riogrande5761 wrote the following post 2 hours ago:

.....Anyway, I still hate the Athearn blue box coupler mounts - even with a dremel it's a heck of a lot of trial and error to get the pad ground down to get the KD in it's box to match the height gauge.  I've got a long list of other things on my hobby to do list that I'd rather do so the Athearn bb coupler mounts seem to forever remain at the bottom of the list.  Maybe when I'm retired some day?

I used a hacksaw to slice 'em off, then added mounting pads to the underside of the pilots using built-up stacks of .060" sheet styrene.  As an added benefit, it allowed the area below the couplers to be closed.

Wayne

I have read about that technique in some MR articles and how toos back in the 80's and 90's.  In fact I hacked off one mount on a bb D&RGW SD40T-2 I had with the intentions of body mounting the coupler, and then put it off - and later sold it.  The guy I sold it to commented that it was missing the mount - I had totally forgot about it and was a bit embarrassed.  It turned out ok, the guy was more of a modeler than I was!

Anyway, Here I was thinking this issue was mostly moot because I was down to 3 bb Athearns now, stored away, but then I remembered doh!  Those Proto 2000 SD7's and SD9's - 4 of them!  Fun fun.

And another added benefit, you don't have to worry about shorting out or insulating if there aren't metal KD couplers directly in contact with the frame, unless you use the KD draft gear box provided in the small packages.  These days I buy KD's in bulk 90% of the time so my draft gear boxes are getting hard to find!

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Posted by doctorwayne on Thursday, March 19, 2015 10:01 AM
riogrande5761 wrote the following post 2 hours ago:

.....Anyway, I still hate the Athearn blue box coupler mounts - even with a dremel it's a heck of a lot of trial and error to get the pad ground down to get the KD in it's box to match the height gauge.  I've got a long list of other things on my hobby to do list that I'd rather do so the Athearn bb coupler mounts seem to forever remain at the bottom of the list.  Maybe when I'm retired some day?

I used a hacksaw to slice 'em off, then added mounting pads to the underside of the pilots using built-up stacks of .060" sheet styrene.  As an added benefit, it allowed the area below the couplers to be closed.

Wayne

 
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Posted by riogrande5761 on Thursday, March 19, 2015 7:14 AM

jecorbett
I've never been able to part with my vinyl records even though I can't remember when I last had a functional turntable. I am sentinmental about them.

Ditto that.  I may loose all my marbles one day and pick up an old decent quality turntable.  I swear I see so much legacy electronic equipment around the west suburbs of Washington DC (Northern Virginia) for super cheap as everyone dumps it.  You never know!  I still have a small stack of vinyl records too I forgot I still had - found them in the basement - they somehow surviveed many moved of the past 20 years.

My memory is fuzzy too but it seems like the MSRP for Athearn BB F7s was around $60 back then. I remember buying my first one for around $20 in the late 1970s but that was before hyperinflation set in. What I do clearly remember is that when I saw the Trainworld ad for $29.95, I thought it was a steal. It turned out it was.

The $20 figure jives with what I remember from the late 70's, I graduated form HS in 1977 and remember seeing Athearn loco's for around that price in a hobby shop in Sacramento.  But $60 still seems nutty for an F7, even in the early 1990's, maybe someone with an add or something from that time can confirm.  Who knows, maybe you are right.  I think the Stewarts were around $99 MRSP give or take, and it was a strain for me to afford them as a college student at around $70 - good discount price.

 
 
I asked the guy at my LHS if there was still a market for them and he said every time he puts them on his second hand shelf they always sell. He told me nobody was going to get rich selling them, but I could pick up a few bucks with them.
 
I'm sure they do sell.  And considering the rate at which prices have gone up on new stock, those on a tight budget or youner folk who are trying to get into the hobby on a shoe string and aren't picky are happy to pick them up!  The secondary market is still a good market place for many trains!
 
Filing? A Dremel Tool is your best friend when it comes to such tasks..

I have never owned a tap..I use the KD coupler box and self tapping screws and a touch of Walthers Goo on the coupler pad..

Oh yes, my Demel I bought back in the early 80's still runs pretty well - funny the one I picked up at a train show (new in the box and probably made in the 90's) the shaft broke after using it for just a few months - quality of later model Dremel's isn't worth dirt!

Anyway, I still hate the Athearn blue box coupler mounts - even with a dremel it's a heck of a lot of trial and error to get the pad ground down to get the KD in it's box to match the height gauge.  I've got a long list of other things on my hobby to do list that I'd rather do so the Athearn bb coupler mounts seem to forever remain at the bottom of the list.  Maybe when I'm retired some day?

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Posted by BRAKIE on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 9:36 PM

riogrande5761
Don't get me started about mounting Kadee's on blue box loco's. Definitely not a "drop in" conversion - and to get them to mount in the box they came with, it was a lot of filing, then tapping them out for a screw etc.

Filing? A Dremel Tool is your best friend when it comes to such tasks..

I have never owned a tap..I use the KD coupler box and self tapping screws and a touch of Walthers Goo on the coupler pad..

Larry

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Posted by CSX_road_slug on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 7:46 PM

During my first stint in the hobby as a teenager, I amassed a collection of ~50 BB locos.  I didn't have space for a layout, but I would bring half a dozen of them to run on the BSME layout in downtown Baltimore every Friday.  

During the other six days of the week, I would be kitbashing and/or custom painting them.  I remember that excellent article in RMC (~1971?) that showed how to convert an SDP40 into an SD40, and a GP35 into a GP40 (of which my favorite road, the B&O, had hundreds!).  Later I also did a few GP38's.  These are some of my happiest hobby-related memories.

My interest in trains faded quickly after I graduated from high school and joined the Navy.  Fast cars and women took their place.  I thought I'd never be doing mrr again, so I just donated my BB collection to the club [that's not the first or the last stupid thing I've done in my life...Bang HeadSigh].

15 years later when I returned to the hobby, scale-width hood GP7/9's were available from Front Range, and GP40's and 38's from Atlas/Roco.  I bought ~10 BB F-units and painted/decaled them, but when the Stewart Fs came on the market a year later, the BB F's instantly became shelf queens.  The only other Athearn loco I got was an SW1200. I still have that one, it is waiting for DCC conversion if I ever get around to it...

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Posted by jecorbett on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 5:47 PM

riogrande5761
 
jecorbett
I'm not terribly sentimental about them

 

Me neither, or only to the same degree I am sentimental about vinyl records, but when compact discs became economical, I was all too happy to rid myself of the snap, crackles, pops and thumps I heard on many of my LPs!  Still, I get a kind of cool feeling when I see a good turntable in action, which is extremely rare these days!  =P  Ah the olden days!

I've never been able to part with my vinyl records even though I can't remember when I last had a functional turntable. I am sentinmental about them.

 
am getting ready to sell them to one of the LHSes that buy used equipment.  They are asking $15 for ones in good condition which means they probably offer $5 for them. When I returned to the hobby around 2000, the plan was to build a new DCC layout and upgrade all my old locos with decoders. I saw an ad in Trainworld offering BB F7s for the blowout price of $30.

 

Maybe my memory is fuzzy but $30 seems high for a bb F7, but hey, you are talking about 15 years ago!  Maybe they were that high.  I remember paying around $75 ea for a new Stewart F7 in the early 1990's, which was a lot back then - but they were/are KATO made after all.

 
My memory is fuzzy too but it seems like the MSRP for Athearn BB F7s was around $60 back then. I remember buying my first one for around $20 in the late 1970s but that was before hyperinflation set in. What I do clearly remember is that when I saw the Trainworld ad for $29.95, I thought it was a steal. It turned out it was.
 
I bought about six of them not caring what the road name was figuring I was going to custom paint them. Then I ordered my first sound equipped diesel and saw how much better the detailing was on the new stuff and realized I'd made a big mistake. Not a single one of my BB diesels has been upgraded and I have no plans to do so. They served me well on the old layout but it's time to move on.

 

Some bb diesels were better than others.  I found the F7 to be crude, especially the awful windshields, number boards and air grills.  When Stewart came out with their F unit around 1989 I was so pleased as I could dispose of my Athearn F7's as soon as possible.  That said, the GP40-2 and SD40-2 shells were much better and if detailed well, would be fine looking models.  However when it came to DCC, it was a good deal of extra work to remove the motor and isolate it from the frame yada yada.  I know the real mechanic's in the hobby would make fast work of adding a decoder to the old blue box Athearn.  What was it Clint Eastwood used to say in one of his old movies:  "a man has to know is limitiations"!!  I just find doing all that stuff very frustrating and I don't have a good budy who is going to do it for me.  Solution?  Newer loco's that take light board decoders or 9 pin plug in!!!

 
I'm pretty sure the Clint Eastwood line was at the end of Magnum Force, probably my least favorite Dirty Harry movie but that's like saying my least favorite flavor of ice cream. As for the Athearn F7s, I never minded the lack of detail on them. I've only added decoders to a a few DC Atlas engines so I have no idea what I would have run into with the Athearns.
 

Don't get me started about mounting Kadee's on blue box loco's.  Definitely not a "drop in" conversion - and to get them to mount in the box they came with, it was a lot of filing, then tapping them out for a screw etc.  Some parts of the hobby were just not fun for everyone; God bless you if you enjoyed that.

 
I agree completely about the coupler system. It was my biggest gripe. I never bothered with all that hassle. I left the horn hooks on between the A & B units and then just put a #5 and the copper piece into the pocket on the rear of the B unit. The copper piece hung out and of course it didn't center the coupler but at least I could hook to my rolling stock with them. I think I did that on the front of the A unit too although I didn't do much switching with them.  
 

Anyway, for those who still wax nostalgic about Athearn blue box loco's, they can still be had at many a train show! 

 

I asked the guy at my LHS if there was still a market for them and he said every time he puts them on his second hand shelf they always sell. He told me nobody was going to get rich selling them, but I could pick up a few bucks with them.

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 2:12 PM

jecorbett
I'm not terribly sentimental about them

Me neither, or only to the same degree I am sentimental about vinyl records, but when compact discs became economical, I was all too happy to rid myself of the snap, crackles, pops and thumps I heard on many of my LPs!  Still, I get a kind of cool feeling when I see a good turntable in action, which is extremely rare these days!  =P  Ah the olden days!

am getting ready to sell them to one of the LHSes that buy used equipment.  They are asking $15 for ones in good condition which means they probably offer $5 for them. When I returned to the hobby around 2000, the plan was to build a new DCC layout and upgrade all my old locos with decoders. I saw an ad in Trainworld offering BB F7s for the blowout price of $30.

Maybe my memory is fuzzy but $30 seems high for a bb F7, but hey, you are talking about 15 years ago!  Maybe they were that high.  I remember paying around $75 ea for a new Stewart F7 in the early 1990's, which was a lot back then - but they were/are KATO made after all.

I bought about six of them not caring what the road name was figuring I was going to custom paint them. Then I ordered my first sound equipped diesel and saw how much better the detailing was on the new stuff and realized I'd made a big mistake. Not a single one of my BB diesels has been upgraded and I have no plans to do so. They served me well on the old layout but it's time to move on.

Some bb diesels were better than others.  I found the F7 to be crude, especially the awful windshields, number boards and air grills.  When Stewart came out with their F unit around 1989 I was so pleased as I could dispose of my Athearn F7's as soon as possible.  That said, the GP40-2 and SD40-2 shells were much better and if detailed well, would be fine looking models.  However when it came to DCC, it was a good deal of extra work to remove the motor and isolate it from the frame yada yada.  I know the real mechanic's in the hobby would make fast work of adding a decoder to the old blue box Athearn.  What was it Clint Eastwood used to say in one of his old movies:  "a man has to know is limitiations"!!  I just find doing all that stuff very frustrating and I don't have a good budy who is going to do it for me.  Solution?  Newer loco's that take light board decoders or 9 pin plug in!!!

Don't get me started about mounting Kadee's on blue box loco's.  Definitely not a "drop in" conversion - and to get them to mount in the box they came with, it was a lot of filing, then tapping them out for a screw etc.  Some parts of the hobby were just not fun for everyone; God bless you if you enjoyed that.

Anyway, for those who still wax nostalgic about Athearn blue box loco's, they can still be had at many a train show! 

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Posted by FRRYKid on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 11:51 AM

JimValle

Actually the old Athern BB's offer a lot of possibilities for those who like to tinker with and customize their engines.  You can start with engines pulled out of under-the-table boxes at train shows and bought cheaply. 

Oh, how I know about working with Athearn BB engines for Kitbashing on 2 fronts.

1) I have 8 GP20s which I term Tythearn. The engines are a Tyco GP20 shell with some added details (and some body putty) with a modified BB GP35 drive. (The only modifications are trimming the sides around the motor area to fit the shell better and removing the coupler mounts in order to body mount the couplers to the shell.) The Athearn stanchions from the 35 even worked their way in as they were reused when the handrails were rebuilt. (Using a Tyco metal handrail upgrade kit for the handrail and the stanchions bent to fit.)

2) I am working on another project which involves 3 Stewart F3 shells (ABB). I decided to use Athearn F7 BB drives for that one as well (Edit: with close coupling kits installed except on the A front [see below]). For where the project will end up, I will most likely have to be the one to fix them if there ever is a problem. The Athearn units are something I know. (And the modification to the Stewart shells wasn't hard and it doesn't change the look of the shell at all.) The only major compromise was that the front coupler mount on the A unit didn't fit with the shell so that will have to be body mounted. (That will be a "dummy" coupler so strength won't be a major concern.)

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Posted by jecorbett on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 10:21 AM

Athearn BB were a good value for their day and they comprised most of my diesel fleet with Rivarossi providing the steamers. I'm not terribly sentimental about them and am getting ready to sell them to one of the LHSes that buy used equipment.  They are asking $15 for ones in good condition which means they probably offer $5 for them. When I returned to the hobby around 2000, the plan was to build a new DCC layout and upgrade all my old locos with decoders. I saw an ad in Trainworld offering BB F7s for the blowout price of $30. I bought about six of them not caring what the road name was figuring I was going to custom paint them. Then I ordered my first sound equipped diesel and saw how much better the detailing was on the new stuff and realized I'd made a big mistake. Not a single one of my BB diesels has been upgraded and I have no plans to do so. They served me well on the old layout but it's time to move on.

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 8:38 AM

The Athearn BB loco served it's purpose and for it's time it was a good thing.  Since there are better quality and more true to the prototype loco's out on the market in the past 15 years, I have moved on and eliminated most of my blue box Athearns.  I only have 3 left now, and none in service at this writing (2 Athearn bb GP40-2's and one dummy SD40T-2).  Only one of the 3 is in running condition, the other powered unit has been in pieces for years split up between serveral boxes - it ran like a coffee grinder out-of-the box.

The bb Athearn was economical, and many could be made to run well with some elbow grease or some work and if you were lucky, it ran pretty well out of the box - QAQC was always spotty with Athearn even in the blue box loco years.  If I do get my old blue box Athearns roadworthy again, it will probably be to run at modular club days because I won't be traumatized if something bad happens to them.  Other folks in the club do the same thing, use their older, cheaper simple engines for the club.

Athearn blue box are great for kids and beginners, those who need engines for not much money as they are still available at train shows etc. and great for folks who still like to paint, detail etc., especially if you have the skill.  And even if you don't have much skill like me, they are good to practice on since you won't be devistated if something goes awry when cuttting/detailing/painting etc.

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Posted by userjh5174 on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 4:45 AM

I love the old Athearn BB engines. I just have four SP ac4400's all ballasted to the max. I run all four lashed up to pull my 110 car coal train: 25 cars with loads to prevent string lining and a 2.3% grade. These engines always run flawlessly.

Does anyone know if the new genesis GE engines are heavier than the old blue box units?

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Posted by BRVRR on Monday, March 24, 2014 8:34 AM

Of the fifty or so locomotives on the BRVRR layout, 23 are Athearn BB locomotives. The first locos I purchased for the layout were and ABA set of F-7s in Santa Fe livery. They are still in service today albeit with Digitrax decoders in both A-units and a Soundtraxx decoder in the B-unit. They were shown in WPF this past weekend. Here's a link:

http://cs.trains.com/mrr/f/88/t/228442.aspx

All of my locos are equipped with at least motor and light decoders and many with sound. Most have been detailed with window glazing, handrails, better headlights and MU hoses. I have FP-45s, F-7s, ALCO PAs a few GP-40s and GP-40-2s in service. Many were repainted. An example:

 

The A-unit Pennsylvania F7 #9822 at left has been lying around for years. It is an Athearn BB kit that I detailed with a Walther's dress-up kit. I made the train phone antenna from stanchions from an Athearn handrail set for a GP40-2 and a couple of pieces of .015 music wire. The B-unit was repainted to match, is not powered and has a Soundtraxx decoder installed.

There are more pictures, exampes and "How To's" on my website. Link is in my signature.

Athearn BB locos are a mainstay. Rugged, inexpensive and reliable. Too bad they never made an affordable steam loco. But the diesels will always have a place on the BRVRR.

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Posted by Southgate on Monday, March 24, 2014 5:31 AM

I've been enjoying reading this thread. Since it started, I went out in the train room and finally assembled an SD-9 out of parts that I'd been collecting. It didn't match the speed of my other one, at first, but with a bit of tweaking, and several laps arount the layout at about 3/4 throttle, it's good to doublehead.  I don't use dummies. (I wish they called them gliders or something 'sides dummies.)

Some of you guys really go to town on the modifications! A lot of nice work and photos here.  All mine do have improved wiring, some have NWSL wheels, a few added details. I only have 9 BB locomotives and a couple other non Athearn locos riding on Athrean trucks. One BB is a Hustler (wip) with a Sagami can and Atlas gears, twin flywheels.. Smooth, and can go slow. 

The only "gray" motor is an SW-12, It's chassis survived the fire that killed my original  1976 GP-35 , but the body was melted. I put a new one on it. It actually runs fine after a good cleaning of smoke off the vitals. I think it deserves a place on the layout.  All others have Athearn gold colored motors (do those qualify as cans?)

Nobody has mentioned it here, but Athearn also helped a lot of us kids get the rollong stock on the rails. Even with it's now frowned upon generic approach, they were still better than train set junk, had body mounted couplers (freight), were easy and fun to knock together, and affordable. And you could use those nifty boxes to organize everything. Dan

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Posted by Medina1128 on Sunday, March 23, 2014 6:57 PM

My first layout, built 20+ years ago strictly used BB locomotives. They were the best bang for buck. They weren't expensive to detail and they were pretty good runners. 

 

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Posted by tankertoad70 on Sunday, March 23, 2014 10:42 AM

Gotta love those BB lokeys.  They are the staple of my motive power fleet; fun to kitbash and detail.  Here are a pair of GP60s that I bashed from GP50s before Athearn produced the GP60. 

GP60

Don in 'Orygun' City
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Posted by Catt on Friday, March 21, 2014 9:40 PM

My first bluebox Athearn was a SD-9 bought on my birthday 1-11-1980.I still have ity but it ain't what it used to be.It spent almost 10nyears running 8 houes a day on a local LHS HO layout.When they sold the shop the ole girl came home'She origonally had the metal sideframe trucks but wore both of them out then went through 3 more of the plastic sideframed trucks. She went through three motors in all that running time and now has the flatcan withbturned brass flywheels.No DCC yet but that will happen this summer along with her fifth paint jub.Needs a different cab though ,if I can find one I plan to adapt a ATLAS SD 26 with the split windsheild.

 

 

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Posted by 7j43k on Friday, March 21, 2014 8:17 PM
And, oh yeah, one of my pet projects: I've got a Hobbytown slow speed switcher chassis. OMJ, that thing runs beautifully. It SLITHERS. In a good way. It is, sadly, missing a body on top. I had thought of using a Cary SW1500 body, but it's too wide--Athearnitis. What a shock. There's a Varney NW2 body in the garage. Maybe that'll work. I'm aiming after something as heavy as it can get. Did you know that tungsten is denser than uranium? Though using the latter, I could probably have constant lighting. Even in the cab. Nope, that bad boy's not BB. Ed
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Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Friday, March 21, 2014 8:15 PM

I like the rugged dependabily of the blue box F7's. Athearn F7 chassis are one that I use to repower the old metal body Varney F3's. It fits in the body almost like it was made for it.

Running Bear, Sundown, Louisiana
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Posted by 7j43k on Friday, March 21, 2014 8:08 PM

Dr. Wayne,

Athearn's SW1500/SW7/(or whatever) have correct width hoods.  I've got a Southern cow/calf that I hope to upgrade someday:  new motor and DCC, for sure.  And maybe some decent lighting.  And a Cannon cab.  And sealing up the incorrect steps on the calf.  And.......  What's nice with this paint scheme is it's all black, so touch up paint is/should be super simple.

I'm a bit less sentimental for the fat bodied stuff.  A very large bit.  Somewhere I've got a BB project of kitbashing to make an Athearn-based SDP45 and SD40-2.  When I find it, it'll get scrapped for parts.

Where the "BB boosters" have a really valid point is in the handrails.  Not that the old Athearn ones are good enough, but they did, indeed, stay straight and square.  I miss that.  I would really like to see cast beryllium copper stanchions and ACCURATE metal preformed handrails.  That would/could provide strong, square and scale handrails.

 

Ed

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Whitby, ON
  • 2,594 posts
Posted by CP5415 on Friday, March 21, 2014 7:41 PM
Yup, they're noisy ( real locos are ) they're not the best detailed ( doesn't bother me ) but over half of my 80 loco's are BB an I'll never tire of them

Brought to you by the letters C.P.R. as well as D&H!

 K1a - all the way

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  • From: NS(ex PRR) Mon Line.
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Posted by Jimmy_Braum on Friday, March 21, 2014 2:24 PM

My only Diesel locomotive is a railpower products shell, a Bluebox chasis, and a soon to be upgraded Blue box motor.'

 

(My Model Railroad, My Rules) 

These are the opinions of an under 35 , from the east end of, and modeling, the same section of the Wheeling and Lake Erie railway.  As well as a freelanced road (Austinville and Dynamite City railroad).  

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Posted by G Paine on Friday, March 21, 2014 12:54 PM

I also liked the BB locos. Add some detail parts and it looks close to prototype.

This is a GE U-23(?) that was cut down to make a U-18B by Chuck's Chop Shop. I bought it as undecorated and painted it.

The B&M "Slug Set" Undecorated GP-40-2 non-dynamic and a dummy GP-9 cut down, shaved styrene added along with body putty

Gp-7 BM 1715 in a simplified bicentennial scheme

I also have another GP-7 in the works, just waiting for some detail parts. All of the diesels need to be converted to DCC.

 

George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch 

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Posted by doctorwayne on Friday, March 21, 2014 2:39 AM

My very first diesels were Athearns before they became Athearn:  an A-B-B-A set of Globe F-units.  They were in Santa Fe Warbonnet paint when I got them, then spent some years in CPR maroon and grey, before getting the dark green and double grey of my freelanced road.  One unit had one Lindsey power truck, the others were dummies:


This NW2 started as Athearn's original SW1500 - a misnamed SW9, I think.  This one has a very large Sagami can motor - so large that I had to use a mill file to widen the interior of that famous overly-wide hood.  It also has Ernst gears and a GSB cab interior, along with Tomar track wipers.  No matter how much crud built-up on the wheel treads, she'd keep motoring along.  Eventually, the build-up would get so thick that the loco would begin to bounce when pulling a heavy train and the crud would then start to flake off in chunks - self-cleaning wheels!  Thumbs Up



These monsters (there are three of them) started as U33Cs:


I remotored them with two Mashima can motors each...


...then ballasted them to just over 33oz. apiece, re-dubbing them U36HTs (High Traction):

 

Drawbar pull (measured) is 8.3oz each:


This pair started as a project to recreate two prototypes of my favourite road, and specifically the paint scheme and lettering.  Except for the numerals in the number boards and the stripes on the pilots, all lettering and striping was done with paint, using dry transfers as masking devices in order to get the proper matching colours for both the paint and lettering.  The custom-mixed paint (Polly S) was brush-applied, and the cab heralds were done freehand, using a fine brush.  This freight GP7 was originally a dummy:


...while this passenger GP9 used the Athearn motor.  Both units were originally equipped with the metal-sideframed trucks, but I later replaced them with the better-detailed plastic ones, and equipped both locos with can motors.  Both units have been ballasted to about 18oz. each, and are decent pullers - the passenger units ran long hood front, the freights short hood front:


These ones, Athearn's ubiquitous SW1500, have been re-worked as SW1200RS locos, very commonly seen on CP and CN trains in my area.  I based the paint scheme on that of the TH&B's switchers, substituting green for their maroon, and replacing the cab herald with oversize numerals.  All lettering is painted, as with the TH&B units, although it was done with an airbrush:


I replaced the original motors with Mashima cans, and the trucks got Juneco Flexicoil sideframes to replace the original metal AAR switcher sideframes, and all were equipped with Ernst gearsets.  Later, when Athearn offered more modern switchers, I swapped out the original trucks for ones with the better-detailed plastic Flexicoil sideframes, although I had to sacrifice some of that weight for the improved appearance.  I also removed the Ernst gears, as the units were too slow to be used in their intended role as roadswitchers.  At about 12.5 oz. each, these were great pullers and ran extremely well together or with my Bachmann Consolidations.  DC-powered, I hard-wired the motors, but used short pieces of rail and rail joiners to allow the trucks to be easily removed for servicing:



 

While mine were all re-motored and re-detailed, Athearn locos were an important part of my enjoyment of this hobby.  I've backdated my layout to the '30s, so the TH&B geeps see little use.  The others have all been sold off, and all are, for various reasons, missed, especially the SWs.


Wayne

 

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