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With the announcement of Stewart
Hobbies' Baldwin DS-4-4-1000(606SC)
and S-12 in HO scale, the possibilities for
modeling the Valley's Baldwin switchers have been expanded considerably. Some of
the differences between the DS-4-4-1000 and S-12 are subtle, and Baldwin
switchers generally changed a lot during their production runs, so that the LV
units are likely to have some detail differences from any commercial model. This
page covers the LV units to point out some of these areas. Please drop
me a note if you can add anything!
The Valley Baldwin roster included:
| VO-1000 |
135 - 139 |
Delivered 1944 in the Red & Gray paint
scheme, all repainted into Cornell Red, and 137-139 repainted again into
Tuscan before being scrapped or traded. All were gone by 1969. |
HO:
Stewart
Hobbies'
4730 (LV 316, Cornell Red/black
stripes) or
4700 (undecorated) seems
to be dead-on except for the exhaust stack. The LV units had a lower,
wider stack with a lip around the top that is not clear in any photo
I've seen. |
DS-4-4-1000
(606SC) |
140 - 148 |
Delivered 1949 in the Cornell Red Scheme. All
but 144 were repainted into Tuscan in the late 60s & early 70s, and
all were scrapped or traded in by 1974. |
HO: Stewart 4813 & 4814 (LV 140 & 148, Cornell
Red/black stripes) or 4800
(undecorated). There are some differences in
louvers and the sand filler cover between the model and the LV-owned
units, which were early production. |
| DRS-4-4-15 |
200 |
Delivered 1948 in Cornell Red, and used
exclusively as a switcher after early road service proved
unsatisfactory. Repainted into Tuscan in 1970, and traded in on GP38-2s
in 1972. |
HO:
Stewart
Hobbies' AS-16 is a reasonable stand-in:
4150 (Cornell Red/black stripes, no numbers) or
4000 (undecorated). This was a late DRS-4-4-15, almost indistinguishable from an AS-16.
To be exact, the radiator grill needs to be relocated to be flush with the
walkway, and the middle horizontal bar removed. (The high vs. low
position was not a distinguishing feature of DRS-4-4-15 vs AS-16.) See Lee
Turner's O scale model. |
| S-12 |
230 - 243 |
Delivered 1950 in Cornell Red. 230, 232, 235,
237 & 241 were repainted into Tuscan in 1969
-1972, and all scrapped or traded by 3/75. |
HO: Stewart
4900 (undecorated) represents a later production S-12 than those
delivered to the LV, so there are some detail differences.
The 30+ year old Athearn is 6 scale
inches short, and has the wide hood typical of early Athearn models. |
Differences between LV DS-4-4-1000s and
S-12s
According to The Second Diesel Spotter's Guide, the only visible
difference is that some late DS-4-4-1000s and most S-12s had
fabricated underframes, instead of the earlier combination cast & welded
underframe. Since BLW's production changes did not always coincide with model
changes, and the frame construction was an option to be specified by the
purchasing railroad, this is not a 100% reliable indicator.
Three louvers over the two access
doors above the battery boxes appears to be a reliable DS-4-4-1000 spotting feature. An
S-12 photo in The Second Diesel Spotter's Guide shows only two
louvers in this position, and photos of S-12s on the web seem to confirm this. Unfortunately, the number of louvers on the hood
doors seems to vary according to railroad, or perhaps BLW production batch. BLW
introduced many detail changes during DS-4-4-1000 production, and late
production units may appear very similar to early production S-12s. Since it is the LV's roster that concerns us here, I decided to concentrate
only on what distinguishes the Valley's Baldwin swithchers from each other.
Where it is relevant, I've also pointed out features of the LV units that
differed from the units owned by other railroads, and from available models.
I started by going to George
Ellwood's excellent Fallen Flags web site, and looking at his Lehigh
Valley page. There is a series of DS-4-4-1000 and S-12 photos. Be careful
to go by the road numbers, since George has some of the DS-4-4-1000s mislabeled
as S-12s. In particular, look at the photos of DS-4-4-1000
#144 and S-12 #234.
Both show the left side of the locomotives from a similar angle. Gary
Stuebben, who contributed these photos by David Nyce, has given permission to use them here,
so I've adjusted the contrast and brightness to show details more clearly, and
cropped portions of these two photos to focus on the differences I found.
Most
obviously, the LV's DS-4-4-1000s had two windows in the cab above the
hood. These are accurately reproduced in the Stewart model. |
The
S-12s had no window in this position. The Stewart model shows this
correctly. |
| |
|
The hood-mounted handrail on LV's DS-4-4-1000s
turned down at the front, and curved in front of the sand filler.
Stewart's undecorated model has
the correct shape handrail, but uses a later style flush mounted sand filler hatch
like that found on LV's S-12s. To be correct for the LV, the sand
filler hatch should be recessed at an angle. |
The handrail on LV's S-12s was straight from
front to back, and ended just above the sand filler hatch. The S-12
hatch has a flush fitting cover, like the later production DS-4-4-1000s.
Stewart's S-12 captures these details correctly for the LV units. |
| |
|
The
LV's DS-4-4-1000s had three sets of louvers on the doors on the left side of
the hood. There were no door louvers on the right side of either loco.
The left side photo of the undecorated model on Stewart's web site shows
NO door louvers. This was probably the only choice that was commercially
feasible for a mass-production model, since presence or absence of door
louvers, and their exact location, seems to vary in the DS-4-4-1000s on
other railroads' rosters. |
The
LV's S-12s had only two sets of door louvers, none in the same position as on
the DS-4-4-1000! The Stewart S-12 model is correct for the LV units. The Athearn S-12 has one set of door louvers,
but at least it is in one of the correct positions for a LV S-12. However,
Athearn does not have the supercharger bulge in the hood which should be
just aft of this set of louvers. |
| |
The
DS-4-4-1000's side frame member was thinner than that on the S-12,
perhaps a reflection of the cast frame on the DS-4-4-1000. |
The
deeper side frame on the S-12 necessitated two access cutouts. The
forward one appears to be for the fuel filler, and appears on both
sides. According to Dave Forster, the rear cutout allows access to
lubricate the truck bolster centercup, and there is a similar cutout on
the right side of the front bolster. The two Stewart
models capture these frame differences correctly. |
| |
The most
subtle difference is the grouping of the louvers above the hood doors. There
are 12
louvers on both the DS-4-4-1000 and the S-12, but they are grouped
slightly differently. On
the DS-4-4-1000, the louvers are spaced more (but not quite) evenly. The
Stewart model captures this accurately. |
On the S-12, there is a clear grouping of 1-2-2-2-3-1-1 from front
to rear. The louver arrangement on both sides is the same on both
locomotives. The Stewart S-12 has the correct louver arrangement, while Athearn's S-12 is incorrect, with 14
louvers - they added a new group of 2 louvers in front of
the group of 3. |
|
|
|
I was unable to see any other frame differences in the photos on George's
site, but there were no good shots of the pilots, which is where Steve Stewart points
out the frame features on the DS-4-4-1000 that his crew measured. I know I did
not spot all
the differences on the LV locomotives, but Norman Mueller has added a few. If you can add something that
we've missed, send
me a note.
- Ed
LV 137 (VO-1000), by Curt
Pope

LV
200 (DRS-4-4-15), by Lee Turner

This O scale model
"started out as a kitbash of the Mikes Train House Baldwin AS616 which I
planned on repowering with a Weaver power train. After I purchased the model and
sat it on the shelf something did not look quite right so I broke out the scale
ruler and plans. To be kind I would probably say they took some artistic license
when they made the tooling. I was already prepared to scratchbuild the short
hood and radiator assembly but the cab was entirely wrong, the hood was 2 scale
feet too tall and 1 foot too wide. The outcome of this was to scratchbuild
everything but the louvers and hood doors on the long hood. This was extreme but
I had to have a model of the 200 as it was my favorite Lehigh loco as I watched
it many times in my childhood in Sayre."
- Lee Turner
[ Up ] [ Early EMD Switchers ] [ Baldwin Switchers ] [ EMD SW8 "Pups" ] [ EMD F-Units ] [ ALCo RS2's and RS3's ] [ ALCo RS11's ] [ ALCO C628 ] [ GP38AC ] [ GP38-2 ]
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