Heljan GWR 61xx 2-6-2T
Purchased and reviewed by Geoff Goddin
Gazette - November 2018 (Vol 20 No.9)
It's been a long wait but having seen the 61xx Large Prairie on Heljan's stand
at Guildex at a full retail price of £699, Tower sent my pre-ordered GWR version
numbered 5184 for £500 plus £225 for fitting DCC and sound. Heljan state 'that
the model has been tested over curved track down to a minimum radius of
1028mm' (the Peco R2 setrack radius), though more satisfactory running is
achieved over greater radii.' The photo shows the model on my R2 curve.
In my 8 x 11ft railway room it's either R2, or go down a scale, or go into 0-16.5 NG. The
loco runs satisfactorily through the curves and points on my layout. This is not
so surprising since Richard Webster's 43xx 2-6-0 GW mogul, with the same
5ft8in drivers and same fixed wheelbase, has proved to be quite at home on
R2s, though Lionheart use clever engineering such as cam-guided pony trucks,
and variable tender drawbar arrangements. (Digression, - I do not know why
some dismiss the Peco radius, it is equivalent to 2ft or '4th radius' in OO which
accepts virtually all OO stock. Like RTR locos, it makes 7mm modelling more
accessible, which must surely be a good thing?)
The Heljan pony trucks are simple pivot, and you fit them yourself, this is
straightforward since the front is the smaller 3ft 2in diameter and the rear
3ft8in. The pony wheel axles do not run in separate bearings or bushes, the
driving wheel axles look thinner than usual for O gauge, and the drivers have a
fair degree of side and vertical play. I did not care to dismantle the mechanism,
but I suspect the motor/gearbox floats.
The normal components of RTR detailing are present below and above the
footplate, in the capacious but gloomy cab, pipes and dials can be seen with
the aid of a powerful torch. However the coal-load is a real let down, think early
Tri-ang levels of realism. Once my 61xx completes its year of warranty, major
surgery will be called for on this component.
Operationally, at 1.6kg the 61xx well outweighs Dapol or Minerva RTR locos,
but then the prototype weighs 80 tons. The model comes screwed to a
polished hardwood plinth and protected by shaped hard foam, in fact the
packaging without the loco weighs 900grams.
Mike Barcy at my Tolworth club had his analogue version of 5184 hauling a
rake of five Darstaed mark ones plus four brass Maunsells, on six foot radius
curves, a tail load of at least eight kilos. My R2 curves tend to induce some
friction drag, so my loco managed six Dapol Colletts, about five kilos, but this
rake would be twice what my layout can manage. The mechanism is acceptably
quiet and smooth.
Unlike the other RTR manufacturers, Heljan does not do DCC or sound fitting,
though this model comes DCC ready to fit an ESU Loksound L4.0 decoder. The
decoder guide tells me F3 controls a 'flickering firebox' feature which would be
of use in illuminating my crew in that gloomy cab, however this is on F4 in my
Tower Models DCC installation. Since 6106, the only class survivor is at Didcot
but not running, the sound file is 'generic'. Tower have done a good job setting
up the chuff synchronicity, but oddly while I have been able to tweak CVs 3 and
4 (acceleration and slowing) the loco strongly resists being addressed '5184,’
but I have been able to shift it from '03' to '51' which is okay for me. No
'Realdrive' option is available on this chip.
Overall, apart from the coal, this is a great model with impressive haulage powers, far beyond my present needs, in other words it displays all the typical Heljan qualities.