I'm glad to have read this review from the Steam Channel. Others are posting similar thoughts as mine, i would rather build my own shell from scratch. Cannot get used to faux Mars light as well. Please do more reviews like this! It helps people to spend wisely on their hobby.
It all depends on the purpose : This would be a very nice loco and certainly good enough to pull kids around in an amusement park. In that case it doesn't matter that it only resembles the prototype from a distance. As a serious modeller I would give it a miss however.
A brilliant piece of work that was built to provide pleasure to the owner and riders and I am sure it does that in spades!!! Don't mind the negatives Bill just enjoy it.
Agreed the body contours are way off. It is not like there are probably over 100,000 photos of Santa Fe F unit Warbonnets out there plus probably actual EMD Schematic Drawings available.
not that hard. If you can mold a 150' long yacht hull you can make a decent mold for a 7' long locomotive. It would be FAR better to mold a basic body then epoxy on the additional contours and details.
The cab contours are way off. What could have been a truly fantastic model was totally ruined by that one error. If this is an advertisement because you want to sell these, you have certainly lost me as a customer.
I agree, but try pricing RC jet airplanes with real miniature jet engines. Even a small one that’s not junk will cost $8-$10k. A 1/4 scale one is about and depending on the model, more than most top line cars, and even close to or more than a lot of houses, not junk houses either. Some of the engines themselves Te $10k alone.
And there are people paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for RC airplanes. Not to mention those ugly as hell super cars that ain't nothing but a glorified penis extension.
@@TheSteamChannel I was also thinkg that too lol. its just the windows make it look like the locomotive is giving you a thousand yard stare like chuck norris.
For that price, it should come with full interior detailing. I would have also hidden the connection point behind an access panel for display purposes.
99 percent of the comment section is people saying bad stuff about the f unit. and it looks more like an aloco and at 4:45 the locomotive looks like they edited it in.
Crazy Kaboose the engine is no peach, I’ll give you that. And it certainly has garnered a lot of negative attention for not looking anything like an F-Unit...that’s a problem for the manufacturer of the unit not this channel. But, if you honestly think I edited the engine into the video...you may be an idiot.
That is so awesome my son would LOVE to ride on a train like that! I wish i could find a local place like that to go for train rides. A VERY VERY expensive hobby im sure!
.............. I think it's absolutely wonderful ....the best I've ever seen.... thank you for sharing this .....if only I won the lotto I'd buy a dozen of them.... God Bless America
No EMD F-series locomotive ever had a light setup like that. Usually it was nothing more than a light cluster on a sideways swivel and that was it. And some railroads put a red light in there to use when it was being pulled backward.
Sorry but for $13000 + I would expect the shell proportions to be correct. The nose and windscreen are way off. It has the look of an Alco FA with the squareness of the front instead of the classic round curves that gave it the bulldog moniker. NOT IMPRESSED.
I agree I wouldn't be paying $1300.00 let alone $13,000.000 + for something as pathetic looking as that and the sound effects were rubbish too. The Santa Fe decals on the nose and on the side were crooked, the ladder rungs on the nose were crooked, the horns were out of scale among many other things, the fuel tank was the wrong shape, and the shape was all wrong, with something as big as that if you can't get it even close to shape give it away, one word RUBBISH.
Stan Fishman That much, really? I wanted to get one for my 3 year old so he can ride around the local club tracks but I was expecting around a grand or two. Looks like I'll be buying used.
I agree, before I got this far down in the comments, I thought, "WTF" were these people thinking. That is a terrible rendition of an F Unit, and those trucks?
WOW!!!!! SOMEBODY OUT THERE READ MY MIND!!!!! I HAVE BEEN DREAMING ABOUT THAT FOR THE LAST THIRTY-FIVE YEARS!!!!! OH, THAT WOULD BE BEYOND AWESOME!!!!! I WANT ONE NOW!!!!!
On the miniature railway I volunteer at we have 2 diesels (a Deltic and a Hymek) and both aren't scale models...they just do for a good run about with kids, much like this one. The steam locos we use are mostly scale representatives of the true form, but there's a Tinkerbell class called Jeff, which does most of the work. If it's cheap and cheerful and kids love it, buy it. It's low maintenance and easy to run. On a critical point: The lady presenter is a bit wooden in her approach. She could interact with the loco and use a more animated voice....instead of sitting there like a plank and speaking in a rather monotone way.... (sorry Love, no offence, but that's my opinion). On the whole. Great Channel.
You'd think they'd get the number board right. I've yet to see a F series locomotive where the "B" unit had a cab for crews to ride in and control from. "B" units have no cab, therefore they are designated "B" units. I think at some point Union Pacific changed some of their locos to "B" unit by plywood and paint over windows, but that was on Geeps. If I were shelling out 13 grand I want it to pretty much blow sunshine up my behind and make my toes curl.
Not exactly scale. The stripes are not parallel with the red border. The nose under the windshield is flat. The prototype has a slope. With photos of an actual F-7 it has a toy like appearance, not a scale reproduction.
Please for all the critics out there spreading their good cheer and who are enhancing the hobby with their stellar support and feedback; please share your work, completed projects and abilities here so we can enjoy.
I agree that it would have been the same amount of effort to get the shell right as it was to produce this large scale Tri-ang doppelganger. There is a giant sh*t-load of technical info available for F-units.
The larger scales are going to look a bit "off" compared to the scale trains (HO, N-Gauge, O-Scale etc.) G scale comes to mind. Even old Lionel wasn't to scale. Nothing wrong with that, different strokes for different folks. But hey, for those of us that are nuts about trains and wonder how it would affect a relationship, this gal is for you!!!
The lack of transparent window panels would look hokey even in the smaller scales, not to speak of something this big. The general public might be impressed, but not a seasoned model railroader.. This is for amusement park rides; Key Models this ain't!
Amusement parks and city live steamer clubs - a seasoned model railroader, aware of these clubs, would not be surprised at the lack of precision modeling. But these are not toys.
Ha! At first, I didn't understand this train was designed to pull passengers in a park. I thought those batteries and motors were massive overkill! Once I saw it was made to actually carry human beings, it made a lot more sense! LOL
To all you purists: Quit complaining. So it's not to scale or strictly a real model. I'm impressed by someone's building skills and everything else be damned. This is fun ride for someone.
We’ll have to disagree that 13.5 is reasonable for the quality level of this unit. Checkout the Museum Trains F7 review we just posted. This is a park engine for kids compared to that.
Back in the early 70s, one gentleman here in Florida coupled 3 single cylinder gas engines together to drive a generator that then powered the motors on the axles. He had a small pump that added Diesel fuel to the exhaust. Problem with most Diesel engine models is weight and size vs output. Think about 2 times as heavy just for a twin cylinder over a gasoline engine. As an example, a 10HP Carrol Stream single weighs in at 106 lbs. While a gasoline engine of the same output weighs in at 55 lbs. And at nearly 4 times the price to over 10 times the price. I had a test bed which used a 10 HP Techumseh engine to drive two 24VDC 50Amp generators. As the generators were rewired to be self exciting, they would put out anywhere from 0 volts to 110 volts DC depending on engine speed. I installed a voltage limiting circuit to keep the voltage under 36 volts. Fed to the two 24 V .55 HP motors on the axles, they had a big problem with wheel spin at starting. But could get it up to better than 15 MPH when they got it moving. For those that want to scale that out, that is 120 scale MPH.
I grew up with a local farmer who had a 1/4 scale railroad around the property. He had a Volkswagen Rabbit diesel coupled to a hydraulic pump. Has worked great since 1995, these days that train running to the pumpkin patch is keeping the farm alive.
With all due respect, the proportions of that shell are so far off. If that was delivered to me I'd send it back!! For the money these sell for, they should have a steel or aluminum shell. Horrible...
I know it's a year later, but this is what I came to say! The top is way too flat, the contours of the nose not right, and it has painted-on windows for Pete's sake! When you can get better proportions and details in N scale, it doesn't say much.
The contours and proportions for the nose are off, as others have noted. That's not a huge issue for me; the model is close enough to give the general feel for the prototype, and the EMD "bulldog" nose is a challenging shape to get right. What bothers me most is the way the cigar bands coming off the sides of the Sante Fe herald on the nose droop; if that issue was fixed, and those bands were parallel with the bottom edge of the body shell, I think this model would look a lot better.
The company that has manufactured this wants people to buy it so those people who want to buy one have to right to say if it is worth the money they are asking. This is well made however the body is wrong. Bryan McKenzie sums it up perfectly, it looks like the result of an F unit and a PA sleeping together. Get it to look right and I would love to buy one and drive one on my property.
Por el tamaño de esa máquina yo esperaría que estuviera bien detallada igual que una real, pero ya veo que no, tiene mejor detalle una máquina escala H0...
That is because it is. An F-unit has a curved roof. The windshield glass openings in the cab were curved. And the nose was curved. Back in the early 70s we made 1.5/1.6" F-units the hard way at Koster's Miniature Railroad Supplies. They were all steel bodies. The nose was made by taking a sheet of 16ga steel and cutting, hammering, and welding it on a wood block. It had the correct curvature. If you ordered it with a Mars light, it had a true oscillating headlight. Pain to make but something to see at night. The grills on the side were made by stretching copper coated steel wire so that they could be open behind them. They took a lot of liberties on this model so that they could have a bigger interior and to make it easier to do the fiberglass work. If you want to see what ours looked like, see ibls.org/files/Companies/KostersMiniatureRailroadSupplies/Kosters_Miniature_Railroad_Supplies_Catalog_6B.pdf $4500 per unit back then is equal to about $18K today. I'm in that catalog by the way.
Just had a look at that catalogue from 1978 - very impressive! Although $4500 would've been an eye-watering amount of money in those days. A very good model of the GP-7.
I think you would have been surprised how many we built even at that price. The Clinchfield GP-7 resulted in a sale to the same owner of a Clinchfield F-7 as an example.
The rake of the windshield is wrong, but the nose actually looks pretty good. It looks like someone applied a straight Warbonnet decal to the nose, whereas on the real article, the "whiskers" coming off the Santa Fe cross followed the contour of the hood much better. I think the decal is doing the nose and major injustice here...if it were an HO gauge model, I'd say to use a decal softener on the decal before it adheres to the paint and some tweezers to manipulate the whiskers!
Seeing a lot of comments about the lack of precision in the modeling. These trains are designed to be ridden by people; they are not going to be "model" precise. Neither are the cars, which passengers ride, as well. These clubs often meet in city parks where the clubs have been allowed to lay track. Take a look at some of these clubs, here on UA-cam. Those who are complaining might learn something.
Livery is not pronounced "LI very", it's "Liver y". Having grown up with Santa Fe passenger trains, this is a poor representative of the classic F-7 locomotive, especially with the technology available today. The sound is that of an F-7, however. Very impressive!
I love smell oil rugs and real black diesel smoke and sound. I want to old forklift's diesel engine with electric generator powered fit in model 1/5 scale train.
No deep cycle are the right kind of battery to use as they are designed to be charged and discharged multiple times. That type of use would seriously shorten the life of an automotive battery. Unless you are thinking of an electric vehicle battery in which case it would be much more expensive.
Grand scale model trains are really cool, but the design of this F body was way off, it looks more like an Alco FA. The build quality is also really underwhelming, especially at this price point. I could buy a 2016 Camry with that sort of money. At 13K, I would expect a lot better.
This is not grand scale...that would be 10" gauge +. But, I do agree--there are sharper F units on the market. Museum Trains is making some gorgeous F units in 7.5" gauge.
in fairness to the rivet counters, the engine is advertised as a 1.6" scale model. It's to scale about as much as a Lionel O27 is to O Scale. Oh, and rivet counters, take a look at the work they are doing on the Big Boy - tell me that the modern construction and safety feature are making it like the original.
It's so nice to see females enjoying things like this. We boys now full grown men have always dominated the toy buying and enjoying market but I think it's even cooler and sexier that women enjoy the same things men have a longing for.
It's a slow day here, so I've read some of the comments. Since it appears this is for those park railroads where the kiddies and their parents take a ride, what child and/or parent knows the difference. They're just there to have some fun. Sure, the 'experts' can pick it apart, and I'm certainly no expert, but I stand by my comment regarding children and parents not knowing the first thing about how this engine should look. They don't care. They just wanna have fun.
I came here to look at some trains but this is much better. And I also like your "Marvel" MCU intro but made for locomotives instead. Wait a minute. Loco-motive. Loco=crazy.... crazy train. Ozzy Osbourne was on to something...
I run an old MTC G12 with a little old 4 cylinder gas engine in it, and the thing sounds so amazing and pulls like a bulldozer, but I've always wanted it actually diesel powered. Trouble is, it's almost impossible to find anything that will fit and not sound like a lawnmower.
I think scale model railroads are cool and all, but $13,000?! You can by a pretty decent full scale car for that and you can drive it in a lot more places. Plus, you can even drive it in the rain and not get wet.
Ridgerunner2112 That’s actually cheaper in this hobby..I wouldn’t pay 13.5k for this...but when you start getting into steam it can be a lot more. A casting kit alone might run 10-15k for the chassis...a boiler will run at least $4,350 and could be as much as $9,000. It’s not a cheap hobby.
@@TheSteamChannel Thanks for the info. I had seen a video about a week ago on a different channel of a large scale working steam locomotive and I was curious what the price tag on something like that would be. Up until about a week ago, I didn't even know working large scale steam locomotive engines were a thing. I guess that and the price tag left me a bit underwhelmed with this electric locomotive. Whether it's steam or electric, It's still a very interesting and unique hobby. However, I think it is especially great that there are folks maintaining and operating the scale actual steam locomotives.
I'm glad to have read this review from the Steam Channel. Others are posting similar thoughts as mine, i would rather build my own shell from scratch. Cannot get used to faux Mars light as well. Please do more reviews like this! It helps people to spend wisely on their hobby.
The top of the cab resembles more of an Alco FA unit
It all depends on the purpose :
This would be a very nice loco and certainly good enough to pull kids around in an amusement park.
In that case it doesn't matter that it only resembles the prototype from a distance.
As a serious modeller I would give it a miss however.
A brilliant piece of work that was built to provide pleasure to the owner and riders and I am sure it does that in spades!!! Don't mind the negatives Bill just enjoy it.
I know it's hard to make that but that shell sucks.
Agreed the body contours are way off. It is not like there are probably over 100,000 photos of Santa Fe F unit Warbonnets out there plus probably actual EMD Schematic Drawings available.
not that hard. If you can mold a 150' long yacht hull you can make a decent mold for a 7' long locomotive. It would be FAR better to mold a basic body then epoxy on the additional contours and details.
The cab contours are way off. What could have been a truly fantastic model was totally ruined by that one error. If this is an advertisement because you want to sell these, you have certainly lost me as a customer.
It’s a review...like many others on the channel. I’m not affiliated with the manufacturer.
$13,500????? The price of a car but the precision/accuracy of a toy.
I agree, but try pricing RC jet airplanes with real miniature jet engines. Even a small one that’s not junk will cost $8-$10k. A 1/4 scale one is about and depending on the model, more than most top line cars, and even close to or more than a lot of houses, not junk houses either. Some of the engines themselves Te $10k alone.
DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY HO TRAINS I COULD GET WITH THAT MONEY?
The material alone to build something this large is most of that cost, thats like complaining about paying more for a better equipped car.
And there are people paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for RC airplanes. Not to mention those ugly as hell super cars that ain't nothing but a glorified penis extension.
very good and informative video i enjoyed this and the young lady knows her stuff
the squareness of the body and windows makes it look like it had chuck norris face
Raymond Leggs I was thinking more of the magic school bus 😉
@@TheSteamChannel I was also thinkg that too lol. its just the windows make it look like the locomotive is giving you a thousand yard stare like chuck norris.
For that price, it should come with full interior detailing. I would have also hidden the connection point behind an access panel for display purposes.
99 percent of the comment section is people saying bad stuff about the f unit. and it looks more like an aloco and at 4:45 the locomotive looks like they edited it in.
Crazy Kaboose the engine is no peach, I’ll give you that. And it certainly has garnered a lot of negative attention for not looking anything like an F-Unit...that’s a problem for the manufacturer of the unit not this channel. But, if you honestly think I edited the engine into the video...you may be an idiot.
Ich hab noch nie ne Modelleisenbahnerin mit Frosch im Hals gesehen. Danke!
That is so awesome my son would LOVE to ride on a train like that! I wish i could find a local place like that to go for train rides. A VERY VERY expensive hobby im sure!
Brings back memories. I had an HO scale train with the same colour scheme.
AMAZING,absolutely love it,and what a beautiful speaking voice the young lady has
a locomotive that every driver wants to drive in his club VERY COMPLETE and practice traditional model thanks
This is why ALCO PAs and EMD F7s shouldn't sleep together.
Bryan McKenzie best comment ever...😂😁
CLASSIC! LOL!
Some people have to much damn money
Lol
I was kinda thinking the same thing. lol
What I like to know is how long did it take the lovely lady to remeber her lines as thats very indepth and a video worth watching
P arjacpar Ever heard of cue cards?
I need to ride that Unit so bad that's so cool you got your own backyard Railroad to yourself
.............. I think it's absolutely wonderful ....the best I've ever seen.... thank you for sharing this .....if only I won the lotto I'd buy a dozen of them.... God Bless America
The L E D Mars lights looks awful.
Seriously HO and N scale Mars lights look better.
NJW1973 I Know! For that size you should be able to get an actual working mars light
No EMD F-series locomotive ever had a light setup like that. Usually it was nothing more than a light cluster on a sideways swivel and that was it. And some railroads put a red light in there to use when it was being pulled backward.
I like the older halogen like bulbs in the locos not the bright ugly led light
Sorry but for $13000 + I would expect the shell proportions to be correct. The nose and windscreen are way off. It has the look of an Alco FA with the squareness of the front instead of the classic round curves that gave it the bulldog moniker. NOT IMPRESSED.
I agree I wouldn't be paying $1300.00 let alone $13,000.000 + for something as pathetic looking as that and the sound effects were rubbish too. The Santa Fe decals on the nose and on the side were crooked, the ladder rungs on the nose were crooked, the horns were out of scale among many other things, the fuel tank was the wrong shape, and the shape was all wrong, with something as big as that if you can't get it even close to shape give it away, one word RUBBISH.
Stan Fishman That much, really? I wanted to get one for my 3 year old so he can ride around the local club tracks but I was expecting around a grand or two. Looks like I'll be buying used.
I agree, before I got this far down in the comments, I thought, "WTF" were these people thinking. That is a terrible rendition of an F Unit, and those trucks?
@Don Vito 😂😂😂
If you think you can do it better, then nobody is stopping you. Whining armchair experts.
Really cool video! Would be really cool to see a Baldwin Sharknose locomotive in this scale!
WOW!!!!! SOMEBODY OUT THERE READ MY MIND!!!!! I HAVE BEEN DREAMING ABOUT THAT FOR THE LAST THIRTY-FIVE YEARS!!!!! OH, THAT WOULD BE BEYOND AWESOME!!!!! I WANT ONE NOW!!!!!
On the miniature railway I volunteer at we have 2 diesels (a Deltic and a Hymek) and both aren't scale models...they just do for a good run about with kids, much like this one. The steam locos we use are mostly scale representatives of the true form, but there's a Tinkerbell class called Jeff, which does most of the work.
If it's cheap and cheerful and kids love it, buy it. It's low maintenance and easy to run.
On a critical point:
The lady presenter is a bit wooden in her approach. She could interact with the loco and use a more animated voice....instead of sitting there like a plank and speaking in a rather monotone way.... (sorry Love, no offence, but that's my opinion).
On the whole. Great Channel.
You'd think they'd get the number board right. I've yet to see a F series locomotive where the "B" unit had a cab for crews to ride in and control from. "B" units have no cab, therefore they are designated "B" units. I think at some point Union Pacific changed some of their locos to "B" unit by plywood and paint over windows, but that was on Geeps. If I were shelling out 13 grand I want it to pretty much blow sunshine up my behind and make my toes curl.
Mike Lcml5c the number board layout had nothing to do with railroading...196 B was to mark the owner's military service.
This is an amazing set up you have Just think if your friends came round what fun they would have
I love the new intro as much I like this Chanel
Nice review!
Not exactly scale. The stripes are not parallel with the red border. The nose under the windshield is flat. The prototype has a slope. With photos of an actual F-7 it has a toy like appearance, not a scale reproduction.
perfect for a kid who doesnt care what kind of train hes riding on who wants to have fun
Ouch. Nice Toy! That is a very beautiful locomotive!
🚋 🚞
Just Superb!!!! I love this train!
Perfect to a point,the wind shield is not like a real one,that a point missing.
It looks like something you would buy at the toy store to give your 5 year old for Christmas.
Wow. Real nice
Please for all the critics out there spreading their good cheer and who are enhancing the hobby with their stellar support and feedback; please share your work, completed projects and abilities here so we can enjoy.
awesome video. very cool.
This is so COOL!!
Nice video and fun to watch. Take care now.
this is exactly what I want but in the r160 form from the NYC subway!
I agree that it would have been the same amount of effort to get the shell right as it was to produce this large scale Tri-ang doppelganger. There is a giant sh*t-load of technical info available for F-units.
The larger scales are going to look a bit "off" compared to the scale trains (HO, N-Gauge, O-Scale etc.) G scale comes to mind. Even old Lionel wasn't to scale. Nothing wrong with that, different strokes for different folks. But hey, for those of us that are nuts about trains and wonder how it would affect a relationship, this gal is for you!!!
Scale can be off and not noticed, but when you get the shape off as badly as that, it just becomes a miscarriage.
The lack of transparent window panels would look hokey even in the smaller scales, not to speak of something this big. The general public might be impressed, but not a seasoned model railroader.. This is for amusement park rides; Key Models this ain't!
Amusement parks and city live steamer clubs - a seasoned model railroader, aware of these clubs, would not be surprised at the lack of precision modeling. But these are not toys.
Quit carping. Hey it's for fun. Enjoy the ride.
You said that right 2027850. Its just for fun.
Ha! At first, I didn't understand this train was designed to pull passengers in a park. I thought those batteries and motors were massive overkill! Once I saw it was made to actually carry human beings, it made a lot more sense! LOL
Nice Video. Greetings from Berlin
Enjoyed the video and l have subscribe to your channel.
Nice looking model and train
The locomotive looks nice and the settings too.
iv'e always loved the f series diesel locomotives!, Great video!
That looks Cool!
To all you purists: Quit complaining. So it's not to scale or strictly a real model. I'm impressed by someone's building skills and everything else be damned. This is fun ride for someone.
could they not even get the basic contours of the body right? that's like the whole appeal of the f unit and they screwed it up
Embarrassingly bad.
TWO AMAZING MACHINES!!!
$13.5k is very reasonable. I wish I had a few acres of land so I could build a layout. Walt Disney had something similar on his personal property.
We’ll have to disagree that 13.5 is reasonable for the quality level of this unit. Checkout the Museum Trains F7 review we just posted. This is a park engine for kids compared to that.
That looks more like an ALCO profile then an EMD!
Forget the batteries.... let's make a mini diesel engine and throw it in there
Back in the early 70s, one gentleman here in Florida coupled 3 single cylinder gas engines together to drive a generator that then powered the motors on the axles. He had a small pump that added Diesel fuel to the exhaust. Problem with most Diesel engine models is weight and size vs output. Think about 2 times as heavy just for a twin cylinder over a gasoline engine. As an example, a 10HP Carrol Stream single weighs in at 106 lbs. While a gasoline engine of the same output weighs in at 55 lbs. And at nearly 4 times the price to over 10 times the price. I had a test bed which used a 10 HP Techumseh engine to drive two 24VDC 50Amp generators. As the generators were rewired to be self exciting, they would put out anywhere from 0 volts to 110 volts DC depending on engine speed. I installed a voltage limiting circuit to keep the voltage under 36 volts. Fed to the two 24 V .55 HP motors on the axles, they had a big problem with wheel spin at starting. But could get it up to better than 15 MPH when they got it moving. For those that want to scale that out, that is 120 scale MPH.
Hmmm..... It could work on a larger scale if size and weight is the problem....
I grew up with a local farmer who had a 1/4 scale railroad around the property. He had a Volkswagen Rabbit diesel coupled to a hydraulic pump. Has worked great since 1995, these days that train running to the pumpkin patch is keeping the farm alive.
That would be 15” gauge- much, much bigger.
@@gravelydon7072 use a hotbox truck diesel engine, already has the generator on it
Very cool video
That's awesome
Very cool.
With all due respect, the proportions of that shell are so far off. If that was delivered to me I'd send it back!! For the money these sell for, they should have a steel or aluminum shell. Horrible...
hey I saw one at a garage sale one time & it was a battery operated loco but it was ALL aluminum body & boy did I wish I had the cash to get it!
I know it's a year later, but this is what I came to say! The top is way too flat, the contours of the nose not right, and it has painted-on windows for Pete's sake! When you can get better proportions and details in N scale, it doesn't say much.
Yeah, I could go for steel shell.
I love that intro
The contours and proportions for the nose are off, as others have noted. That's not a huge issue for me; the model is close enough to give the general feel for the prototype, and the EMD "bulldog" nose is a challenging shape to get right. What bothers me most is the way the cigar bands coming off the sides of the Sante Fe herald on the nose droop; if that issue was fixed, and those bands were parallel with the bottom edge of the body shell, I think this model would look a lot better.
The company that has manufactured this wants people to buy it so those people who want to buy one have to right to say if it is worth the money they are asking. This is well made however the body is wrong. Bryan McKenzie sums it up perfectly, it looks like the result of an F unit and a PA sleeping together. Get it to look right and I would love to buy one and drive one on my property.
Awesome and beautiful! when the woman loves trains!!
Greeting from Mexico!
BIG POINTS ! I have only the GILS - GAUGE 0 - SILVER GILS TRAIN . GREETINGS ! F.E. GERMANY
Por el tamaño de esa máquina yo esperaría que estuviera bien detallada igual que una real, pero ya veo que no, tiene mejor detalle una máquina escala H0...
Superb
Please tell us more about the Hot Box Detector !!!
a beautiful model train and a beautiful young lady. nice combo.
I think this a nice characature of the F... Nice lady.
This seems a lot squarer than an F-unit should be. The flatness of the roof and squareness of the nose reminded me more of an Alco than F-unit.
That is because it is. An F-unit has a curved roof. The windshield glass openings in the cab were curved. And the nose was curved. Back in the early 70s we made 1.5/1.6" F-units the hard way at Koster's Miniature Railroad Supplies. They were all steel bodies. The nose was made by taking a sheet of 16ga steel and cutting, hammering, and welding it on a wood block. It had the correct curvature. If you ordered it with a Mars light, it had a true oscillating headlight. Pain to make but something to see at night. The grills on the side were made by stretching copper coated steel wire so that they could be open behind them. They took a lot of liberties on this model so that they could have a bigger interior and to make it easier to do the fiberglass work.
If you want to see what ours looked like, see ibls.org/files/Companies/KostersMiniatureRailroadSupplies/Kosters_Miniature_Railroad_Supplies_Catalog_6B.pdf $4500 per unit back then is equal to about $18K today. I'm in that catalog by the way.
Just had a look at that catalogue from 1978 - very impressive! Although $4500 would've been an eye-watering amount of money in those days. A very good model of the GP-7.
I think you would have been surprised how many we built even at that price. The Clinchfield GP-7 resulted in a sale to the same owner of a Clinchfield F-7 as an example.
The rake of the windshield is wrong, but the nose actually looks pretty good. It looks like someone applied a straight Warbonnet decal to the nose, whereas on the real article, the "whiskers" coming off the Santa Fe cross followed the contour of the hood much better. I think the decal is doing the nose and major injustice here...if it were an HO gauge model, I'd say to use a decal softener on the decal before it adheres to the paint and some tweezers to manipulate the whiskers!
And P.S. on the Santa Fe, passenger F A units didn't have steam generator so the B units carried them :-p
WOW THAT THING NEEDS WORK
It’s huge ok do you expect everything to be perfect
Indominus Rex it being bigger allows more detail
@@Simplicity223 tons of people have built F units at this size that look fine
The quality of the fabrication is very sub par for what I could see. Looks like someone who never welded before did the welds.
Seeing a lot of comments about the lack of precision in the modeling. These trains are designed to be ridden by people; they are not going to be "model" precise. Neither are the cars, which passengers ride, as well. These clubs often meet in city parks where the clubs have been allowed to lay track. Take a look at some of these clubs, here on UA-cam. Those who are complaining might learn something.
Awesome
love it!!
Nice. Wonder if they offer a fully detailed cabin with clear windows?
It's an F flat. Lmao!!! 😂
Beautiful
Livery is not pronounced "LI very", it's "Liver y". Having grown up with Santa Fe passenger trains, this is a poor representative of the classic F-7 locomotive, especially with the technology available today. The sound is that of an F-7, however. Very impressive!
I love smell oil rugs and real black diesel smoke and sound. I want to old forklift's diesel engine with electric generator powered fit in model 1/5 scale train.
Great to see a woman presenting the hobby
So Cool!
I want all sets of trains because I like trains.
your my fan
First like plus nice video and awesome locomotive
I love trains and this is cool
Nice Job! The one improvement? You should be using motive power batteries for this application instead of the deep cycle type.
No deep cycle are the right kind of battery to use as they are designed to be charged and discharged multiple times. That type of use would seriously shorten the life of an automotive battery. Unless you are thinking of an electric vehicle battery in which case it would be much more expensive.
Subscribed !!!
Grand scale model trains are really cool, but the design of this F body was way off, it looks more like an Alco FA. The build quality is also really underwhelming, especially at this price point. I could buy a 2016 Camry with that sort of money. At 13K, I would expect a lot better.
This is not grand scale...that would be 10" gauge +. But, I do agree--there are sharper F units on the market. Museum Trains is making some gorgeous F units in 7.5" gauge.
in fairness to the rivet counters, the engine is advertised as a 1.6" scale model. It's to scale about as much as a Lionel O27 is to O Scale. Oh, and rivet counters, take a look at the work they are doing on the Big Boy - tell me that the modern construction and safety feature are making it like the original.
I love this and want one in my yard !
The castings of the trucks is as rough as guts. The detail is very poor and at $13.500 is totally over priced.
How is 13 dollars 50 cents over priced?
@@Zanderreaper idiot it’s 13 grand and 500 dollars.
@@Xiiki i was pointing out that he misspelled 13,000
@@Zanderreaper LOL1 Perfect. :)
It's so nice to see females enjoying things like this. We boys now full grown men have always dominated the toy buying and enjoying market but I think it's even cooler and sexier that women enjoy the same things men have a longing for.
When I win the lottery I'm calling you
Makes me want to give a crack at building a 1.6" scale GE U18b. (I live near Pickens RR and they just look so quirky)
Very nice. I wonder just how much does the locomotive costs.
Bill Halupka
For THAT price I would expect something a bit more realistic
It's a slow day here, so I've read some of the comments. Since it appears this is for those park railroads where the kiddies and their parents take a ride, what child and/or parent knows the difference. They're just there to have some fun. Sure, the 'experts' can pick it apart, and I'm certainly no expert, but I stand by my comment regarding children and parents not knowing the first thing about how this engine should look. They don't care. They just wanna have fun.
I came here to look at some trains but this is much better. And I also like your "Marvel" MCU intro but made for locomotives instead. Wait a minute. Loco-motive. Loco=crazy.... crazy train. Ozzy Osbourne was on to something...
I'm okay with the body, not a fan of the window stickers though. That makes it look cheap.
The Mars light is not to my liking
Would love to see an 1/8 or 1.6 scale loco with a small diesel so it blows black under load like the real units
I run an old MTC G12 with a little old 4 cylinder gas engine in it, and the thing sounds so amazing and pulls like a bulldozer, but I've always wanted it actually diesel powered. Trouble is, it's almost impossible to find anything that will fit and not sound like a lawnmower.
I think scale model railroads are cool and all, but $13,000?! You can by a pretty decent full scale car for that and you can drive it in a lot more places. Plus, you can even drive it in the rain and not get wet.
Ridgerunner2112 That’s actually cheaper in this hobby..I wouldn’t pay 13.5k for this...but when you start getting into steam it can be a lot more. A casting kit alone might run 10-15k for the chassis...a boiler will run at least $4,350 and could be as much as $9,000. It’s not a cheap hobby.
@@TheSteamChannel Thanks for the info. I had seen a video about a week ago on a different channel of a large scale working steam locomotive and I was curious what the price tag on something like that would be. Up until about a week ago, I didn't even know working large scale steam locomotive engines were a thing. I guess that and the price tag left me a bit underwhelmed with this electric locomotive. Whether it's steam or electric, It's still a very interesting and unique hobby. However, I think it is especially great that there are folks maintaining and operating the scale actual steam locomotives.
Wao Great Nice Good Job