I had the handsome Alco PA's in D&H paint. Strong runners with very good sound for the time. ROW was the only manufacturer who tried to simulate the stainless panels found on some diesels (The Santa Fe PA's had it as well) and the different finishes was striking. They were also made of brass and had a great amount of detail not found on any other 3 rail diesel locomotive, like windshield wipers, grab irons above the windows, lighted side number boards as well nose boards and small lights elsewhere that no one else had. If I remember correctly, they sold for $1400 at the time with no discounting that I was aware of. Yes, D&H had no B units...
Our club had a few donated double stack cars that were nice too.
$1400 sounds about right; saw some at the LCCA train show in Detroit; early 90's.
This ROW Alco photo below was taken on my layout a couple of weeks ago. Next project, now that my 2-4-0 Cab-forward is finished. The PA is due for a solid red GM&O paint job (PA 291 was solid red for a while), some earlier-era streamlined number boards, fixed pilot and ERR.
It runs well, with low gearing. Can practically crawl in conventional using my Powermaster and Lionel brick. 2 Pittmans w/no flywheels. It runs just fine without the flywheels; no train-derailing jerky stops even when I tried. Flywheels would be better, but, oh, well.
All ROW PA ABA's had tethers and pickups on all units. No dead spots. I will use the tethers to attach this GM&O PA to the only solid-red FA that the GM&O had (744); a plastic Williams FA dummy will be used, and will carry the ERR antenna. I will move one end of the ROW PB's tether to the Williams FA for AC pickup.
All brass. Nice. Not sure that there is any zinc at all, either (the truck components may be cast brass; must check). No plastic except for electrical insulation and the window glazing.