Model Railroader, Nov 2012 Review - Con-Cor
Transcription
Model Railroader, Nov 2012 Review - Con-Cor
PRODUCTREVIEWS Con-Cor's HO scale PRR MP54 commuter cars have sharp details, smooth drives Pennsylvania RR fans modeling the electrified Northeast Corridor in HO have a new option for commuter service. Con-Cor International has released its MP54 multiple-unit (MU) cars in prewar and postwarpaint schemes and severalbody styles. The smooth-running models are prototypically accurate with an impressive amount of detail, includ ing workingpantographs. The models can be converted to Digi tal Command Control (DCC). The MP54 (Motorcar, Passenger, interior length 54 feet) was the Pennsy's most plentiful model, with 455 built. Con-Cor offers models of the MP54 coaches, along with MPB54 passengerbaggage combines and MBM62 baggagemail MU cars. Commuters and train men called the MP54 and its kin "owl-eyed cars" due to their distinctive porthole end windows. Fewif any physicaldetails denote the different phases of prototype MP54 construction, but the road numbers The owl-eyed MP54. The Pennsylva nia RR electrified its major eastern corri dors in the early 20th century in re sponseto municipal anti-pollutionlaws, the need for powerful helper engines on steep grades,and a desire for greater effi ciencyof commuter trains. Multiple-unit on the Con-Cor models belong to the second class of cars built between 1926 and 1928, designated MP54E2. Most were retired by the late 1950s, though some saw service into the Conrail era. A few cars run on museum and excur The model has a plastic body with finely molded rivets and seams, wire grab irons, etched-metal windshield wipers, flexible plastic end-door chains, and other impressive details. I was pleasedto note the model includesthe curved grab irons under the vestibule floor trap doors, a detail not visible dur ing normal operation. The clear window glazing includes the red stripe in the end windows that designates the operator end; the toilet window is frosted like the prototype. The models are equipped with tan one-piecemolded interiors; the MBM62 has visible mail-sorting shelves inside. As on the prototype, the model has two different types of trucks. The drive truck, with an 8'-8" wheelbase, was a A detailed look. The details and paint PRR2D-8-P1 Hyatt roller-bearing truck, while the unpowered trailing truck was a 2C-P2 plain journal truck with an 8'-0" schemes of Con-Cor's models match wheelbase. On the Con-Cor model, both trucks are accurately detailed, including quicker than locomotive-hauled trains with equal seating capacity, cutting the photos publishedin "Pennsylvania Rail road MP54 Multiple Unit Cars" in The Keystone (vol. 43 no. 4, winter 2010) and in the books Pennsy Electric Years by travel time of demanding commuters. William D. Volkmer (Morning Sun sion lines today. cars were the answer to that last need. Originallyconvertedfrom steamhauled heavyweight passenger cars start ing in 1915, self-propelled coaches could accelerate and decelerate for station stops Furthermore, MU car trains could be Books, 1991) and PennsyElectric Years the different wheelbases. On the HO scalepowered cars, unlike the prototype, both trucks are driven. The two trucks' gear towers are linked via driveshafts to a motor mounted in a operated by a singlemotorman working Vol. 2 by Bert Pennypacker (Morning recess in the underbody. This allows the from either end of the train, eliminating Sun Books, 2002). All the dimensions interior to be unobstructed. The motor time spent turning a locomotive at the I checked matched those in builder's end of a run. diagrams I found online. enclosure isn't prototypical, but it doesn't look out of placeamong the plentiful brake equipment, battery boxes,and other underbody details. The unpowered models have a more prototypical under body without the motor housing. The sprung, etched-metal panto graphs closely resemblethose in proto type photographs in the Keystone article and both volumes of PennsyElectric Con-Cor powers the cars with a motor mounted in an enclosure in the underbody, leaving the car's interior open for detailing or adding figures. 72 Model Railroader • www.ModelRailroader.com Years. The parts flexsmoothly and can be secured in the down position. The for fun & enjoyment Yorjfce aLware on tqe aiGHt tpack • HO scale PRR MP54s rain or shine THE BEST SELECTION OF MODEL TRAINS, AUTOMOBILES, PLANES, BOATS, SCENERY& SUPPLIES IN TOWN Price (single car): Unpowered, $129.98; powered (direct-current), Catering to the model railroad enthusiast $229.98; plug-in Digital Command Atlas-Digitrax - QSI - Proto 2000 - Soundtraxx DCC& Sound Installation Design Specialist N - HO - 0 - G Scales Lionel - MTH - NCE - Walthers -Thomas the Tank Control sound decoder with speaker, $74.98; motor-only (non-sound) DCC decoder, $39.98 Manufacturer Con-Cor International VISIT OUR NEW EXPANDED LOCATION AND IMPROVED ONLINE ORDERING! 22939 Woodward Ave Ferndale Ml 48220 248 545 5667Dhone 248 545 5668fax WWW.RAINYDAYHOBBIES.COM 8101 E. Research Ct. Tucson, AZ 85710 pantographs are wired to the interior lighting board, and a switch on that board lets the user choose between over head or traditional two-rail track power. The lighting board in the powered models includes an eight-pin Digital www.con-cor.com Road names: Pennsylvania RR (prewar Tuscan red scheme with boxcar red or black roof and postwar keystone scheme), Long Island RR (Tuscan or Tichy gray Command Control socket. Con-Cor and white), Penn Central, South offersboth a sound decoder with speaker, loaded with prototypical sounds, and a motor-only decoder. The manufacturer eastern Pennsylvania Transporta tion Authority (SEPTA), and recommends the sound units be installed in the baggage-mail or combine cars, due to the difficulty of concealing the speaker in a coach. Our samples didn't unlettered (Tuscan with black roof). Era: MP54s, 1915-present (modeled car numbers, 1926-1950s) Features • All-axle drive and electrical • Blackened metal wheels on include a decoder, so we didn't test them under DCC. On the test track. The lights and motor came on at about 2.5V. At this voltage, the powered coach crept along at just 0.6 scalemph. At 3V the car glided along at a steady 6 scale mph. The model reached a top speed of almost 130 scale mph on our test track, nearly twice the top speed of the prototype. Since the cars were designed to oper ate as multiple units, I tested our three powered samples to see how they'd run together. First, I set all three a couple inches apart on the same track and applied power. The three responded with slightlydifferentspeeds;within a few feet, they had either separated or coupled together. In coupled operation this speed difference wasn't significant; I noticed no bucking or wheel spinning when I ran the three together. But I imagine most modelers are likely to equip their trains with a single pow pickup plastic axles, in gauge • Directional light-emitting-diode headlights • McHenry knuckle couplers Committed to Excellence (mounted at correct height) • Minimum radius: 18" • Traction tires on one wheel per • Weight: 9 ounces (powered car) 5 ounces (unpowered car) Drawbar pull Scale speed (DC) 4ounces Volts 20 HOscale passenger cars Control Facility! Scale mph model railroad from a Current draw at 12 volts (DC) 129.5 • Works on any PC .42A .44A coloron yourPCscreen. versions of these distinctive cars are well-detailed, smooth-running models worth a spot at your passenger plat forms. - Steven Otte, associate editor • DCC or conventional • Just plug and play Slipping A niche filled. If you model the Penn sylvania RR's electrified territory, you need MP54s on your layout. Con-Cor's >All gauges, Z to 6 • Easy-to-use software Stalled car commuter train, even on steeper - state-of-the-art control console displayedin full- coach alone. The models have one trac measured the coach's drawbar pull at a hefty 4 ounces, enough to haul a train. One powered MP54 should have no problem handling a typical five-to-six- Monitor and control the operationof your entire 2,5 (start) grades seen on some layouts. each other. Our test bench force meter Turn your PC into a Centralized Traffic Con-Cor HO scale PRR MP54s ered car and several unpowered trailers, so I tested the drawbar power of the tion tire per truck, on opposite rails from www.thecoachyard.com truck Automate signals, turnouts, reversing loops, sound, lighting, collision avoidance,and much more. Make your trains obey signals, make station stops, or run according to time tables. Configure routes and dispatch trains with a single click of the mouse. All automatically from your PC... Introducing the "Train-Brain," the fast, affordable way to add computer control to your model railroad. Think computer control is too expensive? Our starter kit with all the hardware and software needed to get into model railroadcomputer controlcosts just $99. www.cti-electronics.com NOVEMBER 2012'Model Railroader 73