stevedenver
Registered

Inside the back of the 2005 LGB catalogue was a nice partial peep at a repainted DSP mogul and a 4075 'drovers caboose' (it wasnt a drovers caboose at all-it was a combine with a cupola added for mixed train service to Pagosa Springs)
i have alway loved this car since i first purchased it many years ago-a caboose for a freight train or -a one car train-with the potential for intersting lighting (the originals were not lighted at all)
as with so many things LGB-there's always a hint of the real somewhere in their fantasy- boondoggle US livery schemes-
for instance the number is correct, and the large D&RGW logo between the numbers is also correct (for another later incarnation of the 215 post cupola removal)-
also the red color-so US caboose -was also rooted in reality -unbeknownst to me sorta close but no ceegar-to me DRGW passenger equipment was usually green-and so i thought the Pagosa Springs car
-i was really taken with the subtle and dramatic difference shown in the photo at the back of the 2005 catalog-suddenly the car, with black roof and tuscan paint-looked plausible -like US railroad equipment
So having duplicate 4075s-and one red drovers combine with silver roof is enough, thank you
I tried my hand after seeing an article about the DRGW #215 'Pagosa Spring' car-a real, properly proportioned model version on the MLS site-and learning a great deal of the build and painting history of the actual car-didnt have express baggage decals that woudl fit the areas available without more extensive rework-so i passed on this detail -it would have required filling windows-more work than i waned to expend
mine is a can re spray using plastic compatible paint and some numbers that were close
the DRG letting on the fascia is original and will match other LGB DRG coaches-doesnt look too bad -but its certainly not correct as iv done it, as you can see by comparing the photo below with mine
This is one photo of a model of the prototype at one point-about 1936-not DRG tuscan but rather a box car paint-probably due combined factors of the long discontinued use of Tuscan on coaches (it had been pullman green for some years) and the Depression era
i have alway loved this car since i first purchased it many years ago-a caboose for a freight train or -a one car train-with the potential for intersting lighting (the originals were not lighted at all)
as with so many things LGB-there's always a hint of the real somewhere in their fantasy- boondoggle US livery schemes-
for instance the number is correct, and the large D&RGW logo between the numbers is also correct (for another later incarnation of the 215 post cupola removal)-
also the red color-so US caboose -was also rooted in reality -unbeknownst to me sorta close but no ceegar-to me DRGW passenger equipment was usually green-and so i thought the Pagosa Springs car
-i was really taken with the subtle and dramatic difference shown in the photo at the back of the 2005 catalog-suddenly the car, with black roof and tuscan paint-looked plausible -like US railroad equipment
So having duplicate 4075s-and one red drovers combine with silver roof is enough, thank you
I tried my hand after seeing an article about the DRGW #215 'Pagosa Spring' car-a real, properly proportioned model version on the MLS site-and learning a great deal of the build and painting history of the actual car-didnt have express baggage decals that woudl fit the areas available without more extensive rework-so i passed on this detail -it would have required filling windows-more work than i waned to expend
mine is a can re spray using plastic compatible paint and some numbers that were close
the DRG letting on the fascia is original and will match other LGB DRG coaches-doesnt look too bad -but its certainly not correct as iv done it, as you can see by comparing the photo below with mine
This is one photo of a model of the prototype at one point-about 1936-not DRG tuscan but rather a box car paint-probably due combined factors of the long discontinued use of Tuscan on coaches (it had been pullman green for some years) and the Depression era
