For some time, I've noticed that the Walthers quality assurance is head and shoulders above the competition. It's been some years since I had a loco with a missing part (a cab side window), and Walthers supplied a new one by return mail.
Model Railroad Miscellany
Sunday, April 26, 2026
In Praise Of Walthers Mainline
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Track Cleaning Hack
I can turn the Stewart chassis back to a model loco simply by untaping the battery holder, unsoldering the battery leads, and reconnecting the track leads from the trucks, but I would probably add a DCC decoder if I did this. If the whole idea doesn't work out, that's what will happen.
My layout cleasrances are set up for "Ezceeds Plate C" auto parts cars and such, and the battery holder has no trouble with tunnels and bridges.
My main line is an oval in a sort of double folded figure eight, about 160 feet. At 9 volts, the Stewart chassis runs at a medium-slow speed, which avoids derailments. It takes several minutes to do a complete transit of the main line. A big advantage is that the layout has really too much hidden track, but this setup will clean in the tunnels. The hookup works on 2% grades on the main line.
The photo shows it coupled to an A-Line track cleaning pad mounted in an Athearn box car. I've also used it with a Bachmann track cleaning tank car. So far, it seems to need at leastr a dozen transits of the main line to get things in acceptable shape. Full testing is still under way.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
A Few More Howard Moore Photos
Here is PA-1 51, again just after delivery in September, 1946. It's posed on a special Pacific Electric siding on Exposition Boullevard in Los Angeles, where railroads often displayed new equipment:
ATSF 51 was re-engined by EMD in 1954.Here is Santa Fe FT 158 in Barstow during the 1946-7 period.
The Santa Fe equipped some FT sets with steam generators and painted them in red and silver in 1946, contemporary with the other photos here. The last passenger FTs were returned to the freight scheme in 1954.Sunday, March 29, 2026
Howard Moore Photos
In 2025, the Pacific Northwest Railroad Archive was donated the collection of Charles Givens. Within the collection was a group of 4x5 negatives that Charles purchased and he noted it as the "L.A. Collection" but he did not know who took them. Most of these were taken in Southern California and appear to be from around 1946 to 1948.He then posted several scans, hoping someone might have information. As it happens, I knew the photographer right away, because I'd bought 8x10 prints of the same photos from just that guy, Howard Moore (1916-1998). He was one of Athearn's first employees, and he took the photos because Irv Athearn sent him out specificslly to take photos of rail equipment that Athearn might think worth manufacturing as models. I believe Howard had previously worked for a camera store, so he was capable of using a large-format camera. Here's one of the scans Mr Wilkens posted: In 1947, the eastbound UP Train 2, the Los Angeles Limited, was scheduled to arreive in San Bernardino, CA at 1:55 PM. The sun angle and position of the train suggest this is that train, with new FM Erie Built units. From my collection, here's his shot of what is probably the eastbound Santa Fe Chief, Train 20, probably in San Bernardino the same afternoon. In 1948, it arrived in San Bernardino at 2:18 PM. UP 981-A was UP's first Erie built, renumbered from 50-M-1A in 1946, renumbered to 700A 9n 1948. Eleven sets of Santa Fe FTs were painted in the passenger scheme in 1946 and ran in that scheme for several years.
I got to know Howard about 1980 when I was doing custom work for an LA hobby shop. I visited him and looked at this photo collection when I delivered projects to him. Here's an Athearn S-12 that I detailed with scratch built warning lights before Details West made the castings. He took the photo on his small layout:
I bought several dozen 8 x 10 prints from him back then, and I enjoyed his stories of railfanning and his lifelong friendship with Irvin Athearn. I'm glad I was able to identify him to the Pacific Northwest Railroad Archive as the photographer, but now I realize I need to get back to scanning the rest of those 8x10s. I'll post more as I do so.Sunday, March 22, 2026
New Kato N UP ES44AC In Union Pacific "Small Flag" Scheme
One point to note is that Kato's factory cab roof detail is as the locos were delivered. The photo above shows the prototype in as-delivered condition in November, 2012. However, after this time PTC antennas were added to the cab roof, changing the appearance greatly:
The photo above is from 2014, when this installation was pretty much complete. A loco with the as-delivered cab roof shouldn't have the 2022 "small flag" scheme. I'll have to see what kind of N scale PTC antenna I can find.Sunday, March 15, 2026
Norfolk Southern Retires Its Last SD70ACus
Which brings me to the next issue: there's no longer a reliable way to get this kind of locomotive news. In the 1970s and 1980s, there was Extra 2200 South, but according to AI,
Extra 2200 South, the renowned locomotive news magazine, remains technically in business but has faced significant publication delays as it transitions from a print-focused model to a digital one.The problem with online forums is that they aren't edited, and they're often dominated by young kids or emotionally immature adults, and that includes Trainorders.com. Meanwhile, remaining print venues have the problem that they aren't well indexed and aren't included in online searches. The cost of converting decades of print information to digitally indexed formats is prohibitive, as appears to be the case with Extra 2200 South.Owner Doug Cummings reported in August 2025 that the magazine is "alive and well" but has been delayed due to the complex process of switching to a digital edition. This involved a lengthy legal battle to separate the publication from its former web host, which was only resolved in mid-2025.
. . . Founded in 1961 by Jerry Pinkepank, the magazine became a vital resource for railfans, specializing in detailed locomotive rosters and news. Much of its original news function has since been superseded by real-time internet forums and sites like Trainorders.com.
On the other hand, if I'm forced to use AI, I might as well make lemonade out of lemons. I asked Chrome AI mode, "Can you give the history of the SD70ACu locomotive?" It answered,
The SD70ACu is a remanufactured diesel-electric locomotive created by rebuilding older EMD SD90MAC units. The program was designed to modernize the aging SD90MAC fleet by replacing unreliable Siemens electrical components with updated Mitsubishi technology and installing a more crash-resistant cab.However, this answer didn't mention the SD70ACus NS sold to Progress Rail, which sold them on to Ferromex. I asked about this, and it replied,The SD70ACu was born out of a need to extend the life of "SD9043MAC" cores—locomotives originally built in the mid-1990s as a lower-horsepower version of the SD90MAC.
NS launched the first major rebuilding effort in September 2015 at its Juniata Shops in Altoona, Pennsylvania. They acquired 100 second-hand SD90MACs from Union Pacific via Progress Rail and another 10 through a trade with CIT Group.
In 2018, CP followed suit, contracting Progress Rail to rebuild 30 of its own long-dormant SD90MACs. This order was later expanded to 60 units, utilizing CP's remaining stored fleet and additional cores purchased from Union Pacific.
Yes, Norfolk Southern (NS) reportedly sold approximately 30 retired SD70ACu locomotives to Ferromex (FXE) in 2024.Here's a photo of FXE 4155 that was recently posted on Facebook by a photographer who goes by Car Knocker Joe. It looks like Kato missed a good prototype.The units were not sold directly to Ferromex; instead, they were sold to Progress Rail, which then facilitated the acquisition by Ferromex. These locomotives are undergoing rebuilding at Progress Rail and Ferromex's Guadalajara shops in Mexico for future deployment on the FXE network.
Current Status: Being rebuilt and repainted into Ferromex colors (some units, like FXE-4155, have already been spotted in service).
If we dom't have X2200S, at least we have AI -- but you have to ask AI the right questions. X2200S, especially when the Dover family ran it, had editors who could anticipate the questions people had.
Sunday, March 8, 2026
1980s Brass N Scale Diesels
Here's a factory-painted Hallmark SD45u. The "shouldn't have painted so fast" paint scheme dates it perfectly:
Another SD45u, factory painted in the traditional yellow bonnet: A UP "fast forty" that I painted myself: An SP SD45E, factory paint: A check of Chrome AI mode tells me that these locos are selling for about half of their mid-1980s retail price, and that would be 2026 retail. I'd be lucky to get $100 for any of them if I were selling to a dealer. They'd be too much trouble to try to convert to DCC, although one possibility might be simply to swap out the chassis for a Kato -- but even rhen, the brass body might cause shorts against the Kato split frames.But they do look great in their display case.









