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    Consignment Marklin 39911 - USA Steam Locomotive with Oil Tender "Challenger" of the UP (Sound Decoder)  
        

    Consignment MA39911

    Price: This item is no longer available

    System Scale Country Era Railway Dimensions
    AC HO USA III UP 425mm
    Consignment MA39911 - Marklin 39911 - USA Steam Locomotive with Oil Tender Challenger of the UP (Sound Decoder)

    Product Features and Details
    HO Scale AC Era III Includes a digital decoder Includes a sound effect 

    Prototype: Heavy US Freight Train Steam Locomotive class 3900 of the original "Challenger" in the Rebuilt version with oil tender of the Union Pacific Railroad (UP). Execution of the locomotive with the number 3706 (former cohort-fired locomotive 3943). Operating condition of the 1950s.

    Model: With digital decoder mfx + and extensive sound functions. Fill up different operating noises, such as oil and water, or switch off the opening and closing of the sliding window and the ventilation flap at the operator's station. Controlled high-performance drive with flywheel in boiler. 6 axles powered. Adhesive tape. Curved articulated gear. Boxpok wheels. Headlamp on locomotive and tender, number plates / marker lights with maintenance-free warmwhite light-emitting diodes (LED) illuminated. 2 smoke packs (7226) can be retrofitted. Peak signal and smoke set contact in conventional operation, digital switchable. Driver's license lighting and number plates / marker lights separately digitally switchable. Powerful loudspeaker in the tender. Coupling imitation can be inserted into the shaft at the end of the shaft. Short coupling with kinematics between locomotive and tender. Steam lines at the front bogie swingably guided with the cylinders. Attached metal handles. Many other details. Engine driver and heater figure in driver's cab. Length over couplings 42.5 cm. Delivery in wooden box.

    Highlights:

    • Complete new development, largely made of metal.
    • Many attached details.
    • Marked wind deflectors.
    • With digital decoder mfx + and a wide range of operating and sound functions.

    Model & Prototype Information

    The Union Pacific "Challenger" The "Challenger" type steam locomotive celebrated their hour of birth on the Union Pacific Railroad (UP). In the Mid-Thirties, UP chief engineer Arthur H. Fetter and Otto Jabelmann (UP superintendent for locomotives realized that the existing steam locomotives could not haul heavier trainloads at higher speeds. Freight service was to be accelerated chiefly on the 0.82% grades in Wyoming. The two UP engineers developed and articulated locomotive with a 4-6-6-4 wheel arrangement in cooperation with American Locomotive Company (ALCO). In fact, it followed Mallet design but did not work with the compound principle. The Challenger worked with simple expansion on each set of driving wheels. The first prototype with road number 3900 went into operation on August 25, 1936 in Council Bluffs, Iowa. This locomotive had the newest steam locomotive technology of that time, including roller bearings on all of the pilot and trailing truck wheels and on the tender wheels, a generously dimensioned boiler, as well as a combustion chamber adapted accordingly to the locomotive. With a maximum speed of 70 mph (112.65 km/h) it had the following main data: boiler pressure 17.93 atmospheres / 263.50 pounds per square inch; four cylinders (558.8 x 812.8 mm / 22" x 32"); driving wheel diameter 1,752.6 mm / 69" (Boxpok wheels); grate surface 10.05 square meters / 108.18 square feet; heating surface 499 square meters / 5,371.19 square feet; super heater 151.1 square meters / 1,626.43 square feet; locomotive weight 256.5 metric tons; adhesion weight 175 metric tons; semi-Vanderbilt tender with two three-axle trucks. Its first proving test was on the point of a heavy freight train from Ogden (Utah) to Green River (Wyoming) while mastering the grades of the Wasatch Mountains. In order to test the performance of this unit, the UP officials decided to have the locomotive run without additional locomotive support. Road number 3900 did this run with flying colors and Fetter thus declared that the new design had "met the challenge". The name "Challenger" stuck for the locomotive. By 1937 the UP placed 40 units in three production groups into service with the numbers 3900-3939 (from 1944 on: 3800-3839), in which road numbers 3934-3939 were converted to oil firing right after being delivered and others followed in the next few years. From 1942-1944 the UP added 65 "Challengers" (3930-3949, 3950-3969, and 3975-3999) to its roster. With many improvements taken from the "Big Boys" (such as more powerful boiler, roller bearings on all wheel sets, a larger cab) they were now designated as "heavy" Challengers compared to the "light" Challengers from the years 1936/37. In 1945, road numbers 3975-3984 were converted to oil firing, in 1952 road numbers 3930/31/32/34/37/38/43/44 followed. In the same year, they were given new road numbers 3700–3707, while road numbers 3975–3984 became 3708–3717. In the beginning the Challengers pulled chiefly freight trains over the grades on the Wasatch Mountains and Sherman Hill, but after the still more powerful Big Boys were placed into service, they were seen on the entire UP system in California, Nebraska, Oregon, Utah, and Wyoming. In addition, they were also used for a time to pull passenger trains such as the "Challenger Streamliners" of the same name between Chicago and California. With faster conversion to diesel power after World War II, the last "Challengers" were taken out of service in 1959. Just two remained preserved: road number 3977 as a memorial in North Platte (Nebraska) and road number 3985, also converted to oil firing and currently out of operation as a UP museum locomotive.


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