My friend at work had to divest himself of his trains, so I bought his Lionel 6-30195 Grand Central Express set with a conventional FT and 3 streamlined cars. This is my first Railsounds-equipped conventional train. The passenger car bodies look longer than the obviously very short LionChief Super Chief set I have, even though they and the loco look like the same tooling. I had to measure them to confirm they're the same. The horizontal white stripes must make them appear longer to my eyes. The set includes a CW-80 which is good because I didn't have a transformer or sound switch where I could activate the whistle, bell, and crew talk like this FT has. Beautiful set and I've wanted to add New York Central to my roster.
As part of the bundle, I also got a Lionel 4-4-2 #8644 and Chesapeake & Ohio tender. According to what I've found online it seems like the #8644 engine was often paired with a Santa Fe whistle tender also numbered #8644, so I don't know if somebody swapped that for the non-whistle tender I got, or it was sold this way. This is perfect for me because I've wanted a C&O train for my roster, and I've developed an interest in getting one of these little Atlantic engines. The headlight and smoke unit don't work, but I'm going to open it up and see if maybe a wire is loose for both of them. This engine is a beautiful runner even without the light, smoke and sound. Came with a SP-type "Lionel" lettered caboose that I might attempt to re-letter for C&O.
Also in the box was a 1955 Lionel #60 bump-and-go Trolley, with a shell broken on both ends and a missing trolley pole. I started to glue together the broken pieces of the shell and employed a short zip tie as a makeshift trolley pole. This is one of those things that I never thought I'd want, but now that I have it, I enjoy running it, as loud and grindy-sounding as it is, even after lubing it as best I could. Sometimes I run it on a loop of O-27 track I got from my friend, and tubular track is another thing I thought I've never get and now like.