My favorite railroad is the Boston and Maine Railroad and seeing the 4115 made me very happy!! Do you have any more footage of New England locomotive modles?
I have seen Diesel Locomotives of the Alco PA and PB along with the EMD engines but I have yet to find anything of my favorite steamers the German DR65 and DR99.22. Does anyone know if the latter two are a thing or not?
Northern is a standard designation for a 4-8-4. Whatever cutesy name any particular railroad developed for that class of engines in its fleet…they are still northerns. Just like a 2-8-4 is a Berkshire but the C&O called them Kanawha’s.
I know you guys have places that you can get kits for steam locomotives on your website, but I was just wondering, do you habe any places you'd suggest getting kits for electric or gas powered locomotives? I wouldn't mind building an emd switcher but idk how or where to get started tbh
you need to be at least a little mechanically inclined so you're able to figure out how to do this stuff, or this hobby really isn't for you tbh... you need to actively be researching the inner workings of locomotives and engines in general, if you just want to run a train then it might be better to join a club and use whatever extra equipment they have for people to use... in short: you have to want it, even when building from a kit you're gonna be machining parts and getting everything working yourself
@@jamesm6638 thanks, im aware of this and have the tools and attitude needed for it, I can build it just fine and probably make the frame but when it comes time for the cover I wouldn't know where to go, so thats why I was asking if there's kits
@@haunted1659 well you need a pretty decent sized mill and a good lathe to start, so if you've got those then you should be ok... as for the body structure of the unit, it's just some supports with sheet metal covering it, follow the drawings and you'll be fine
Awesome that a big Loco red.👍😎
The best Chanel in this world 🌎
I love that Boston and Maine 4-8-4 and the PRR GG1!
Thanks for sharing!
Lots of great engines :)
That GG 1 was really awesome. Great video .
Great locomotives.
great engines great track need a short length of 7 1/4 track for those visitors
Awesome locomotives and watching now and enjoying your video too 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍😎 AWESOME 🚂🚂🚂🚂😄👌❤️
Great video!
Love that GG-1!
I enjoyed it
My favorite railroad is the Boston and Maine Railroad and seeing the 4115 made me very happy!! Do you have any more footage of New England locomotive modles?
Would like to know more about this gg1...who built it.....always thought this would be my next project ???
I have seen Diesel Locomotives of the Alco PA and PB along with the EMD engines but I have yet to find anything of my favorite steamers the German DR65 and DR99.22. Does anyone know if the latter two are a thing or not?
the northern had a centipede tender
Muito bom!
Nice video. Lackawanna 4-8-4’s we’re actually called Pocono’s not Northerns.
I challenge you to find 1 person who will actually refer to them that way out loud
@@jamesm6638 Come to northeast PA…you’ll find some people lol
Northern is a standard designation for a 4-8-4. Whatever cutesy name any particular railroad developed for that class of engines in its fleet…they are still northerns. Just like a 2-8-4 is a Berkshire but the C&O called them Kanawha’s.
I know you guys have places that you can get kits for steam locomotives on your website, but I was just wondering, do you habe any places you'd suggest getting kits for electric or gas powered locomotives? I wouldn't mind building an emd switcher but idk how or where to get started tbh
you need to be at least a little mechanically inclined so you're able to figure out how to do this stuff, or this hobby really isn't for you tbh... you need to actively be researching the inner workings of locomotives and engines in general, if you just want to run a train then it might be better to join a club and use whatever extra equipment they have for people to use...
in short: you have to want it, even when building from a kit you're gonna be machining parts and getting everything working yourself
@@jamesm6638 thanks, im aware of this and have the tools and attitude needed for it, I can build it just fine and probably make the frame but when it comes time for the cover I wouldn't know where to go, so thats why I was asking if there's kits
@@haunted1659 well you need a pretty decent sized mill and a good lathe to start, so if you've got those then you should be ok... as for the body structure of the unit, it's just some supports with sheet metal covering it, follow the drawings and you'll be fine
like honestly, with diesels for the most part, after you've got a rolling chassis and an engine, it's basically all stuff you can get at lowes
@@jamesm6638 I'm not gonna lie I feel stupid for not thinking of that, thanks for your help!
whait its a mountain type
4-8-2
Well, if you're from maine....