Scott:
Sorry to hear that your hobby shop is closing. Part of the enjoyment of the hobby is browsing in a train store. There are no local stores near my home nowadays.
Photos and videos show my model of Metro-North Commuter Railroad EMD F-unit diesel locomotive #412 by K-Line (K2544-0412) pulling models of Connecticut Department of Transportation Comet II coaches Noah Webster and Fairfield County by Atlas O. The locomotive was advertised in the K-Line 2000 catalog at an MSRP of $309.95. The Comet II coaches were offered in 2008 at an MSRP of $109.95.
The Comet II coaches are scale-sized and 21 inches in length. They’re too long to look realistic on the O-54 curves of my 10’-by-5’ model railroad but they do clear all scenery and structures on the layout because I used them to set clearances. At the tunnel entrance, the clearance on the inside of the curve is just 1/8-inch (see videos).
FP10 locomotives were EMD F3 and F7 diesels that were rebuilt at Paducah, Kentucky during the 1970s. Despite the “P” in their designation, they were not extended beyond their original length.
Metro-North Commuter Railroad (MNCR) had FP10 diesels with road numbers 410 through 413 in the red-blue-silver-black livery of the model. I don’t recall ever having seen MNCR #412 but I used to see MNCR #413 when it pulled a short train of Comet II coaches on the branch line between Bridgeport and Waterbury, Connecticut around 2005. So, my model consist is nearly the same as one which actually ran on Metro-North and in which I have ridden many times. And the scenery and structures on my layout were made to look like what passengers see from a train on the Waterbury branch as it travels along the Naugatuck River and through the towns of Derby, Ansonia, Seymour, Beacon Falls and Naugatuck.
For railfans who live around New York City and in Connecticut, I recommend taking Metro-North to Bridgeport and continuing for a ride up the Waterbury branch. The trip between Bridgeport and Waterbury is 32 miles and takes about 55 minutes – an average speed of 36 miles per hour. The scenery is spectacular at any time of the year, but especially in Autumn, and the train ride along the branch is a throwback to the 1950s or maybe even before.
In the videos of my layout, the train is running at about 26 scale miles per hour.
MELGAR