REVELL models!! The fun I had as a kid enjoying the midnight buzz from the glue as I would be awake with a flashlight working on whatever I could get from Kmart for 1.96 plus tax which was 2% so a cool two dollars kept me busy. I spent 32 years as an adult working on the FA-18 for the Navy. Building F-16's for General Dynamics after that. Then moved over to Boeing for the 747-400 and ended there with Boeing AOG having travelled to 14 countries and built the biggest and the baddest. My fascination was fueled by Revell models and toxic glues/paints.
The "cow catcher and box thing part" referred to at the 8:25 mark is actually called the Pilot. The term "cow catcher" is something of a misnomer as its actual purpose is to deflect anything that might be on the tracks. Fallen rocks, small trees, large debris and yes, the occasional animal.
I first saw this kit nearly 10 years ago, and this is the first time I've seen it built! The engine on the front of the box (number 4006) is one that I've seen in person at the St. louis Museum of Transportation!
The "steam contraption of some kind" at 4:20 is the dynamo. It uses the loco's steam to generate electricity for the lights, communication, etc. I bought this model a couple of years ago and never got around to actually putting it together. It's sitting in the closet with the plastic wrap still on the box. I'll be stuck in the house for the next couple of weeks or so, (Winter. Ugh.) so now might be the time to dig it out.
16:12. What I did to make the wheels still moving is I used thin styrene sheet and I glued it on there and painted altogether with model after it dried and it worked the wheels could move without falling
This particular kit is made of an injection molded styrene plastic,a-typical to kits commonly found here in the US. I've built 2 of these plus the NYC Hudson , the Chessie System Steam Special Hudson and the B&O Y6b Mallet. They are all nice kits to be honest.
My son gonna start building this big boy and its nice to seen this video, now i know to look for while we are building, we gonna use this video as a guide. Thnx
I built the same kit. For the cast on handrails that run the length of the boiler; I first used the original cast piece as a guide and drilled holes for the stanchions. Then with a Dremel and x-acto blade removed the cast handrails/stanchions. Sanded the boiler smooth from the Dremel and tool marks. Then installed brass stanchions. Bowser or Precision Scale sells stanchions. Then added the handrails which is K&S steel wire available at hobby shops. I have seen this kit at toy train shows varying in price from $10 (no instructions and beat up box) to $30.
Young man... !! I SURE would have loved to see a Paint job on this !!! Gun medal on the Wheel rims and rail tops....two shades of brown for dirt and Ties...and some Nato Black over the entire model. Some weathering and BAM... one hell-of-a-model !!
You're oversimplifying it a bit. you've missed any of the highlighting and shading and more important the time it would take to paint and then edit the video. which would also result in an excessively long video. Also I just didn't feel like painting it. I will eventually though.
I agree that the directions were confusing and had errors. I had to refer to my technical drawing on the wall. I found blemishes in mine; I weathered mine to reflect hard freight use. The box art reflects a museum piece. Painting the tires silver makes it look toylike. A nice earth tone with a wash of black on the running gear looks great. The decals are ok, but Microscale has better! Getting the boiler to snap together was a challenge. I fidgeted with it until it went and reinforced it with liquid cement. The dry pipe had to be glued and the steam supply pipes reattached. It came loose and I had to take the model apart to fix it. I also like how the drivers are quartered. The interior of the cab has nice detail, but you do not see it when finished. I will build the next one with paint in the cab. I wish the railings on the boiler were better done and separate valve gear parts would have been cool. There is some good news. If you can get a Bowser version of Big Boy and the super detail kit, you can also use the Revell tender with Bowser's pickup kit. Pentrex shot a great video supplement to UP's video "Last of the Giants." The Big Boy was hand fired when the stoker broke on a run. That was done by UP Fireman Dillard Hill on a run to Laramie. Another had the shovel sucked out of his hand and in the firebox! A future build is chopping the boiler down to make a Challenger. This was a study model of where to do the surgery.
I have a kit by revell. They’re nice little models. Also at 4:20 that little contraption is the dynamo. Basically a little steam turbine generating electricity for things like the headlight
This was originally a Monogram model that was also released as a DM&IR Yellowstone. Though the detailing is not up to today's standards for it's day, as a Snap Tite model, it was quite acceptable.
I built this train a few years ago. It was a good build. I noticed recently, they reissued the General,a wood burning 4- 8-4 civil war era train much like the one on pettycoat junction( aging myself). The General is a beautiful train and great build. I won many awards with that train. If you like trains,or just models, it is a great model. Thebplastic his heavy and durable. I have had mine stored in a box with foam peanuts, it is still in excellent shape as I built it in 1991. Always,always wash your models before assembly. Next try the Orient Express. That is another nice train to build. The engine is small and fiddly. Use care at all assembly,its easy to break parts here. There are three versions of the Orient express as far as detail and carriage detail. I just built it as is. zthe coaches have more detail than you can see through the windows. I just made sure the colors of the paneling is dark,as was in the real coach. Had I wanted, I could have added led lighting, but decided against it. On the General, it would have been fun to add a flicker flame bulb to the firebox as well as head lamp. Let me know what you think about the General.
Steve Gamez and Trainz I saw them listed on line, so best thing to do is google it. I can check to see who is selling it, our local Hobby shop already sold the one they had in but you should be able to order one if you have a local hobby shop. Its been rereleased for 2017/ 18 year.
I went through 4 of these. The "thing" you're referring to, that's the dynamo generator. Its used to generate the electricity for the lights and the radio, I think. But great video! Edit: the Big Boys were not hand fueled, being as large as they are. So, they used a mechanical stoker to feed feed the fuel to the firebox. Also, the delivery pipes, that are at the front, were a pain for me. The pins kept breaking.
I built this 15 years ago. Removed all railing and replaced it with thin wire. Did a lot of superdetailing. I painted mine and weathered it heavily. Looks rather impressive along with the Trix Big Boy. I bought it in Adelaide, Australia in early 2000 für around 60AUD. It came in a Monogram box. It was re-released by Revell a few years later
I built this model and did not have any issues with the black plastic or any greasy feel. During assembly I painted the correct areas gray and the rest with flat black and ended up with a really nice model.
thats an impressive locomotive!! as usual a rather nice kit from revell! I want a 1/72 Kriegslokomotive... and have it look like its pulling a bunch of my 1/72 panzers around on railway carriages, that would make for an interesting way to display some of my panzers :)
@Cloud Burst 117 my apologies in misunderstood your comment,I guess the reason they don’t make them is there wouldn’t be as much of a demand for it as their other models.
The Big Boy was actually not manually shovelled. Even the best human fireman could barely shovel enough to make steam to blow the whistle. A mechanical auger sat in the bottom of the tender and fed coal into the firebox through a massive pipe between the tender and the engine.
It being HO scale makes it easy to add HO decals to it for a Big Boy which would make it look better. Painting it would be a nice touch as well, but as least decals would improves it's looks.
This was originally sold as a snap kit, along with the Hudson kits that came out the same time. I never did get the Big Boy, but had a few of the Hudson Locomotives.
Hey, I used this model as the base for my entry for the Desert Bus Craftalong this year, the Literal Sub Train. I hear the LRR crew read out your name in resubs now and then, so I thought you would appreciate that.
That's awesome! I really like that idea. I can't wait to see it on Desert Bus. I've been thinking of doing a bus of some kind for it myself, but I never get my arse into gear with it! Also I recognise your name from the chat. Good times!
I’ve actually bought this kit twice. Once when I was young and again a few years ago. I ran into the same problems as you both times. I lost the decals last time, wrote Revell and they sent out a replacement twice. Like you the most annoying thing was the solid handrails. I’ve been thinking of removing it and replacing it. But the connection details were more than I was willing to attempt. But the price was cheap on hobylink.
They actually didn't have to do any shoveling. There was an automatic screw that passed from the tender into the firebox that dragged the coal along. Nice video by the way!
It's just Revell Contacta Professional, You should be able to find it pretty easily in your average hobby store. Easily found online too. Here's a link that's probably only really relevant to Australians. www.thecombatcompany.com/glues-and-adhesives/revell-contacta-professional-plastic-glue-25grams/
I have just finished building one of these, as you say the valve gear would never work for a number of reasons but that doesn't really matter as mine will be permanently attached to the track once it;s finalised. One small point, I had two air pumps left over from the build and after a quick look at the instructions I could see no reference to them or did I miss it? I have weathered mine and it makes a nice display.
Well the parts can be allowed to move. I glued mine solid. I feel like it would take a good bit of work to make them move freely without getting stuck and possibly breaking parts.
LincolnTek I basically just weathered mine up a bit,I did paint mine,but it was hard to tell. I used my airbush as a thinner is better on the paint on this model, its too easy to ruin the detail with thick paint. Its not the greatest model out there but it works. The General, a Civil war wood burner has just been reissued. If you love old trains,I highly suggest the General. Its an awesome train to build. I made mine in 1991 and got many awards for detail on the railbed( I used fish gravel) and used various washes on the wood in the tender for detail. Many people thought I used real wood pieces.
I remember a old silent Buster Keaton movie called The General in which a steam engine called The General was used. I wonder if this is the same steam engine.
I really enjoyed the video, despite having zero interest in trains. If i bought it I'd feel a little cheated ,personally, having the two huge moulded pieces - surely that's what modelling is about, building small bits into large bits? Anyway, nice job!
It should fit on standard HO scale track. Though it would take some work to get it to roll nicely and you'd need to leave any articulation points unglued if you wanted it to go around a corner.
14:52 you don’t shovel coal into the tender or from the tender there are large coal filling stations at yards and at rest stops also the “water filly things are called tender caps”
@@NW-gi1cp bruhhhhh the same happened to mine but the rods broke, I was getting somewhere but made the dumbest move to replace the pins with screws... it didn't end well lol
REVELL models!! The fun I had as a kid enjoying the midnight buzz from the glue as I would be awake with a flashlight working on whatever I could get from Kmart for 1.96 plus tax which was 2% so a cool two dollars kept me busy. I spent 32 years as an adult working on the FA-18 for the Navy. Building F-16's for General Dynamics after that. Then moved over to Boeing for the 747-400 and ended there with Boeing AOG having travelled to 14 countries and built the biggest and the baddest. My fascination was fueled by Revell models and toxic glues/paints.
I managed to build most of the kit without the instructions all because of this video
I'm glad it was helpful.
14:52 it was actually impossible for a fireman to keep up with the big boy's thirst for coal, so they had conveyors to bring the coal to the firebox.
@Cloud Burst 117 I think you meant "Archimedes"
In railroad terms it's called "mechanical stoker".
The "cow catcher and box thing part" referred to at the 8:25 mark is actually called the Pilot. The term "cow catcher" is something of a misnomer as its actual purpose is to deflect anything that might be on the tracks. Fallen rocks, small trees, large debris and yes, the occasional animal.
two years later big boy 4014 was finally back in service it was one of my favorite big boys even before they started restoration in 2014
I first saw this kit nearly 10 years ago, and this is the first time I've seen it built! The engine on the front of the box (number 4006) is one that I've seen in person at the St. louis Museum of Transportation!
The "steam contraption of some kind" at 4:20 is the dynamo. It uses the loco's steam to generate electricity for the lights, communication, etc. I bought this model a couple of years ago and never got around to actually putting it together. It's sitting in the closet with the plastic wrap still on the box. I'll be stuck in the house for the next couple of weeks or so, (Winter. Ugh.) so now might be the time to dig it out.
the fireman never had to shovel coal, it has an automatic stoker, he controls how much coal goes in by adjusting it.
OK you two (sambear0 and Sudrian Signal Man), what's it gonna be: Archimedes screw or automatic stoker?
16:12. What I did to make the wheels still moving is I used thin styrene sheet and I glued it on there and painted altogether with model after it dried and it worked the wheels could move without falling
This particular kit is made of an injection molded styrene plastic,a-typical to kits commonly found here in the US. I've built 2 of these plus the NYC Hudson , the Chessie System Steam Special Hudson and the B&O Y6b Mallet. They are all nice kits to be honest.
My son gonna start building this big boy and its nice to seen this video, now i know to look for while we are building, we gonna use this video as a guide. Thnx
this just got recommended in my news feed good vid man
Very cool video. Thanks for posting and have a nice day too.
I built the same kit. For the cast on handrails that run the length of the boiler; I first used the original cast piece as a guide and drilled holes for the stanchions. Then with a Dremel and x-acto blade removed the cast handrails/stanchions. Sanded the boiler smooth from the Dremel and tool marks. Then installed brass stanchions. Bowser or Precision Scale sells stanchions. Then added the handrails which is K&S steel wire available at hobby shops.
I have seen this kit at toy train shows varying in price from $10 (no instructions and beat up box) to $30.
I was looking for some details of Big Boy while drawing on a 3D CAD something to do with my 3D printer. A very well done video with class. Good job!
Thanks Herbert for this. I have looked atthis kit in my local shop, now i know what is inside. Cheers, Al
Young man... !! I SURE would have loved to see a Paint job on this !!! Gun medal on the Wheel rims and rail tops....two shades of brown for dirt and Ties...and some Nato Black over the entire model. Some weathering and BAM... one hell-of-a-model !!
You're oversimplifying it a bit. you've missed any of the highlighting and shading and more important the time it would take to paint and then edit the video. which would also result in an excessively long video.
Also I just didn't feel like painting it. I will eventually though.
I agree that the directions were confusing and had errors. I had to refer to my technical drawing on the wall. I found blemishes in mine; I weathered mine to reflect hard freight use. The box art reflects a museum piece. Painting the tires silver makes it look toylike. A nice earth tone with a wash of black on the running gear looks great. The decals are ok, but Microscale has better! Getting the boiler to snap together was a challenge. I fidgeted with it until it went and reinforced it with liquid cement. The dry pipe had to be glued and the steam supply pipes reattached. It came loose and I had to take the model apart to fix it. I also like how the drivers are quartered.
The interior of the cab has nice detail, but you do not see it when finished. I will build the next one with paint in the cab. I wish the railings on the boiler were better done and separate valve gear parts would have been cool. There is some good news. If you can get a Bowser version of Big Boy and the super detail kit, you can also use the Revell tender with Bowser's pickup kit.
Pentrex shot a great video supplement to UP's video "Last of the Giants." The Big Boy was hand fired when the stoker broke on a run. That was done by UP Fireman Dillard Hill on a run to Laramie. Another had the shovel sucked out of his hand and in the firebox!
A future build is chopping the boiler down to make a Challenger. This was a study model of where to do the surgery.
my son built and motorised it with a bespoke chassis from the plastick one and made the wheels also from cast molds he made,made a stunning job of it
This engine is longer and more powerful than the entire dang maginot line.
hey
don't you dare talk shit about France
Why not? Everybody else does.
Marie BCFHS maybe next time also build it on the belgian border
Piss off Franceie get a pair of AC6000s
I have a kit by revell. They’re nice little models. Also at 4:20 that little contraption is the dynamo. Basically a little steam turbine generating electricity for things like the headlight
This was originally a Monogram model that was also released as a DM&IR Yellowstone. Though the detailing is not up to today's standards for it's day, as a Snap Tite model, it was quite acceptable.
I built this train a few years ago. It was a good build. I noticed recently, they reissued the General,a wood burning 4- 8-4 civil war era train much like the one on pettycoat junction( aging myself). The General is a beautiful train and great build. I won many awards with that train. If you like trains,or just models, it is a great model. Thebplastic his heavy and durable. I have had mine stored in a box with foam peanuts, it is still in excellent shape as I built it in 1991. Always,always wash your models before assembly. Next try the Orient Express. That is another nice train to build. The engine is small and fiddly. Use care at all assembly,its easy to break parts here. There are three versions of the Orient express as far as detail and carriage detail. I just built it as is. zthe coaches have more detail than you can see through the windows. I just made sure the colors of the paneling is dark,as was in the real coach. Had I wanted, I could have added led lighting, but decided against it. On the General, it would have been fun to add a flicker flame bulb to the firebox as well as head lamp. Let me know what you think about the General.
Where can I get one , my son loves trains...
Steve Gamez and Trainz I saw them listed on line, so best thing to do is google it. I can check to see who is selling it, our local Hobby shop already sold the one they had in but you should be able to order one if you have a local hobby shop. Its been rereleased for 2017/ 18 year.
I went through 4 of these. The "thing" you're referring to, that's the dynamo generator. Its used to generate the electricity for the lights and the radio, I think. But great video!
Edit: the Big Boys were not hand fueled, being as large as they are. So, they used a mechanical stoker to feed feed the fuel to the firebox. Also, the delivery pipes, that are at the front, were a pain for me. The pins kept breaking.
I built this 15 years ago. Removed all railing and replaced it with thin wire. Did a lot of superdetailing. I painted mine and weathered it heavily. Looks rather impressive along with the Trix Big Boy.
I bought it in Adelaide, Australia in early 2000 für around 60AUD. It came in a Monogram box.
It was re-released by Revell a few years later
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me and my dad are still working on this set as a father-son project
I built this model and did not have any issues with the black plastic or any greasy feel. During assembly I painted the correct areas gray and the rest with flat black and ended up with a really nice model.
Pretty neat. There's a running Big Boy in Cheyenne, WY. There's a steam shop there that I used to go into every so often when I worked for the UP.
4:31 That's the steam turbo dynamo to produce electricity for the headlight and cab lighting .
thats an impressive locomotive!! as usual a rather nice kit from revell!
I want a 1/72 Kriegslokomotive... and have it look like its pulling a bunch of my 1/72 panzers around on railway carriages, that would make for an interesting way to display some of my panzers :)
boer harms that's actually a really good idea
To change the shield numbers apply let dry and cure then paint them out and renumbered later
At the 4:30 second mark the part you are talking about is a steam dynamo. It was spun like a small turbine to produce electrical power for the train.
It could have be a good model if it wasn't for that awful railings along the boiler. They should have been a detached part..
@Cloud Burst 117 tamiya did the same on kits from the era tho
@Cloud Burst 117 my apologies in misunderstood your comment,I guess the reason they don’t make them is there wouldn’t be as much of a demand for it as their other models.
love the video you know big boy 4014 will be thundering over sherman hill once again
I’m gonna use this video once I get my kit on the 14th of June or some other day before that
i have a question because I'm thinking about buying it what type of tools like glue and spray-paint
I didnt use any paints or glue. I built it all without glue not even 1 drop
Understandable have a great day ✌️
I should stop thinking this whole video was dedicated to me... (nice job btw)
Who says it wasn't?
Herbert Erpaderp huehuehuehuehuehue
@@HerbertErpaderp but who said it was
The Big Boy was actually not manually shovelled. Even the best human fireman could barely shovel enough to make steam to blow the whistle. A mechanical auger sat in the bottom of the tender and fed coal into the firebox through a massive pipe between the tender and the engine.
does it run on ho hornby train track cus i did saw at 9:45 it wigels so i think it does tern at curves
Nice video that thing is huge
14:52. The Big Boy had an automatic stoker. So Don't worry for the fireman :P
Big Boy uses 22 ton of coal a hour. That would be impossible to shovel.
It being HO scale makes it easy to add HO decals to it for a Big Boy which would make it look better. Painting it would be a nice touch as well, but as least decals would improves it's looks.
This was originally a Monogram model. I got two kits in 1984. Put one together to see how it looked, the other is still unopened.
I do agree that the rails on the kit ruins the build a little bit but its fine
12:10 that fish tho
excellent
17:16 take a look at that big boy!
The old kit if you can find it has better details that piping he was talking abt is separately applied
Whats a butterfly damper?
This was originally sold as a snap kit, along with the Hudson kits that came out the same time. I never did get the Big Boy, but had a few of the Hudson Locomotives.
Thanks for sharing..
trains might not be my cup of tea, but give a lot of credit to the engineering poured in the creation of this kit...=)
The engineering poured into the creation of the actual locomotive is pretty impressive too.
Hey, I used this model as the base for my entry for the Desert Bus Craftalong this year, the Literal Sub Train. I hear the LRR crew read out your name in resubs now and then, so I thought you would appreciate that.
That's awesome! I really like that idea. I can't wait to see it on Desert Bus. I've been thinking of doing a bus of some kind for it myself, but I never get my arse into gear with it!
Also I recognise your name from the chat. Good times!
Herbert Erpaderp I scratch-built a bus model for DB7 (or maybe 6). It was so much work.
Oh boi thats a very big boi
I’ve actually bought this kit twice. Once when I was young and again a few years ago. I ran into the same problems as you both times. I lost the decals last time, wrote Revell and they sent out a replacement twice. Like you the most annoying thing was the solid handrails. I’ve been thinking of removing it and replacing it. But the connection details were more than I was willing to attempt. But the price was cheap on hobylink.
I'm going to get this kit for a skullgirls model railroad!!
I like how thats HO scale.
I wish union Pacific would bring all those trains back they are great trains an they were built to last
@Paul Boobier oh that's great news I'm glad they are bringing them back I love the old trains thanks for the information I will check it out
I build a revell big boy too but its way easier to paint all parts first and then build it it is great display model
miguel chavez at one point of having one I painted mine completely gold
It's been said to wash assembly parts before assembly and painting. Wash with what?
Usually water, warm is probably best. And some dish washing liquid should do the trick. Nothing too tricky.
Ok, thanks. Actually I never really heard about it. That'll explain why some parts wouldn't stick even when I glued them.
They actually didn't have to do any shoveling. There was an automatic screw that passed from the tender into the firebox that dragged the coal along. Nice video by the way!
The BIG ONE the galaxy railroad
14:24 Hehehe, tender rear.
I love the glue applicator your using , got a link where I can buy it ????
It's just Revell Contacta Professional, You should be able to find it pretty easily in your average hobby store. Easily found online too.
Here's a link that's probably only really relevant to Australians. www.thecombatcompany.com/glues-and-adhesives/revell-contacta-professional-plastic-glue-25grams/
what humbrol colors should i use?
I don't use humbrol paints, so I have no idea. Black and greys mostly I would expect.
What glue did you use. And we’re did you get it
I would like to build this in a way that shows the articulation. It looks like this will take a lot part building and dremmel work.
Do the wheels roll after the model is completed?
i think i can give my shot to build that
I have just finished building one of these, as you say the valve gear would never work for a number of reasons but that doesn't really matter as mine will be permanently attached to the track once it;s finalised. One small point, I had two air pumps left over from the build and after a quick look at the instructions I could see no reference to them or did I miss it? I have weathered mine and it makes a nice display.
northstar1950 Nope, extra parts. I saved mine,they are in my greebly box with other parts.
Painting?
What about it?
Herbert Erpaderp you didn’t paint the model.
If you want to paint it (which will make it so much better)use humbrol’s tank black
Pls tell does it roll
It does not.
Herbert Erpaderp so the coupling rods too dont move?
Well the parts can be allowed to move. I glued mine solid. I feel like it would take a good bit of work to make them move freely without getting stuck and possibly breaking parts.
Herbert Erpaderp ohk ty.nice vid btw
No paint. No detail.
LincolnTek I basically just weathered mine up a bit,I did paint mine,but it was hard to tell. I used my airbush as a thinner is better on the paint on this model, its too easy to ruin the detail with thick paint. Its not the greatest model out there but it works. The General, a Civil war wood burner has just been reissued. If you love old trains,I highly suggest the General. Its an awesome train to build. I made mine in 1991 and got many awards for detail on the railbed( I used fish gravel) and used various washes on the wood in the tender for detail. Many people thought I used real wood pieces.
I remember a old silent Buster Keaton movie called The General in which a steam engine called The General was used.
I wonder if this is the same steam engine.
Will this work without glue
I doubt it
Do the wheels move?
I really enjoyed the video, despite having zero interest in trains. If i bought it I'd feel a little cheated ,personally, having the two huge moulded pieces - surely that's what modelling is about, building small bits into large bits? Anyway, nice job!
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Rubbsalot d2vrtvf
I SUBSCRIBED
Is possible to motorize it?
Probably, but it would be a lot of work. You'd have to replace the wheels, and a metal frame would probably be better than the plastic one.
I'm a big noob but does this go on any model track like ho scale...
It should fit on standard HO scale track. Though it would take some work to get it to roll nicely and you'd need to leave any articulation points unglued if you wanted it to go around a corner.
Does it come with glue
It does not. Suitable plastic cement shouldn't he hard to find.
More locomotives!
There is missing two pieces, in front part, under the boiler, there are two parts right under the stairs comming. Sorry for english.
Big boy is almost put back together is the real locomotive
You don't have to glue the wheels or drive rods, and neither do you have to glue boiler pipes or where the front set of drivers hook to the rear set.
Very nice can you really add some paint to it
Hello i wish to hnow sherry ils placed the pièce No 101 thanks
It's been 6 years. Have you painted it yet? 🙂
Nope.
I got one of these and I also accidentally put the coal tender truck together upside down
If that is the "Big Boy" I wonder what the "Big Man" will be?
I’ve built the kit and I like trains
14:52 you don’t shovel coal into the tender or from the tender there are large coal filling stations at yards and at rest stops also the “water filly things are called tender caps”
That's incorrect, the coal in the tender never just sat there. There were conveyors to move the coal into the firebox.
"This will never be free rolling" I CAN CUSTOMIZE MY BIG BOY TO MAKE IT MOVE AND I HAVE PROOF ... in a few weeks
Can you make a video on how you did it?
Imma just say all the wheels broke you win *default dances*
@@NW-gi1cp bruhhhhh the same happened to mine but the rods broke, I was getting somewhere but made the dumbest move to replace the pins with screws... it didn't end well lol
I managed to fix the wheels im never trying that again
Well decided im gettibg another one
In real life the locomotives had worm gears that pushed the coal into the boiler, so no one had to shovel coal
You can get the big boy locomotive on Amazon for 26 bucks
12:10 It looks like your fish is slowly dive bombing the model.
Lol!
you said shoveling coal for the thing must be horrible but the real one has a corkscrew for the coal
my next build
Is it plastic or metal?
It's plastic.
i just bought the same one
Look at this big boiiiiiiiiiiiiii XD
COOL!!