Toronto Ontario - Do you have a soft spot for railroad rebuilt diesel locomotives?
Then you'll want to check out the HO scale Canadian Pacific RS18u from Rapido Trains.
The model, designed from field measurements and a 3D scan of a full-size engine, is offered in a variety of paint
schemes from 1980 to the present.
The Prototype
In 1980, CP started a program at its Angus Shops in Montreal to rebuild the railroad's aging fleet of Montreal
Locomotive Works RS18 diesels.
When the program concluded in 1989, a total of 69 units were rebuilt.
The locomotives, assigned to the 1800 through 1868 series and designated RS18u, featured a low short hood, tri-color
class lights, and mechanical upgrades.
Our sample is decorated as CP Rail 1826, one of eight units rebuilt in 1984.
It was retired by CP in April 1998 and sold for scrap to Century Metals in Lachine, Quebec, a month later.
Model Features
The Rapido model features a plastic shell and die-cast metal chassis.
The CP style pilots are fitted with factory applied m.u. and train line hoses and uncoupling levers.
The front of our sample has deck-mounted ditch lights.
The cab has the signature flat-top number board, class light, and bell housing that protrudes above the curved roof
line.
And yes, the class lights work.
Not to be overlooked is the detailed cab interior, which is painted light gray with three seats painted
black.
The control stand has illuminated gauges.
Long-hood features include etched-metal screens, formed-wire handrails and lift rings, and a three-chime air
horn.
A rerail frog, painted white, hangs below the sill on both sides.
Model vs. Prototype
Our CP Rail sample is painted in the railroad's Action Red scheme with Multimark herald.
The red paint is smooth and evenly applied, and the graphics are opaque.
The Multimark herald was especially well-executed, with crisp color-separation lines through the radiator
shutters.
A prototype image I found online showed the 1826 in fresh paint, sans Multimark, in March 1990.
The herald and lettering placement follow a photo from February 1985.
A few small labels were omitted from the sill and long hood.
The DRS-18 stencil (Diesel Road Switcher – 1,800hp) below the road number on the model doesn't appear in the
image.
On the Layout
Rapido Trains offers the RS18u as a direct-current model with a 21 pin connector and with a dual-mode ESU LokSound
decoder, we received the latter.
I tested the model in our workshop using an NCE PowerCab system.
At speed step 1, the four-axle unit moved at less than 1 scale mph.
The model achieved a top speed of 77 scale mph at step 28.
The full-size engines had a top speed of 75 mph.
I then took the RS18u over to our Milwaukee Racine & Troy layout for real-world testing.
The unit ran without incident while powering a short freight train.
The locomotive pulled nine 50 foot freight cars up the 3 percent grade between Bay Junction and
Skyridge.
It's nice to see manufacturers like Rapido think outside the box and offer railroad-rebuilt diesels.
Though small in number compared to other CP diesels, the RS18u was a signature part of the railroad's locomotive fleet
in the 1980s and 1990s.
See the Rapido Trains HO scale RS18u in action on our Milwaukee Racine & Troy staff layout in
this video.
Facts
Price - Direct current with 21-pin connector $225, with dual-mode ESU LokSound decoder $335.
Manufacturer - Rapido Trains 500 Alden Road, Unit 21 Markham Ontario L3R 5H5. rapidotrains.com
Era - 1984 to early 1990 as decorated.
Road names - CP Rail (with and without Multimark in five road numbers each), Bath & Hammondsport (one number),
Minnesota Commercial (two numbers), New Brunswick East Coast (two numbers), Ontario Southland (three numbers), Ottawa
Central (three numbers), and Western New York & Pennsylvania (one number). Also available undecorated.
Features
Correctly gauged metal wheels.
Metal couplers, at correct height.
Weight: 12.8 ounces.
Cody Grivno.
(likely no image with original article)
(usually because it's been seen before)
provisions in Section 29 of the
Canadian Copyright Modernization Act.