Märklin 37984 (HO) Class 800 heavy steam locomotive - UP 844
Prototype: Union Pacific Railroad (UP) class 800 heavy steam locomotive, with an oil tender. Locomotive road number 844. The locomotive looks as it did starting in 2016.
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Prototype: Union Pacific Railroad (UP) class 800 heavy steam locomotive, with an oil tender. Locomotive road number 844. The locomotive looks as it did starting in 2016.
Prototype: Class 498.1 heavy express train steam locomotive with a tender. Version as museum locomotive road number 498.104 of the Železnice Slovenskej Republiky (ŽSR) / Slovak Republic Railways. The locomotive looks as it currently does in real life, i.e. as the operational locomotive currently based in Bratislava.
Prototype: French East Railroad (EST) class 13 (241-A) heavy express train steam locomotive with a tender. Black basic paint scheme with a black frame. Version as a locomotive for the "EDELWEISS" express train passenger car set. Changes to the smoke deflectors specific to the type. Dual headlights with kerosene lamps, with one lamp above and one lamp below. Road number EST 241 004. The locomotive looks as it did around 1931.
By the end of DB steam locomotive operation, road number 44 1315 (starting in 1968: 043 315), an oil-fired freight locomotive carried on its service without hesitation, finally at Emden pulling mostly heavy ore trains in the Emsland area. Even on October 26, 1977 – the last day of DB steam locomotive operation – it showed one more time what it could do. Towards two in the afternoon, it was pulling one of those famous 4,000 metric ton ore trains under the gaze of a large number of photographers from the ore station to the Emden freight yard. On September 12, 2018, it moved back up to a star position, when it moved in as a tremendous spectacle and to the applause of numerous onlookers as a new landmark of the Märklineum in Göppingen.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 043 heavy freight locomotive, with a type 2´2´T34 standard design oil tender. Black/red basic paint scheme. Cab with two side windows, with standard version Witte smoke deflectors, pilot truck wheelset with spoked wheels, without smokebox door central locking, with inductive magnets on both sides. Road number 043 087-6. The locomotive looks as it did around 1971. EraIV
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 01 express steam locomotive with a type 2´2´T34 coal tender and Witte smoke deflectors. Road number 01 105. The locomotive looks as it did around 1965. Era III
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 52 heavy freight locomotive, with a type 2´2´T30 tub-style tender. Black/red basic paint scheme. Witte smoke deflectors with a kinked upper edge. The pilot truck wheelset includes solid wheels. Locomotive road number 52 1530. The locomotive looks as it did around 1951/52.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 50 steam freight locomotive, with a type 2´2´T26 standard design box-style coal tender as it originally looked. Witte smoke deflectors, 4 boiler domes, standard design cab, shortened running boards, DB Reflex glass lamps, and inductive magnets on both sides included. Locomotive road number 50 2640. The locomotive looks as it did around 1967. Era III
Prototype: Class 41 steam freight locomotive with a tender. Older version painted and lettered for the German Federal Railroad (DB), with Witte smoke deflectors, older design boiler, type 2´2´T34 standard design tender, DB Reflex glass lamps, inductive magnet on one side, and buffer plate warning stripes. Road number 41 178. The locomotive looks as it did around 1965.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 041 steam freight locomotive with a tender and coal firing. Rebuilt design version with new design high-performance boiler, type 2´2´T34 coal tender, Witte smoke deflectors, DB Reflex glass lamps, inductive magnet on one side, and buffer plate warning stripes. Road number 041 282-5. The locomotive looks as it did around 1969/70.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 065 passenger tank locomotive. Version with a feed water heater, ventilation installation on the roof and DB Reflex glass lamps. Road number 065 001. Weathered version.
MHI Exclusive Model - One Time Series
In regularly scheduled use all over Germany, whether it was branch lines or main lines, whether it was freight or passenger trains.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 56.2-8 steam freight locomotive. Rebuilt Prussian G 8.1 with a pilot truck. German State Railroad lanterns on the locomotive and tender, without a bell. Type 3T 16,5 coal tender. Road number 56 814. The locomotive looks as it did starting in 1950 at the Nördlingen maintenance facility
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 18.1 express steam locomotive. Former Württemberg class C. Road number 18 102. The locomotive looks as it did around 1953. Era III.
One-Time Series
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 44 heavy steam freight locomotive, with an oil tender based on the type 2´2´T34 tender. Black/red basic paint scheme. Transitional wartime cab with only one window per side, standard design Witte smoke deflectors, pilot truck wheel set with disk or solid wheels, without smoke box central locking, with an inductive magnet on one side. Road number 44 1264. The locomotive looks as it did around 1962/63.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 023 passenger steam locomotive with a tender. Road number 023 005-2. The locomotive looks as it did around 1972.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 078 (former Prussian class T18) steam tank locomotive. Version with three boiler domes (D-D-S), and a rectangular sand dome. Riveted water tanks, cab roof with a rectangular top part, triple headlights with DB Reflex glass lamps. Road number 078 256-5. Based in Aalen. The locomotive looks as it did around 1969.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 75.4 steam tank locomotive (former Baden VI c). Version with dual headlights, smoke box door with central locking, and riveted water tanks. Road number 75 407. The locomotive looks as it did around 1953. Era III
The Reliable One
Between 1909 and 1916, 572 pieces of this class of tank locomotive were built for various railroad companies. Most of them were used in Prussia. Their great reliability assured these units an extremely long service life. Road number 92 532 was built in 1910 by the Union Foundry Company in Königsberg under builder number 1863. At the end of the Fifties, it was stationed in Minden. There it was retired on August 5, 1959.
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 92 freight train tank locomotive. Former Prussian class T 13.
One-Time Series
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 24 steam passenger locomotive with a tender. Standard design locomotive with Wagner smoke deflectors. Locomotive road number 24 044. The locomotive looks as it did around 1957. Era III
Class 74 Tank Locomotive | Märklin Start Up
Article No. 36740 Steam Locomotive - HO scale
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 74 tank locomotive.
This small nimble tank locomotive is actually a must on your layout. In the Fifties of the German Federal Railroad, it was one of the locomotives that could pull everything in commuter service
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 81 heavy switch engine.
Class 89.0 Tank Locomotive | Märklin Start Up
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) class 89.0. Standard design locomotive.
The class 89.0 was a tank locomotive for freight service and a German State Railroad standard design locomotive. It was the smallest standard design locomotive placed into service by the German State Railroad.
Prototype: Wet steam locomotive based on a provincial railroad design. 0-6-0T wheel arrangement.