Last week I received the Legacy GS-2 (black) and N&W J that I had ordered last year. Both are solid Lionel products: delivered with no defects, nicely detailed, good runners, good sound, etc. I've posted separately about how delighted I am with the GS-2 - it is fast becoming one of my favorites.
But what to do about the J? I had intended to repaint and re-label it as UP scheme (see diagram below). I may still do so , but my problem is: I think it is a terribly ugly locomotive. I know its a truly iconic loco, brilliantly engineering in real life, quite good, and considered beautiful by many. The model is longer and bigger than the GS (second photo), and even more streamlined, and yet to me the GS is gorgeous while the J it looks squat and unattractive. I think part of it is its small drivers - only 70 inches (and barely that in scale - I calipered it them at just 68" but its difficult to measure precisely).
So I am in a "a conundrum" about what to do with it. Part of me says I might as well repaint it as planned but that is a lot of work to put into a loco that could still be unattractive even in UP's lovely gray-black P livery. I could sell it - but no, I don't normally sell things. So, right now, no decision . . .
I just wondered if anyone else found this iconic loco ugly - at least when compared to other streamliners - or am I pretty much alone in that?
Also, I've always heard the J mentioned as one American loco that have broken the 126 mph world record for steam locos held by the Gresley Mallard. But driver size is something like gear ratio for muscle cars. The J had the power to reach and sustain 100-110 mph speeds routinely, but with 70" drivers, I wonder if it could really have pulled any significant load much beyond 115-120 mph? I think locos like the T-1 with 80" drivers were more the candidates for the speed ribbon requiring 130+ mph speeds.
I posted this a year ago and most feedback was in favor of the second paint scheme from the top.
The J with my GS and my favorite looking loco - a scale MTH model ATSF 2900 (an old PS1 model, frankly a pain in the butt to run, with only so-so sound, but gorgeous). Locomotive partly shown above the J is a T-1 - a really sharp looking streamliner and definitely capable of 130 mph (at least on paper).