Skip to main content

Bill,  I do not have them all.  My add on the forum for inoperative engines was raining Hudsons for a while.   We are in a great time in the hobby now.  The hobby has never had so many choices as it has now.  I stated MTH and Lionel on my above response.  I do not want to slight other makers of great Hudsons.  Some guys/gals drive a Ford and others a Chevrolet.  We can buy whatever we desire.   I hope everyone enjoys what they run.  

I have 6 Hudsons but my favorite to run is my prewar black Lionel 763e with the Manhattan heavyweights. It lacks some of the details the other Hudsons have, but to me there's something special about running this survivor that's hard to put into words. I know of many collectors who wouldn't think of running this beauty, but mine simply runs too well to just put it on a shelf. 

John 

 

 

 

BurlingtonBill posted:
O Scale Will posted:

My Hudson started out as an ATSF Warhorse. I removed the lettering and numbers, touched up the paint, and re-lettered for NYC. I cleaned and lubed the mechanism, and added various detail parts. 0816172235_Burst010816172237_Burst01

 

What a beautiful job of customization! I have not heard a better, more mournful (and realistic) whistle than the War Horse's whistle.

D500 posted:

All the modern, can-motored locomotives, Hudson included, run better than the old AC motor versions. (Yes, I have - in TMCC, to boot - and like both.) The Pullmor has charm, and the gearing of the old 700E descendants is still good, but it's still yesterday's news (if Lionel would only offer a Pittman kit to upgrade these to a DC motor with ERR cruise...they'd be the best around).

They all run well; it would be a tie between the Lionel J3a (all flavors) and the K-Line J1e.

Footnote: the Lionel die-cast Century Hudson has a touchy Odyssey throttle; strangely, my ESE and non-streamlined do not have this issue.  I understand that the touchy-problem is not unique to mine.

I have little experience with running MTH scale PS2/3 Hudsons (I upgraded a dead one to TMCC/Cruise, so it's Lionel inside). They appear to run very well.

Great idea with the Pittman but unfortunately the Timko motor size is the only motor that fits without any modifications to the frame or ashpan. I've converted all of mine with a larger motor but modifications were necessary. The Timko does work well though. I just prefer the bigger motor.

Rod Miller

Ron H posted:

This is my favorite Hudson. Hard to come by Pecos River Brass ATSf 3451. Love the double sand domes.

atsf 3451Also like my PRB ATSF 3458.

atsf 3458

Pecos River...wow, now that's a rarity! Did you ever visit their "headquarters" in Lewisville, TX, before they closed? A massive 2-rail O layout that was never quite finished. Nice scale boxcars (available in 3R also) and some terrific buildings. The owner LOVED brass.

BlueComet400 posted:

I have 6 Hudsons but my favorite to run is my prewar black Lionel 763e with the Manhattan heavyweights. It lacks some of the details the other Hudsons have, but to me there's something special about running this survivor that's hard to put into words. I know of many collectors who wouldn't think of running this beauty, but mine simply runs too well to just put it on a shelf. 

John 

 

 

 

John, doesn't the 763E tender have box couplers? I have never seen one. I guess you'd have to create a transition freight car to run it with PW rolling stock, correct?

Bill

Add Reply

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×