Here are some more projects I've been working on since Fall and finally got them running: an interurban, a trolley, and a rail bus, all in standard gauge.
To name and decorate these guys, I just did a little research and found protoypes for each type of motor with colorful names. If you google them I'm sure you'll find them.
The first is an interurban made out of a Lionel 18 car. This has been being done for over 80 years, but for my first project I wanted one that I knew would work. I put a build-a-loco motor in this, which was the easy way, but probably wouldn't do it again; it's a long enough car that the center motor makes for a lot of out-swing on corners, it was hitting things even some of my larger locos don't. Lots of power though. There it is, the Kansas City, Excelsior Springs, and St. Joseph: you gotta love a name like that. The white windows let the interior light show, but hide the big motor.
Then there's the Newton & Boston Street Railway trolley, made out of a Lionel #17 caboose. I thought the caboose had a very old-time trolley shape to it, if you punch a couple more windows. This one is powered by a G Scale DC motor unit which sorta fit back into the 17 truck to hang on the bottom of the trolley. The motor had to be taken apart to convert it from 2-rail to 3-rail, and given larger wheels, widened to fit Standard Gauge. The center rail power pickup is in the other truck; between the headlights, interior lights, and the bridge rectifier for the motor, there's a lot of wiring crammed inside the trolley, which was very visible once I cut all those windows. That's what all the people are for, they obscure the wiring at least somewhat.
The third is the Lac du Bonnet - Great Falls rail bus. This was a preliminary attempt at a rail bus, I want to do some more and follow the more common design of having the driver's cab in the bus itself rather than in a separate cab. The bus I did here does have a prototype - the Michelin buses posted here recently are of this type - but I also want to try a different look. This one was made from a Lionel 36 observation car, which seemed to best fit the scale of the 1:24 diecast truck cab. It is powered by a Lionel #54 O Gauge gang car motor, modified for Standard Gauge. It's a zippy little thing!