The Red Caboose GP9 has excellent detailing. The original kit was a GP9 high-hood out of the box. The ones I have are from the kits which have amazing but very fragile details. Grab irons, lift eyes hoses etc. are all plastic so they easily get knocked off. But everything you need to swap out for metal wire and cast parts are readily available from P&D, Des Plaines etc., all the usual suspects!
The original kit used the old Atlas F Unit double-ended drive with a twin-flywheel motor (you guessed it - a Pittman)! Very nice slow running on DC light engine. But those old Atlas "top-pivot" trucks were not good for keeping wheels on the track under load. So I eventually figured out that the P&D upgrade kit was the way to go. Then I found the Des Plaines brass chassis plate, and now the Finescale 360 version. The Des Plaines brass one is hard to get now. It had the advantage of weight over Kelly's kit. But I like Kelly's better as it comes with chassis rails machined in and milled pathways for ditch light wires that I need. Plus he supplies weights so it's all good.
That said, the way I understand it is that Atlas bought the tooling for the excellent body shell and maybe some of the frame too. Then they tweaked it to work with the dual motor China drive. I think they modded it to make a GP7 also (anyone please correct me). I have never seen one so I may be way off base here. Not sure if they had to compromise handrails or much of the body to work in 3-rail and the dual motors.
So if you find an original kit, I would recommend the P&D brass trucks, Finescale 360 chassis, Weaver/P&D drive with Kelly's tower upgrade and coreless motor TBD as soon as we figure out the best one. I think P&D or Des Plaines bought up all the remaining body kits which were left over without the driveline. So if you can find one and add the above items you'd have a "state of the art" Red Caboose GP9. 2 of mine were chop-nosed back in the UK 20 years ago by a mate with way more styrene-wrangling skills than I. Soon after that, (of course!) Des Plaines made a window surround for the chop-nose version which afaik they still offer.
Hey, it's a sport, right...