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American Flyer, American Models, Lionel American Flyer, S Scale, and and related topics. If we get too much traffic in this column, I may split it out.
Hands down, my favorite AF S-gauge loco is the Hudson...it just looks perfect. This one is a shelf queen, a project cobbled together from a bunch of parts:
IMHO, better looking than any Hudson Lionel ever made. Some day I'll get back to it and get her running.
Paul, the proportions are very close to scale on all AF locomotives (except maybe the D-16 Casey Jones model that "turned out the lights")> When S scalers would replace the drivers with realistic-looking wheels, the results were just as nice as most HO being made in the same period, and better than a lot of it. - Paul
I'd like to find a nice pre-war O-gauge version of this locomotive. It used the same boiler casting as the post-war S-gauge model. Alot of the pre-war late Flyer loco's are found in tough shape...there seems to be issues with zinc-pest, especially on wheels, both the pilot, driver and trailing trucks. If you can find a nice one they are beautiful pieces and I understand they can be returned to great running condition.
My 303 was plastic with molded-on handrails. I like this one better. Except for the tinplate-style drivers and lack of an eccentric, this was a VERY nice little scale model for its day.
Perhaps the best running AF Pacific I have...a 290:
Simple valve gear, cast hand-rails, runs better than any of my others, smokes like a banshee and will pull a long string of cars. Love the heater over the boiler-front. I think I read somewhere that the 290-series was modelled after a New Haven Pacific. A favorite...
I had the plastic version (can't remember if it was a 292 or 293). It was a great runner and would pull plenty of cars. As a heavy USRA Pacific, it would have looked at home on a lot of railroads.
An American Flyer 350, modelled after the B&O's Royal Blue:
I don't think they ever made a set of Royal Blue themed passenger cars in S-gauge...I run mine at the head of a set of polished aluminum passenger cars.