Broadway Limited 10156 HO Class R3a 4-8-2 - Standard DC - Brass-Hybrid -- New Haven #3558 (1940-1945 Appearance, black, graphite)
Broadway Limited 10156 HO Class R3a 4-8-2 - Standard DC - Brass-Hybrid -- New Haven #3558 (1940-1945 Appearance, black, graphite)
Estimated Arrival: Oct. 2027
HO Class R3a 4-8-2 - Standard DC - Brass-Hybrid -- New Haven #3558 (1940-1945 Appearance, black, graphite)
Brass-Hybrid Construction — Built to Perform
Each R3a Mountain features:
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Hand-crafted brass boiler and tender
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Heavy die-cast chassis for serious pulling power
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Excellent weight distribution and smooth operation
The result is a locomotive that looks refined and mechanical, yet delivers the strength expected of a true Mountain-type engine.
Road-Specific Detail & Multiple Road Numbers
This first production run includes multiple road numbers, each rendered with era-appropriate and road-specific detailing. Careful attention has been paid to the R3a’s unique external features—especially the distinctive front-end appliances and proportions that set it apart from more common 4-8-2 designs.
Even for modelers without a New Haven–specific layout, the R3a offers a rare opportunity to roster a steam locomotive that is visually compelling, historically important, and seldom modeled in HO scale.
About the Prototype
The R3a class was developed from earlier New Haven Mountain designs and stands apart for one remarkable reason: it employed a three-cylinder configuration, rather than the more common two-cylinder arrangement.
This design offered several advantages, including greater pulling power, quicker acceleration, and smoother operation, particularly at speed. As a result, the R3a locomotives became the largest and heaviest steam locomotives ever rostered by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad—a significant milestone in the railroad’s steam-era evolution.
The third cylinder, however, was difficult to access and maintain. While other railroads that experimented with three-cylinder locomotives later simplified their designs, the New Haven—constrained by financial realities—never made this modification. The R3a therefore remained a rare and uncompromising expression of steam-era ambition until the end of New Haven steam operations.
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Industry-leading Model Features:
**Specifications on this page subject to change. |
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ScaleHO Scale
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Roadname
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Control TypeDC (DCC Ready)
