Connect & follow Facebook

Store Search


 

Our Brands

 

Our Products

 

Your Cart

0 Product(s) in cart
Total $0.00
 

Store Location


Micro Macro Mundo Inc.
14900 S.W. 136th Street #103
Miami Florida 33196
U.S.A.

PH: 786-250-3108

 

Store Hours


11 to 6 Weekdays
10 to 3 Saturdays
Sundays CLOSED.

 


Marklin 39511 Electric Loco Serie Be 4/6 Grun SBB III

Home
»

Marklin 39511 Electric Loco Serie Be 4/6 Grun SBB III
Prototype: Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) class Be 4/6 electric locomotive. Locomotive from the first production series. Fir green basic paint scheme with gray running gear. With older design buffers, cab doors at the ends of the locomotive with walkover plates, with sanding equipment, with an oncoming train light, and with an inductive magnet. Lengthwise cooling lines with 6 vertical mounting brackets. Road number 12306. The locomotive looks as it did around 1950.

  Enlarge  
Product ID 39511
Manufacturer Marklin
ISBN 4001883395111

Marklin 39511 Electric Loco Serie Be 4/6 Grun SBB III


Price seen below is ...
Year Model : 2021

Free IN STOCK Continental US USPS Standard Ground shipping orders over $ 150.00 (pays Insurance) Credit Cards Only, no PayPal

  • Description
  • Reviews

Marklin 39511 Electric Loco Serie Be 4/6 Grun SBB III

Model: The locomotive has an mfx+ digital decoder and extensive sound and light functions. It also has controlled high-efficiency propulsion with a flywheel, centrally mounted. Both driving wheels and jackshafts in each group of driving wheels powered using cardan shafts. Traction tires. The locomotive frame is articulated to enable the locomotive to negotiate sharp curves. Triple headlights and 1 white marker light (Swiss headlight / marker light code) change over with the direction of travel, will work in conventional operation, and can be controlled digitally. When the locomotive is running "light" the lighting can be changed to 1 red marker light. The running authorization lights can be controlled separately in digital operation. The headlights at Locomotive Ends 2 and 1 can be turned off separately in digital operation. The locomotive has the double "A" light function. The cab lighting and engine room lighting can be turned off separately in digital operation. Maintenance-free warm white and red LEDs are used for the lighting. This locomotive has highly detailed metal construction with many separately applied details, such as cooling pipes for the transformer oil. The cabs and engine room are modelled. Sanding equipment is included on the groups of driving wheels. The roof equipment is detailed with heating resistors, roof conductors, insulators, lightning arrester coils, and roof walk boards as well as double-arm pantographs with a simple contact strip. The minimum radius for operation is 360 mm / 14-3/16". Brake hoses, imitations of prototype couplers, and access ladders are included. Length over the buffers 18.9 cm / 7-7/16".

Highlights:

  • Highly detailed metal construction
  • "World of Operation" mfx+ digital decoder and extensive operation and sound functions included
  • Cab lighting and engine room lighting can be controlled digitally
  • Additional red running authorization lights can be controlled in digital operation

In June of 1917, the SBB ordered two test locomotives (road numbers Be 4/6 12301 and 12302) from the Swiss industry for use in heavy express train and passenger train service in electric operation on the Gotthard. While the test locomotives were still being built, the SBB decided in May of 1918 on a first modified regular production order to SLM and BBC, which included road numbers Be 4/6 12303-12312. They clearly formed a further development of the aforementioned road number 12302. As early as July of 1918 there was a first subsequent order for road numbers Be 4/6 12313-12318, followed by two other orders in 1920/21 as road numbers Be 4/6 12319-12328 and road numbers 12329-12342. These first electric Gotthard express locomotives then took up their duties between February of 1920 and April of 1923. Their external appearance was defined by a box-cab superstructure on a sturdy frame reinforced at critical points. The frame was mounted, using a pivot bearing on both driving wheel frames, each with a Bissel pilot truck wheelset. Two traction motors were geared in each power truck respectively to a deep-mounted jackshaft, which was linked to the driving wheelsets by a simple coupling rod. By 1929, the class Be 4/6 units were pulling all important express trains on the electrified lines and of course chiefly across the Gotthard. The new class Ae 4/7 units did not begin until then to make the field more competitive and by 1938, the use of the class Be 4/6 units in express train service across the Gotthard was largely over. They now carved out an existence pulling regional and freight trains, which finally ended in 1962 with increasing use of the class Ae 6/6. The class Be 4/6 units moved to somewhat "flatter" fields and were assigned again to the depots Biel, Lucerne, and Winterthur. Yet now they made their age noticeable, because their susceptibility to repair and their maintenance intensity clearly increased. In April of 1965, road number Be 4/6 12312 was the first to be taken, but in the following years increasingly more retirements opened up gaps in the time-honored Gotthard express locomotives. Road number Be 4/6 12339 was retired as the last of the Mohicans on February 29, 1976. Three units are still preserved: Road number Be 4/6 12320 underwent a major overhaul in 1975 after being retired with restoration largely to its original condition. For many years, it then functioned as an operational SBB museum locomotive and now belongs to SBB Historic. After intermediate stations as a memorial locomotive in Baden and as an exhibit at the Lucerne Transportation Museum, road number Be 4/6 12 332 went to the depot in Erstfeld under the care of the SBB Historic Team in Erstfeld. Road number Be 4/6 12339 was acquired at the end of 2009 by the "Association Swisstrain" after a stay of many years in Italy and it is now again in Swiss custody at the depot in Le Locle.

This model can be found in a DC version in the Trix H0 assortment under item number 25511.

Properties:

  • Metal frame and locomotive body.
  • Digital decoder with up to 32 digitally controlled functions. The quantity depends on the controller being used.
  • DCC decoder
  • Built-in sound effects circuit.
  • Triple headlights and a white marker light that change over with the direction of travel.
  • Triple headlights and a red marker light that change over with the direction of travel.
  • Marklin close couplers in standard pocket with pivot point.
  • Era 3
  Control
Unit
Mobile
Station
Mobile
Station 2

Central
Station 1/2

Central Station 3/2*
Mobile Station 2**
Headlight(s) · · · · ·
Marker light(s) · · · · ·
Electric locomotive op. sounds · · · · ·
Locomotive whistle · · · · ·
Direct control · · · · ·
Interior lights   · · · ·
Engineer’s cab lighting 1   · · · ·
Whistle for switching maneuver   · · · ·
Engineer’s cab lighting 2   · · · ·
Sound of squealing brakes off     · · ·
Headlight(s): Cab1 End     · · ·
Headlight(s): Cab2 End     · · ·
Blower motors     · · ·
Letting off Air     · · ·
Pantograph Sounds     · · ·
Sanding         ·
Rail Joints         ·
Brake Compressor         ·
Conductor's Whistle         ·
Doors Closing         ·
Sound of Couplers Engaging         ·
Operating Sounds         ·
Switching maneuver         ·
Special light function         ·

Warning: Adults only.

Product Reviews (Please login to leave a review)
No Reviews For This Product.
Price: $537.64
IN STOCK. (This is a Discontinued item.) Ships now
 
 

36 years in Business
Largest Marklin &
Trix/MiniTrix
LGB & Schuco
Dealer in USA

Complete European
Manufacturers in stock.