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Discussion Boards => HO => Topic started by: HOplasserem80c on February 28, 2007, 08:31:13 PM

Title: the tyco city of san francisco
Post by: HOplasserem80c on February 28, 2007, 08:31:13 PM
hi i wanted some info on this engine before i buy it. any advice is welcome as always. i have a layout 4x6 with 18 radius turns. will this engine do ok? and are there passenger cars to go with it? i am so happy i found this engine because i am a UP nut.
(http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2006-11/1227030/tycoSF-4-LN.jpg)
found this on ebay
                                                           thanks your friend HOP
Title: Re: the tyco city of san francisco
Post by: Guilford Guy on February 28, 2007, 08:52:24 PM
Will take 18" turns but won't look good at it and the thing is a total POS. Tyco's are nothing compared to modern stuff. I suppose you could swap shells with Proto E unit and swap the truck side frames but that would take a but of work.
Title: Re: the tyco city of san francisco
Post by: LD303 on February 28, 2007, 10:33:03 PM
GG got it right....unless you want to do major repairs and then have an engine that sounds like a blender on high speed you might want to save your money.
Title: Re: the tyco city of san francisco
Post by: HOplasserem80c on March 01, 2007, 08:40:20 PM
i like the train because it is UP and it says "city of san francisco" one of UP's most famous trains.(even though there are no pics of a full consist of it) or the engine
Title: Re: the tyco city of san francisco
Post by: Nigel on March 02, 2007, 11:17:47 AM
Tyco's E7 shell was quite good - equal to the others in its day (25 years ago).  The drive was worse than awful.

The BLI and P2K offerings are far superior.

Model Power's E7 shell was comparable, in some ways better than the Tyco, but in some ways not.  A great deal depends on the particular prototype.   MP's chassis was far superior, though I doubt it would do 18" radius curves without serious modification.

If you really want it, get it, but remember you are just purchasing the shell.

18" radius and E-units do not mix in HO scale - think N scale, or 24" radius (or larger).

Options for powering the shell:

Advice: save your money, focus on smaller models for your current layout, gain some experience with your current layout then start designing your next one, learn, research, study.