How about the "Des Moines Rocket" of the '50's--one E-7, dinette-coach-coach, 
articulated; a straight coach, a parlor-obs; usually all pre-war Budd cars.  
Dave Engle

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: raisinone 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 07, 2012 5:22 PM
  Subject: {S-Scale List} Re: Raduis Roll Call


    
  I tend to approach things more from a prototype POV. Sometimes you can 
actually look to the real world for examples! Not every 12 inch to the foot 
passenger train had 3+ locomotives and 12+ cars. 

  My personal favorite, a train I'm modeling, is Rock Island's "Choctaw Rocket" 
- daily Memphis to Amarillo - E6a, RPO and three passenger cars. The "Nancy 
Hanks" and "Ann Rutledge" are two others that come to mind as short name 
trains. A quick look at some actual 1940's consists yielded Pennsy's "Liberty 
Limited" - 4-6-2 and 5 cars in December 1948. Two others that comprise a single 
locomotive and 4 or fewer cars were "The Gulf Coast Rebel" (GM&O) and the 
"Lookout" (NC&StL), again both in the 1940's. 

  I believe MR, probably 20+ years ago, did a series on short passenger trains 
you can model for this very reason. Without the on-line all-time index I can't 
tell you which issue. Man do I miss that resource.

  Jim Kindraka
  Plymouth, WI

  --- In [email protected], "richgajnak" <rustytraque@...> wrote:
  >
  > 
  > My railroad is really too small to even properly support an American Models 
seven car Budd set with a pair E's or trio of F's on the point.
  > Rich G(ajnak)
  >



  

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