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RailSmith - 3001810-1 - Passenger Car, Lightweight, Pullman, Sleeper 10-6 - Northern Pacific - 365

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N Scale - RailSmith - 3001810-1 - Passenger Car, Lightweight, Pullman, Sleeper 10-6 - Northern Pacific - 365 Image Courtesy of Lowell Smith
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Stock Number3001810-1
Original Retail Price$48.00
BrandRailSmith
ManufacturerRailSmith
Body StyleWalthers Passenger Car Pullman Standard 10-6 Sleeper
Image Provider's WebsiteLink
Prototype VehiclePassenger Car, Lightweight, Pullman, Sleeper 10-6 (Details)
Road or Company NameNorthern Pacific (Details)
Reporting MarksSP
Road or Reporting Number365
Paint Color(s)Silver with Red Stripe
Print Color(s)White & Red
Coupler TypeAccuMate Magnetic Knuckle
Coupler MountTruck-Mount
Wheel TypeChemically Blackened Metal
Wheel ProfileSmall Flange (Low Profile)
Release Date2020-02-01
Item CategoryPassenger Cars
Model TypeLightweight/Streamlined
Model SubtypePullman Smoothside
Model VarietySleeper 10-6
Prototype RegionNorth America
Prototype EraNA Era III: Transition (1939 - 1957)
Scale1/160
Track GaugeN standard



Specific Item Information: This 10-6 sleeper car was built by Pullman in 1950 for service on Southern Pacific’s Cascade between Oakland and Seattle. NP had two of these cars as their contribution to this Southern Pacific train. First delivered in the Two-Tone Gray scheme. It served on the Cascade until 1962. This car would be placed on a ‘Coast Pool Train’ in Portland for its run up to Seattle. Then returning in same fashion back to Portland to be put onto the Cascade’s run south to Oakland..
Model Information: First released in 2007.
  • All-New Tooling based on Plan #4140
  • Prototype Specific Details: - Skirted or Non Skirted, Corrugated or Smoothside
  • All Detail Parts Added with flush fitting windows
  • Full interiors and working diaphrams
  • Blackened Metal Wheelsets on correct GSC 41-N style Trucks
  • Come with decals permitting multiple car number and names
  • Drop-In Lighting Kit will also be available, item #933-1099
Prototype History:
After World War II the 10-roomette 6-double bedroom (colloquially the "10-6 sleeper") design proved popular in the United States. A roomette is a type of sleeping car compartment in a railroad passenger train. The term was first used in North America, and was carried over into Australia and New Zealand. Roomette rooms are relatively small, and were generally intended for use by a single person. Double Bedrooms are private rooms for two passengers, with upper and lower berths, washbasins, and private toilets, placed on one side of the car, with the corridor running down the other side (thus allowing the accommodation to be slightly over two thirds the width of the car). Frequently, these accommodations have movable partitions allowing adjacent accommodations to be combined into a suite.

The Pennsylvania Railroad had 61 Pullman Standard 10-6's in all. The Norfolk and Western “County” series and the RF&P “King” sleepers were built by PS in 1949 for the New York to Richmond and Norfolk trains.
Road Name History:
The Northern Pacific Railway (reporting mark NP) was a transcontinental railroad that operated across the northern tier of the western United States from Minnesota to the Pacific Coast. It was approved by Congress in 1864 and given nearly 40 million acres (160,000 km2) of land grants, which it used to raise money in Europe for construction. Construction began in 1870 and the main line opened all the way from the Great Lakes to the Pacific when former president Ulysses S. Grant drove in the final "golden spike" in western Montana on Sept. 8, 1883.

The railroad had about 6800 miles of track and served a large area, including extensive trackage in the states of Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington and Wisconsin. In addition the company had an international branch to Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The main activities were shipping wheat and other farm products, cattle, timber and minerals; bringing in consumer goods, transporting passengers; and selling land.

The company was headquartered first in Brainerd, Minnesota, then in Saint Paul, Minnesota. It had a tumultuous financial history, and in 1970 it merged with other lines to form the Burlington Northern Railroad.

Read more on Wikipedia.
Brand/Importer Information:
RailSmith is a brand launched by Lowell Smith in 2019. Lowell acquired the toolings from Walthers.

With each release, RailSmith will bring passenger cars from across the spectrum of North America’s railroads, with the goal of building entire trains over a period-of-time. It is our plan to release cars that might be for a specific train, but you can use these cars as you see fit, as did the railroads.

Production plans are grand, but we believe they are also achievable. We do not have the capabilities to release an entire train at once, but being able to focus on one release (two-or-three cars at a time), we can build a train over time.
Item created by: CNW400 on 2020-03-31 22:33:58. Last edited by gdm on 2021-02-11 14:06:43

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