Bachmann 31-442 Pre-Owned LMS Ivatt 2MT Tank 1205 LMS Black Steam Locomotive

Product Details
| SKU | BAC-31-442-PO |
|---|---|
| Vendor | Bachmann |
| Categories | Bachmann Bachmann OO Gauge Best selling products Era 3 HO-OO In stock Items Locomotives New products OO Gauge Latest Releases OO Gauge Locomotives OO Gauge scale OO Gauge Steam Locomotives Pre-Owned Product Options Steam Locomotives |
| Scale | OO Gauge |
| Share | |
| Features |
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Product Description

Pre-Owned Item, in as new condition.
Test Run.
Accessory pack included.
Featuring a detailed and true-to-prototype bodyshell coupled with a high performance chassis, which is driven by a five pole motor and complete with a Next18 DCC decoder socket and space for a speaker, this model is sure to be popular with LMS enthusiasts and adds another tank engine to the LMS locomotive fleet.
MODEL FEATURES:
- Bachmann Branchline OO Scale
- Era 3
- Pristine LMS Black livery
- Running No. 1205
- Accessory Pack
- NEM Coupling Pockets
- Powerful 5 Pole Motor
- Locomotive Ready to Accept a Speaker
- Equipped with a Next18 DCC Decoder Socket
- Length 160mm
IVATT 2MT TANK HISTORY
The London, Midland & Scottish Railway (LMS) lvatt Class 2 2-6-2 Tank Locomotive was designed by H. G. Ivatt with the first examples introduced in 1946. Using the ‘Prairie’ wheel formation that had proven so successful for the GWR and had been used by Stanier and Fowler before him, Ivatt employed modern labour-saving devices such as self-emptying ashpans and rocking grates to make these Class 2 Tanks more economical than the elderly locos that had been inherited by the LMS and which these would replace. Designed for mixed traffic duties, just ten were built by the LMS before Nationalisation. British Railways constructed a further 120, of which 50 were fitted with Push-Pull equipment.
The type found use on both passenger and freight traffic, working mainly on branch lines across the London Midland Region, although the final 30 to be built were allocated to the Southern Region from new and others had spells on the Western Region. A year after the final example was built, the design became the basis of the BR Standard 2MT Tank, proving just how good a design the Ivatt 2MT Tank was.
Withdrawals began in 1962 and all had gone by 1967, but thankfully four survive in preservation.