Category:US and European Locomotive Outlines (display)
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Models based on US and European locomotive and train outlines.
Some of these trains were made by US manufacturers such as Lionel, others were made by European manufacturers for the US market, either by modelling US trains directly, or by selecting or adapting existing European locomotive shapes to meet the perceived preferences of US buyers for larger, heavier trains with a lot of protruding external rails, pipework, and other attachments (things that would be referred to in the UK as "bells and whistles").
Design differences
"Traditional" US steam locomotives had tended to differ from the European designs in the use of "bolt-on" external features such as cowcatchers, whistles, tall spark-catching smokestacks and large external headlights, whereas in the UK and Europe, the need to run on existing lines though tightly-packed urban areas and in "legacy" tunnels had produced a design aesthetic that put more value on integrated features and smoother more compact lines. The results of early German experiments with streamlined high-speed steam locomotives were eagerly taken up by some of the British engine-builders, but most of the seriously-streamlined UK locomotives later had their streamlined cladding removed to make access easier for servicing.
In the US, the classic modern steam locomotive was the big, clunky, powerful-looking Hudson.
The US streamliners
When US train designers embraced streamlining they were no longer looking at steam, and the buzz of excitement that came with the appearance of streamlined (steam) trains in the UK, was in the US associated with internal-combustion locomotives. Early US locomotive streamlining was associated with bodywork that was sometimes bare silver aluminium or stainless steel, and the classic American streamlined trains were post-steam, with rolling-stock designed to match the locomotives. In the UK, railways had already flirted with streamlining, and to locomotive enthusiasts, the appearance of diesel locomotives wasn't associated with any especially exciting developments. Although UK diesels had a decent design aesthetic, their polite lines never really caught the public's imagination in the same way as the brasher silver Pioneer Zephyr or the red and silver Santa Fe Super Chief, which screamed modernity and new technology.
Pages in category ‘US and European Locomotive Outlines (display)’
The following 43 pages are in this category, out of 43 total.
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- Electric locomotive 3100 (American Flyer)
- Electricity Substation model railway power supply (Jouet de Paris)
- Etat 4-6-2 locomotive 231-612 (Marescot)
- ETAT Baggage Car 17618 (Marescot)
- ETAT First Class Carriage 2640 (Marescot)
- ETAT Second Class Carriage 7124 (Marescot)
- ETAT Third Class Carriage 18616 (Marescot)
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Media in category ‘US and European Locomotive Outlines (display)’
The following 13 files are in this category, out of 13 total.
- American Flyer 3100 electric locomotive.jpg 1,024 × 768; 434 KB
- American Flyer 3141 passenger car.jpg 1,024 × 768; 580 KB
- American Flyer 3142 observation car.jpg 1,024 × 1,023; 701 KB
- CR Bte France, maker's mark (Charles Rossignol).jpg 1,200 × 675; 444 KB
- Etat 4-6-2 loco 231-612 (Marescot).jpg 1,200 × 674; 505 KB
- Ives Trains 1651 locomotive.jpg 1,024 × 768; 449 KB
- Ives Trains 1691 observation car.jpg 1,024 × 576; 368 KB
- Lionel 752 M-10000 streamliner locomotive.jpg 1,024 × 768; 418 KB
- Lionel 753 M-10000 streamliner passenger car.jpg 1,024 × 578; 304 KB
- Lionel 754 M-10000 streamliner end car.jpg 1,024 × 576; 354 KB
- Lithographed locomotive 70, Charles Rossignol, detail.jpg 1,200 × 1,199; 936 KB
- Marescot ETAT locomotive 231-612 valve gear detail.jpg 2,200 × 1,467; 1.97 MB
- Marescot ETAT Third Class carriage 18616, detail.jpg 1,067 × 1,600; 1.1 MB