Well, not long ago, I decided to model some locomotives using some rather obscure models as starting points.
In this case, I’ve started a project using an SD40-2 built by GSB Rail. What we have is a decent shell, about on par with an Athearn Bluebox in quality. And therein lies a tale.
As some of you old-timers in the hobby know, there is a phenomenon in model railroading that uses a phrase borrowed from the computing world - it’s called “vaporware”. More common in brass releases than in plastic, it basically consists of a splashy new-product announcement, up-beat updates… then nothing. It may also just consist of a “Coming Soon!” type ad. But nothing ever comes along.
The GSB Rail SD40-2 was just such a product. First announced in early 1980, it did not get released until March of 1983. And during the lead period, GSB published update ads in the magazines, whetting public interest in the locomotive…
…only to have Athearn completely trump them by releasing the same locomotive in February 1983, almost totally unnannounced!
The genesis of this locomotive came from the July 1976 Model Railroader magazine, which published drawings of the prototype as well as directions on how to kitbash one from an Athearn SDP40 or SD45 and a GP35 shell. The resulting model was still pretty crude, but identifiable as the locomotive it proported to be.
However, in the feelings of many, the hobby would be better served by an accurate model. GSB existed as a smalltime brass importer and decided to take on the challenge of an accurate plastic RTR or semi-kit model. Gordon Cannon scratchbuilt the master shell from brass, as the injection process used by GSB required an oversize positive master (as an aside, Cannon publicly distanced himself from the result, stating he “wanted nothing to do with it”, and from there created his line of accurate diesel components). Cliff Gra