I think this thing was shipped several months ago - I had pre-ordered and I recall getting it two or three months ago it seems, maybe more.
this is the only one of fourteen recent Lionel steamer purchases that disappointed me. I just expected more . . . . Part of this is that I had received only about a monthly earlier the conventional Atlantic and it was a home run, just fantastic.
- sound was okay, but not as good as in the Atlantic and not nearly as good as in other recent Lionel Locos (however, some of those are Legacy models and cost twice as much - the Atlantic, on the other hand, was the same price.
- details and features and 'look' were good - nothing to complain about, but not quite up to that Atlantic. No window glass in mine, little features like that
- mine did not run smoothly at low speeds, like the Atlantic and all the other Lionels I have (I run only conventional so even with the Legacy locos I bought, I am comparing apples to apples as far as running). Mine ran no better at low speeds than old post-War locos. it just would not run at low speeds. I think this was just mine - it took more voltage to get it moving and it did not run quite right at low speeds, varying just a bit in speed, as if it had a gear that was binding slightly every revolution or something like mis-aligned gears, motor to drivers.
- Regardless, it looked nice, and it did run, and everything like sound, lights, bell, whistle, steam, e-board, etc., worked. Thus, I judged I would get nowhere returning it to Lionel to get it to run more smoothly. I do think about taking it appart and seeing if I could free up the gears, but I have so many locos that run well anyway, and some loco is going to sit on that siding . . .
- So I put it on a siding near my rural train station set up just for display, where it sits to this day.
About two weeks later, I took the wonderful small tender it had and converted that to go behind a bashed and detailed (updated to a late '20s look) Williams Baldwin ten-wheeler - basically switching the electronics and interconnections from the Mogul tender to the WBB tender and vice versa and using each tender on the other loco. The Mogul still runs (I tested it once with its now much bigger tender and it ran just the same) but I never run it - still has that low speed unevenes . The ten-wheeler, on the other hand, is awesome with a detailed die-cast tender more its size . . . so after two or three months of owning it, the Mogul probably has 20 minutes of run time on it but the tender, maybe 25 hours.