Metal Handrails and Decorative Bell. Interchangeable RP25 Metal Drive Wheels w/o Traction Tires. Operating Kadee Compatible Remote Controlled Proto-Coupler. (2) #158 Scale Kadee Whisker Couplers.
Powerful 5-Pole Precision Flywheel Equipped Skew-Wound Motor. Locomotive Speed Control In Scale MPH Increments. Operates On Code 70, 83 and 100 Track. Proto-Sound 3.0 equipped locomotives can be controlled in command mode with any DCC compliant command control system. While the user won't have access to all of the incredible features of Proto-Sound 3.0, independent control over the locomotive is possible.
This means you can continue to use your existing DCC controller to independently control your other DCC equipped locomotives in addition to your Proto-Sound 3.0 locomotive on the same track at the same time. When using a DCC controller, the following Proto-Sound 3.0 locomotive features are accessible. Unit Measures:9 1/16 x 1 1/2 x 2. Operates On 18 Radius Curves.
The H10 was the last and largest in a line of Pennsy Consolidations that stretched back to 1875. With a good engine crew, an H10 could hustle about 50 cars along level track, or considerably more cars in drag service hauling coal or iron ore.
When the H10 engines were constructed, the Pennsy was still divided into Lines West - all of its affiliated railroads west of Pittsburgh - and Lines East. The H10s was strictly a Lines West phenomenon, built from a standard boiler common to the H8, H9, and H10 classes, but possessing the largest cylinders of any Pennsy Consol. When a 1920 reorganization abolished the division between Lines East and West, the railroad owned over three thousand 2-8-0's, a majority of them having a common boiler design. By the mid- and late-1920s, however, the H10s and their older siblings were pushed into secondary and branch line service by the arrival of larger, more modern power: Mikados, Decapods, and Mountains.Many Consolidations sat out the Depression years in storage, until recalled to service by the crush of World War II traffic. From the war years though the end of steam, H10's could be found all over the Pennsy, the Long Island Railroad, and the Pennsylvania Reading Seashore Line in switching, work train, branch line, and occasionally main line service. The H10 debuts in the M.
HO lineup in 2013, featuring the level of detail you've come to expect in an M. Virtually all piping and boiler appliances are separate, added-on parts. Rods and valve gear have a prototypically darkened, grimy appearance, and the ProtoSound 3.0 sound and control system features an accurate Pennsy whistle. If you model any period from the Woodrow Wilson era to the Eisenhower years, there's an appropriate chore on your railroad for this rugged, muscular-looking steamer. 7688 was preserved by the Pennsy as part of its historical collection in Northumberland, PA.
It resides today in the main exhibition hall of the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania along with two earlier Consolidations: H3 No. 1187 (which has also appeared as a Premier line model) and an H6sb. The item "HO MTH Die-Cast Pennsylvania H-10 2-8-0 2 Rail DC withDCC, Sound, Smoke 80-3241-1" is in sale since Saturday, May 4, 2019. This item is in the category "Toys & Hobbies\Model Railroads & Trains\HO Scale\Locomotives". The seller is "sell_sa" and is located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. This item can be shipped worldwide.