Hi All,

Ed has Co-opted my "Mighty" phrase for his NYC affliction. I guess that
could be a slight form of flattery! Here in the company of friends we all
have our own flavor of what road we follow for whatever reason. For most I
would suspect it is because it was the road that they were closest to when
growing up, or became interested in trains.

I will openly admit that the PRR was frugal at times and very conservative
as well. Many of the key locomotive classes were 20+ years old at a time
when other roads were still researching and experimenting with new steam
locomotives of their own. The PRR was forced to put stokers on their
locomotives. It was cheaper and easier to put another fireman in the cab. If
he died or quit, get another one. A stoker was a capitol expense that could
break down or need maintenance.

The PRR was constantly improving their locomotives with shopping and newer
appliances, but mostly they were still the same old 20+ year old locomotives
by the 40s & 50s. (That was my first awakening at age 16 looking though
Pennsy Power - realizing that the main PRR classes originated in the 20s and
30s)  The PRR T1 was probably the largest group of steam locos that PRR
built later in an attempt to refine and modernize their steam power. Their
success has been highly disputed on both sides. They were dropped from the
rosters rather early in comparison to the age of other classes. I have heard
that they sat dead for a few years until the trusts were paid for as they
could not scrap them before that.

I am not overly familiar with what other roads did at that time, (later 40s
to early 50s) but I know N&W refused to give up the steam fight until very
late. Most of us know of the circumstances that came to be to produce the
PRR J1. I have wondered if the war restrictions were not in place if the J1
is what would have gotten built instead of the PRR's steadfast self reliance
mentality. If I could wave a magic wand and see ANY PRR steam locomotive
alive and well in 2008, the J1 would not even be in my top 5. The #1 would
probably be the I1 followed by the M1 or K4.

The Santa Fe locomotives (The 2900s?) that were leased on the PRR are
coincidentally the loco that American Models made. They WERE supposedly
liked by the PRR crews because they were significantly more modern then many
other PRR classes. There was quite the article on them in the PRR T &HS
Keystone a while back.

So, MIGHTY is what we all think it is and get to shoot friendly occasional
jabs at each other.... 

Finally, the original premise I posted a few days back WAS - S Scale
locomotives made in BRASS by mainstream builders for specific road (IE, you
could not correctly paint a K4 for Santa Fe) The USRA locos had multiples
correct roads with some detail changes so they DON'T count in my premise.
Now that I have clarified things a bit, I still stand that the PRR has had
more items specifically built in S brass then ANY other road. NYC, C&O, and
SP would be somewhere behind but in what order I don't know. (Think of ALL
the diesels with antennas installed by the builders before you say I am
wrong) 

Let the replies fly! And enough of ENOUGH MR Lane! Change the subject line!


Thank You,
Bill Lane

Modeling the Mighty Pennsy & PRSL in 1957 in S Scale since 1988

See my finished models at:
http://www.lanestrains.com
Winner of the 2007 Josh Seltzer NASG Website Award
Look at what has been made in PRR in S Scale!

Custom Train Parts Design
http://www.lanestrains.com/SolidWorks_Modeling.htm

PRR Builders Photos Bought, Sold & Traded
(Trading is MUCH preferred)
http://www.lanestrains.com/PRRphotos.xls 

***Join the PRR T&HS***
The other members are not ALL like me!
http://www.prrths.com
http://www.lanestrains.com/PRRTHS_Application.pdf

Join the Pennsylvania Reading Seashore Lines Historical Society
It's FREE to join! http://www.prslhs.com 
Preserving The Memory Of The PRSL




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