Product Details
Rapido 142011-1 HO USRA Single-Sheathed Boxcar - Pennsylvania / PRR #38810 Manufacturer: Rapido Trains (Made in China)
Part Number: 142011-1 (606-1420111)
Condition: New
Our Price: 🇨🇦 $54.06 (Plus applicable taxes) Clearance: 🇨🇦 $47.99 (In-stock only, while supplies last) MSRP: $62.95 - Save $14.96 / 24%! ✅ 1 in stock and available to purchase! ❗ We don't expect the manufacturer to produce any more.
Scales/Gauges: HO / H0 (1:87)
Prototype: USRA Single-Sheathed Boxcar
Colour: brown
Railroad / Company: Pennsylvania / PRR
Road/Unit Number: PRR 38810
Features:
Knuckle Couplers Metal Wheels Description:
AB brakes (KC brakes in the box) Youngstown doors Modified with Hutchins roofs Features: Accurate new tooling Correct details including roof and handbrake KC or AB brakes as appropriate * Wood, Youngstown corrugated and Creco panel doors Full underbody with separate brake rods and piping Accurate decoration Fully decorated and assembled Factory-installed Rapido semi-scale couplers USRA Andrews trucks with in-line brake shoes Blackened turned-metal wheels The USRA single-sheathed cars formed significant parts of many railroad’s fleets. The New York Central System had 2,500 cars, the Milwaukee Road had 3,000 copies and the Pennsylvania had over 9,700 cars. The PRR’s cars were delivered with wooden doors, but many later received either Youngstown corrugated or Creco panel doors. The Pennsy’s cars were some of the longest-living with a dozen cars still listed for interchange in 1968! Several railroad later rebuilt their single-sheathed cars with steel sides, and eth New York Central even converted 700 of them into stock cars in the 1940s. Rapido’s new model of the USRA single-sheathed boxcar features an all-new body with correct steel underframe and correct free-standing details. Models will be equipped with either KC or AB brakes as appropriate. Wood, Youngstown corrugated and Creco panel doors will also be available as appropriate. These cars fill a need for a state-of-the-art model of this common car on any transition-era or earlier period layout. |