Showing posts with label SOUND. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SOUND. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2009

HO BACHMANN SPECTRUM 83903 4-8-4 N&W W/DCC&SOUND


NEW- BACHMANN SPECTRUM HO
TOP OF THE LINE ENGINE
NORFOLK & WESTERN 4-8-4- PASSENGER VERSION
Using sounds taken from real locomotives, modelers can add a new level of realism to their railroads with a broad palette of prototypical sound effects and DCC functions. Plus, the dual mode decoders work on both DC and DCC layouts automatically.
Decoder features include:
authentic sound effects uniquely appropriate to each model including whistles, bells, chuffs, and air pumps
additional sounds include dynamo, injectors, coupler clank, water stop and more
three whistles to choose from in each model
whistle can be played in real time to create authentic whistle signals
high quality 16-bit digital sound
advanced motor control features including Load Compensation and Silent Drive to provide smooth, quiet operation
supports all recognized programming methods.

Monday, October 6, 2008

MTH Virginian 2-8-8-8-2 TRIPLEX w/DCC, Smoke & Sound



VIRGINIAN 2-8-8-8-2 TRIPLEX STEAM LOCOMOTIVE & TENDER
New HO scale factory painted and assembled 2-8-8-8-2 steam locomotive and rectangular tender by Mike's Train House (MTH). Painted black with a graphite smoke box and fire box and yellow lettering for the Virginian RR. Road number 700. MTH product number 803110-1. This complex locomotive has been inspected and track tested. (NOTE: we are affiliated with Sommerfelds Trains which is an authorized MTH dealer and warranty repair center).

CAN BE OPERATED 0N DC OR DCC LAYOUTS; SOUND & SMOKE WORK ON DC
Like M.T.H.'s O-Gauge and One-Gauge product lines, the company's HO locomotives will feature the firm's highly acclaimed sound and command control onboard electronics. The Proto-Sound system, Proto-Sound 3.0, includes battery-free operation and a wireless tether between locomotive and tender. The electronics will operate with any DC power supply and can operate in command mode using any DCC command control system or M.T.H.'s own state-of-the-art DCS Digital Command System

Model features include:
Die-Cast Boiler and Tender Body
Die-Cast Metal Chassis
Authentic Paint Scheme & Cab Numbers
RP-25 Metal Wheels Mounted On Metal Axles
Constant Voltage Headlight
Prototypical Rule 17 Lighting
Detailed Truck Sides
Detailed Cab Interior
Powerful 5-Pole Precision Flywheel Equipped Motor
(2) Scale Couplers
Metal Handrails and Decorative Bell
Decorative Metal Whistle
Sprung Drive Wheels
Synchronized Puffing ProtoSmoke System
Locomotive Speed Control
Locomotive Cab To Tender Deck Plate
Detailed Tender Undercarriage
Interchangeable Traction Tire-Equipped Drive Wheels
Proto-Sound 3.0 With The Digital Command System Featuring: Freight Yard Proto-Effects
On-Board DCC Receiver
Operates On Code 70, 83, & 100 Rail Curves
Unit Measures: 15-1/4" x 1-9/16" x 2-1/4"
Operates On 22" Radius Curves

THIS ENGINE IS IN STOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE SHIPPING

PROTOTYPE HISTORY:
P. T. Barnum would have loved the Triplex. It was an engine of superlatives: more drivers than anything before or since, too big for the shops of its owner, the Erie Railroad, powerful enough to pull a train nearly five miles long. Ninety years ago, in the days before multiple-unit control allowed one throttle to control several locomotives, the Triplex was the ultimate attempt to put as much power as possible in the hands of a single engineer. In the end, it proved a noble, flamboyant, but less-than-successful experiment. Baldwin Locomotive Works built three triplexes between 1914 and 1916 for pusher service on the Erie Railroad's daunting Susquehanna Hill (also known as Gulf Summit) near Deposit, N.Y. The cylinders of the Triplex's middle engine were powered by high pressure steam direct from the boiler, while the front and rear engines used low pressure steam exhausted from the middle cylinders.
Each triplex replaced three ordinary helper engines, and the new locomotives worked well enough to stay on the Erie roster for more than a decade. But the design proved a bit over the top and only one more Triplex was ever built, for the Virginian Railway. Even with their huge boilers, the locomotives could only make enough steam to go 10 mph. One reason was poor draft in the firebox, because only the front cylinders exhausted through the smokebox and created draft; the rear cylinders exhausted through a separate smokestack on the tender. Another inherent problem with the design was that traction from the rear engine decreased as the boiler used coal and water and the tender got lighter.
The M.T.H. Triplex recreates the flamboyance of the original design but runs much better than the prototype ever did. MTH engineering will make this complex model run smoothly and steadily at speeds from a barely perceptible crawl to wide-open throttle. For 2008 the Triplex joins MTH's HO lineup, complete with a full range of engine sounds, puffing smoke, speed control, full Rule 17 lighting, and ready to run under conventional, DCC, or M.T.H. Digital Command System (DCS) control.The Triplex was engineered to haul 640 fifty-ton cars in a train almost five miles long. But the couplers and draft gear of the early twentieth century could not have handled such a load, so the 2-8-8-8-2 was used as a pusher and never put to a full test.








Thursday, September 18, 2008

Proto 2000 FM H10-44 NYC #9101 w/ DC/ DCC Sound NEW


By the early 1930s, Fairbanks-Morse was ready to expand its line of diesel prime movers with a new design aimed at railroads. The new Model 38 as it was known used opposed pistons in place of a traditional cylinder head to form the combustion chamber. Although more mechanically complex, it was very smooth running and quiet when properly adjusted. The original six-cylinder 5 x 6" design could generate 300 horsepower; the Milwaukee Road had a single rail car, and the Baltimore & Ohio had two fitted with these engines. Larger eight-cylinder 8 x 10" models soon followed, producing 1,300 horsepower. This version caught the eye of the US Navy, who ordered several for submarines. In 1938, these same engines were selected by the Southern Railway to power five new lightweight rail cars. But further railroad sales were put on hold as the nation entered World War II and the Navy needed every Model 38 it could get. As the war began winding down, F-M was given the OK to build a prototype loco to test civilian applications for the Model 38. On August 21, 1944, F-M rolled out its first H10-44; H for a hood-type car body, 10 for 1000 horsepower and 44 for a B-B (four axles and four traction motors) wheel arrangement. Raymond Lowey designed the body, which featured a gently sloped nose and a rounded roof extending back over the cab. The prototype went to work for the Milwaukee Road, who placed the first large order for 10 in 1945. Some 197 were built through May of 1950 when a 1200-horsepower version (H12-44) was introduced. These models used the same body through 1952. Some H10s and H12s soldiered on into the early 1980s, often working for shortline and industrial users. The first H10 was restored by the Illinois Railway Museum and is still in operation.



Sunday, August 24, 2008

Athearn Genesis Milwaukee Road F-7A & F-7B DCC & Sound!



You are bidding on Athearn Genesis G22150A & G22150B HO Scale Milwaukee Road Freight F-7A & F-7B Both Powered, Both Have DCC & Sound!
Will Run On DC & DCC! Remote For Sound and All Instructions Included!!
Fully assembled and ready to operate!
Test Run Only!




MILWAUKEE ROAD F7 DIESEL A&B LOCOS & SOUND



This is a NEW HO-scale EMD F7 Diesel Locomotive WITH SOUNDS in the A unit and DCC Ready from BROADWAY LIMITED 'S BLUELINE SERIES for the MILWAUKEE ROAD RAILROAD - road numbers A Unit #106C, B Unit 106B in orange maroon colors. The sounds are installed in the A Unit and it is DCC Ready with the 8 pin decoder plug installed. If you want to make it a DCC loco, you only have to plug in a DCC decoder. The B Unit is a dummy. As with all Broadway Ltd. locomotives, it is quality built and highly detailed. Since Broadway has installed its own outstanding sound system, the BlueLine Series gives Analog DC system users the opportunity to have a quality sound locomotive at an affordable price. Factory installed sounds include dual diesel engine sounds, horn, bell, automatic start up and shut down sequence, automatic brake sound when slowing, radiator cooling fan, air lines filling and more!! This loco will operate on Code 70, 83 and 100 rail. It's features include knuckle couplers, powerful can m
otor with flywheel, diecast frame, constant intensity directional lighting, lighted number boards, RP-25 contour wheels, painted engineer figures and more. This engine is one of the finest you could have in your collection. Broadway Limited produces top-of-the-line and detailed locomotives in HO. Quantum Engineer or Sidekick users, please take note that due to patent restrictions, they will not activate BlueLine sounds. You will not be disappointed with this loco.