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Atlas O 30138268 - Premier - SD45 Diesel Locomotive "Union Pacific" (We Can Handle It) #3618 w/ PS3
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share thisAtlas O 30138268 - Premier - SD45 Diesel Locomotive "Union Pacific" (We Can Handle It) #3618 w/ PS3

Price:$499.95
  • $499.95


Product Description

Announced Date:

Oct 2023

Released Date:

Oct 2024

Individually Boxed:

No - 2 to a case

Road Name: Union Pacific "We Can Handle It"

Road Number: 3618

Product Line: Premier

Scale: O Scale

System: 3-Rail

Features:

Intricately Detailed ABS Body

Die-Cast Truck Sides, Pilots and Fuel Tank

Metal Chassis

Metal Handrails and Decorative Horn

Moveable Roof Fans

Metal Body Side Grilles

Detachable Snow Plow

(2) Engineer Cab Figures

Authentic Paint Scheme

Metal Wheels, Axles and Gears

(2) Remote Controlled Proto-Couplers

Kadee Compatible Coupler Mounting Pads

Prototypical Rule 17 Lighting

Directionally Controlled Constant Voltage LED Headlight

Lighted Cab Interior

Illuminated Number Boards

Lighted Marker Lights

(2) Precision Flywheel Equipped Motors

Operating Smoke Unit

Onboard DCC Receiver

Locomotive Speed Control In Scale MPH Increments

1:48 Scale Proportions

Proto-Sound 3.0 With The Digital Command System Featuring:

Freight Yard Proto-Effects

Unit Measures:17 1/4” x 3 3/4” x 2 3/4”

3-Rail: Operates On O-36 Curves

Overview:

Like the Pontiac GTO, the SD45 was a mid-60s General Motors muscle car. Stuffed under its brick-like hood was the largest diesel motor made up to that time, a turbo-charged, 20-cylinder, Electro-Motive Division model 645E. The Great Northern took delivery of the first SD45 in May of 1966 and promptly painted the nickname “Hustle Muscle” on its flanks. The name said it all: the SD45 was heavy freight power, intended for long trains and high speeds. And it had the muscular looks to match, with flared radiators capping a long body that filled every inch of its frame - as opposed to its baby brother, the SD40, which had an open “porch” at each end of the engine. Unfortunately, the 20-cylinder motor turned out to have a major flaw: a tendency to break its own crankshaft. Even so, a large number of Class 1 railroads rostered the engine, with 1,260 units sold between 1966 and 1971. The Santa Fe, Burlington Northern, Pennsy, and Southern Pacific each owned more than 100 of the heavy freighters. Looking at the order quantities, one can see that the SD45 marked the beginning of a large-scale shift toward six-axle freight engines on American railroads. Before the late ‘60s, adding a third axle to a truck was mainly an expedient to spread out an engine’s weight for service on lighter rail, particularly branch lines. But with the SD45 and its contemporaries, railroads began favoring the six-axle engine as a way to get more power on the rails for heavier mainline trains. Despite the initial crankshaft problems, many SD45s served their original owners for decades, as well as successor railroads like Conrail and the BNSF, and later went on to new lives at smaller, secondary roads.