A beautifully detailed and quite exceptionally finished fully working live steam 1/8 scale model of the Baldwin-built variant of the classic 'American' style 4-4-0 of circa 1870, offered in fully decorated deep red livery, extensively embellished, as UPPR No.7.

Details
A beautifully detailed and quite exceptionally finished fully working live steam 1/8 scale model of the Baldwin-built variant of the classic 'American' style 4-4-0 of circa 1870, offered in fully decorated deep red livery, extensively embellished, as UPPR No.7.
This model, whose original builder is unknown and died before its completion, was finally comleted to its present immaculate state (including the hand applied paintwork) by F.H. Lambert in 1986, and typifies what was undoubtedly the most architypal North American steam locomotive design of the nineteent century (see below). The model is significant in two principle respects: firstly in terms of its extreme technical excellence and accuracy to prototype as far as the overall workmanship is concerned; secondly by virtue of the quite extraordinary attention given to what might be regarded as more cosmetic aspects of the design but which were consideration importance at the period when the prototypes were in use.
The engine itself is carried upon correctly fashioned bar frames fitted with appropriate wheels which, in the case of the driven examples, have also been given 'correct-to-prototype' shrunk-on tyres. The leading 'pilot' (carrying) wheels, arranged in the form of a four-wheel 'bogie' ('truck' in American parlance), are prototypically cast solid, while the fully working outside working motion is made from machined steel to the highest standard, actuated by a correct to pattern lever reverse mechanism in the cab linked to the authentically styled and fully accurate Stephenson's link valve gear, set between the frames.
The boiler is fed by means of a hand feed pump in the tender together with two accurately modelled crosshead feed pumps, driven by the engine itself when in motion. Floor controls in the cab control the injector feed and the feed pump by-pass while there is a properly modelled double-plunger mechanical lubricator in the cab (one plunger per cylinder) on the left hand side. Steam brake, blower and injector control valves are also provided in the cab, together with fully working cab-actuated cylinder drain cocks. The engine is driven via a properly modelled 'pull-out' regulator and the boiler back plate has a proper water gauge complete with working test cocks. The tender water connections are fully compatible with these various controls and the model is coal-fired.
The cab contains a fully functional pressure gauge (the boiler is designed to 'blow-off' at 90psi) and the boiler is fitted with a single functional safety valve of what (without testing) seems to be of the modern 'pop' type, cleverly disguised (cosmetically) as a more correct to prototype 'lifting' type lever safety valve. The internal fire tubes are of approx. in. diameter (ie over scale in relation to prototype), the model being designed from the outset to be fully working. The model has been 'test steamed' and we are informed that the boiler has recently been hydraulically tested. Thus there is no reason why this fine model could not be maintained in full working order if so desired.
Additionally significant is the dedicated attention which has been given to the many 'cosmetic' aspects of th ensemble in two main categories - structural and paintwork. As far as the former are concerned, almost all the platework is of turned or sheet brass and made with the greatest of care (gold plated to retain colour where the original was highly polished). As an example, valve chest and dome covers are removeable (revealing the 'working' - ie more practical - machined steel components beneath), while much cosmetic brass platework is hand-fabricated to shape and subsequently silver-soldered. Pipework is of pink gold - again to retain an ex-works appearance - while the cab panels (made in wood and very much a feature of this type of locomotive) are exquisitely made, the choice of wood and the rendering of the various joints being near-perfect. The cab-roof itself, though made of metal, is covered (correctly) with real canvas and part of it is removeable for access to the controls when operating the model.
The highly decorative paintwork, ebullient with elaborate scrolls, curlicues and painted scenes, immaculately applied against a basic dark red base colour, represents the phase when many American locomotives were adorned with complex and elaborate paint schemes, often unique to a specific engine and associated with its particular driver - 'engineer' in American parlance - along with his fireman. This phase did not last too long and was in marked contrast with later more sombre ideas (usually plain black with minimal trimmings) which eventually came to be associated with most American steam locomotives in later years. It is therefore rather unusual to be able to offer for sale such an accurate model of a historical prototype which is also finished in what turned out to be such a relatively short-lived form of decoration -- 23 x 80in. (58.5 x 203.5cm.) Fitted carrying case with fixed rails.

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Lot Essay

The so-called 'American' 4-4-0 type, denoting four carrying wheels ahead of four driven wheels (two axles in both cases), was the inevitable consequence of the particular circumstances surrounding the development of the steam railway (railroad) in North America during the nineteenth century. The ideal steam locomotive configuration had been established in 1829 by Robert Stephenson (not George, be it noted), when his famous 'Rocket' swept the field at the Rainhill trials in Britain, where considerable civil engineering was accepted as essential so as to achieve the much sought-after gentle track gradient and curvature. When more power was required, the addition of a third or fourth axle (to allow for greater boiler capacity and firebox length) did not therefore present too much of a problem and many hundreds of larger types began to appear, almost always with rigid plate frames. Elsewhere, especially North America, new lines often displayed much tighter curvature to avoid the higher cost of excavating a straighter route and in order to get the extra length to generate more power, greater wheelbase flexibility was needed and this led to the use of the flexible pivoting 'truck' (called a 'bogie' in Britain) mounted ahead of the main driven wheels, which later continued to be fixed to the main frames of the engine.
The first 4-4-0 patent was taken out in 1836; the first example appeared in 1837, and during the 1840's, engines began to appear in significant quantity. These were mostly developed from earlier 4-2-0 types and met with varying degrees of success. In them, the leading bogie acted as little more than a guide, the driving wheels still took most of the weight and the actual drive was usually to the rear axle (often using obsolete types of valve gear), all of which produced a frequently ungainly and not always satisfactory machine. But in due course, in 1852, a radical rethink, largely attributable to Thomas Rogers (whose chief designer William Hudson was an Englishman), gave rise to the classic outline and configuration of the 4-4-0 which became synonymous with North American railroads for well over a generation.
In the Rogers type (the familiar soubriquet 'American' does not seem to have been used until 1872), the drive was now taken to the leading axle and the driving wheelbase extended, thus allowing a deep round topped firebox to be fitted between the wheels, ahead of which was carried a wagon top or coned boiler. The simultaneous lengthening of the leading bogie, well separated from the driven wheels, allowed the cylinders to be brought down to a horizontal position and the connecting rods to be lengthened to seven or eight times as long as the crank throw, thus giving much lighter vertical thrusts at the slidebars. Furthermore, a general improvement in driving wheel springs (0ften of compensated beam type) produced, in conjunction with the central bogie pivot, a near-perfect three point suspension and consequential improvement in both ride quality and reduced track damage.
Coincidentally with these major changes came the almost universal adoption of the bar frame which had considerable technological advantages in the North American context compared with the more rigid European style plate frame, much of the success of the 'American' type, especially over more poorly aligned or maintained tracks, being attributable to this form of framing. However, although Rogers himself had also introduced the improved link motion valve gear into his own examples, it was some time before his imitators (and there were many) realised the true value of that particular feature, so it was not until the 1860's that these now familiar engines were all conceptually alike as near as made no odds.
For the most part, American 4-4-0s tended to come in two main sub-groups, best defined by their driving wheel size. The smaller wheeled engines (best used for heavier freight work and/or steep inclines) generally had wheels of about 5ft diameter (give or take an inch or two), while the so-called 'passenger' versions had approximately 6in. larger diameter wheels for higher speeds. There were of course some exceptions to this generalisation. Finally, and until well into the 1860's, many 4-4-0s were designed to burn wood and fitted with huge spark arresting chimneys. However some of the Eastern railroads preferred either anthracite or coal and by the 1870's, wood burning (which actually needed a different form of boiler draughting than coal or anthracite) was well into a decline across the whole continent.
The model in question represents Messrs Baldwin's interpretation of a coal burning 'passenger' example of the type (5ft 8in. diameter driving wheels) at perhaps the apogee of its evolution and styling.At that time, the type represented some 85 of all locomotives in service in North America and still accounted for some 60 of Baldwin's new production. By the 1880's, however, the classic American 4-4-0 was beginning to develop into something altogether more massive and the need for even larger engines than an enlarged 4-4-0 caused the latter to go into a rapid decline during that decade. But they had served North America well for some thirty-five years or more and it is difficult to overstate the importance of the type both in terms of operating the traffic and opening up the continent as the westward expansion took place. No other single general purpose locomotive ever enjoyed greater popularity and few of them proved to be as useful over such a long period.

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