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D&RGW GALLOPPING GOOSE #1
Product code: 30213101Description
Denver & Rio Grande O Gauge RailKing Galloping Goose Diesel With Proto-Sound 3.0
Roadname: Denver & Rio Grande
Cab/Car Number: 1
Like the doodlebugs before them and the RDC (Rail Diesel Car) after them, the Rio Grande Southern's Galloping Geese were a cheap way to provide passenger service. Cobbled together in the early 1930s by a railroad on the verge of bankruptcy, the Geese replaced steam-powered passenger trains and enabled the RGS to provide passenger and tourist service in the Colorado Rockies until it closed in 1952. The poor condition of RGS track gave the Motors, as they were officially called, the galloping gait that prompted their nickname. Goose No. 7, the last Goose built, was constructed in 1936 with a 1926 Pierce-Arrow body for passengers, a Ford V-8 engine, and a homebuilt box in the back for mail and express freight. Like Geese 3, 4, and 5, after World War II her freight body was converted to provide additional tourist seating. No 7 continued in tourist work until the RGS ceased operations. She survives today in operational condition at the Colorado Railroad Museum.
The Galloping Goose returns to the RailKing line in a variety of liveries. With the extraordinary sounds and slow-speed capabilities of Proto-Sound 3.0, you can recreate the honk of the Goose's horn and its daily struggle to lift a train that weighed 10 tons, fully loaded, over the Rockies with only an ancient, clattering automobile engine.
Features
Intricately Detailed ABS Body
Die-Cast Truck Sides
Metal Chassis
Colorful Paint Scheme
Metal Wheels, Axles and Gears
Prototypical Rule 17 Lighting
Directionally Controlled Constant voltage LED Headlights
Precision Flywheel Equipped Motor
Onboard DCC Receiver
Near Scale Sizing
Locomotive Speed Control In Scale MPH Increments
Proto-Sound 3.0 With The Digital Command System Featuring Station Stop Proto-Effects
Unit Measures: 11” x 2” x 2 1/2”
Operates On O-27 Curves
Roadname: Denver & Rio Grande
Cab/Car Number: 1
Like the doodlebugs before them and the RDC (Rail Diesel Car) after them, the Rio Grande Southern's Galloping Geese were a cheap way to provide passenger service. Cobbled together in the early 1930s by a railroad on the verge of bankruptcy, the Geese replaced steam-powered passenger trains and enabled the RGS to provide passenger and tourist service in the Colorado Rockies until it closed in 1952. The poor condition of RGS track gave the Motors, as they were officially called, the galloping gait that prompted their nickname. Goose No. 7, the last Goose built, was constructed in 1936 with a 1926 Pierce-Arrow body for passengers, a Ford V-8 engine, and a homebuilt box in the back for mail and express freight. Like Geese 3, 4, and 5, after World War II her freight body was converted to provide additional tourist seating. No 7 continued in tourist work until the RGS ceased operations. She survives today in operational condition at the Colorado Railroad Museum.
The Galloping Goose returns to the RailKing line in a variety of liveries. With the extraordinary sounds and slow-speed capabilities of Proto-Sound 3.0, you can recreate the honk of the Goose's horn and its daily struggle to lift a train that weighed 10 tons, fully loaded, over the Rockies with only an ancient, clattering automobile engine.
Features
Intricately Detailed ABS Body
Die-Cast Truck Sides
Metal Chassis
Colorful Paint Scheme
Metal Wheels, Axles and Gears
Prototypical Rule 17 Lighting
Directionally Controlled Constant voltage LED Headlights
Precision Flywheel Equipped Motor
Onboard DCC Receiver
Near Scale Sizing
Locomotive Speed Control In Scale MPH Increments
Proto-Sound 3.0 With The Digital Command System Featuring Station Stop Proto-Effects
Unit Measures: 11” x 2” x 2 1/2”
Operates On O-27 Curves
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Oldest Train Store In America, est. 1909
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