News & Reviews Product Reviews MTH RailKing O gauge Baldwin VO-1000 diesel

MTH RailKing O gauge Baldwin VO-1000 diesel

By Bob Keller | April 18, 2007

| Last updated on November 3, 2020

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YEARS AGO, before joining CLASSIC TOY TRAINS magazine, I was an Air Force transportation officer. I found myself on a staff-assistance visit to Hill Air Force Base, Utah, and stumbled upon a weed-choked rail yard full of diesels in varying shades of faded Air Force blue. Baldwins, Whitcombs, Plymouths, Alcos, you name it. There they were, sitting under the sun, slowly rusting away.

Of course, I wasn’t driving and didn’t have a camera with me. Or even a screwdriver (if you know what I mean). And I didn’t want to alarm the guys I was with, so the only images I have of the encounter are in my mind, not on Kodacolor. This O gauge Air Force VO-1000 takes steps to refresh that undocumented memory – at least a little bit.

In a nutshell, the Baldwin VO-1000 was a sturdy switcher, with more than 540 made from 1939 through 1946. In the 1970s, the Baldwin-Hamilton Corp. (the last vestige of the locomotive production division of Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton) offered a rebuild and upgrade program for switcher owners that extended the lives of many of these diesels

Exclusive to subscribers, check out a video of MTH’s Baldwin VO-1000 running on our roller base and test track.

Opening the box

The MTH model is pretty much as I had hoped: a squat, blue brick replete with Baldwin’s distinctive long-hood air intake cast into the nose of the hood. It has full-scale dimensions and a RailKing “scale” product.

The cast-in body detail is good, with the typical blend of hatch, hinge, latch, and seam detail. The decks have cast-in safety-tread pattern as well.

Add-on pieces, while well done, are minimal. The model has yellow handrails and grab irons as well as yellow uncoupler arms.

The model’s paint is pretty straightforward – Air Force blue body, yellow safety stripe along the frame, and solid yellow accents on steps. On the cab sides you’ll find a nice Strategic Air Command logo, along with an American flag.

On the test track

This switcher packs the full ProtoSound 2.0 system and two coil couplers and offers sturdy performance. Our low-speed test average was 4.5 scale mph, while the high-speed test average was 55.9 scale mph. Drawbar pull for the locomotive was 1 pound 9 ounces.

This model is equipped with MTH’s ProtoSound 2.0 Digital Command System (DCS). The motor response was smooth in both DCS and conventional modes, and the two can-style motors were fairly quiet. For me, the highlight is the speed control, which was flawless.

The sound package is also great, with the high point being the start-up sounds that suggest the motor is about to rattle apart into 1,242 pieces!

I was a bit surprised that the model didn’t have a smoke unit, especially since the RailKing Baldwin AS-616 with LocoSound (reviewed in the May 2007 issue) did possess one. Oh, well.

The VO-1000 meets all my expectations. Wrap it in Air Force blue, and I’ll salute as it rolls past!

O GAUGE RAILKING VO-1000 DIESEL SWITCHER BY MTH
Price: $299.95 (no. 30-2642-1)

Features: O-31 operation, two can-style motors, ProtoSound 2.0, coil couplers

Pros: Nice appearance, good puller

Cons: No smoke unit

Made in the People’s Republic of China for MTH

6 thoughts on “MTH RailKing O gauge Baldwin VO-1000 diesel

  1. As always from MTH, a great product with a realistic sound package. Runs smooth and flawless! Mine a New York Central pattern! The only thing I would have liked would be better body detail such as the new RailKing RS-1 that I recently got in NYC! Oh well, for under $300 I can't complain!

  2. Does the locomotive come in anything except US Air Force?

    Since it has ProtoSounds it apparently must have to be battery operated. I have numerous sound locos that require batteries and I will never buy another one. Batteries are just too much trouble. I think MTH needs to get back to some basics.

  3. I was not happy with the sounds at all. My PS-1 Baldwinhas better, richer sounds. When I first got it, it was so bad that I sent it to a NASC. They put in a sound package from another PS-2 Baldwin, which was better, but not the equal of the PS-1. I'm hoping Baldwin Railsounds become available and I'll replace the whole system in it. Otherwise, runs good, nice paint. Go USAF!

  4. If this loco is like previous MTH PS2 entries, I find the BLH sounds to be very good. I have the Weaver VO1000 and I too would rather it have authentic Baldwin sounds, but I bought it anyway knowing it wouldn't have them. So I just imagine it to be one of the Baldwins that was repowered at some point in its career. I don't know what locomotive MTH recorded the sounds from, but whether they're in my Centipedes, my Sharks, or my Lima transfer locomotive, they sound right. I recommend you hear them in person; they're definitely not EMD and they're much better than the Protosound 1 Baldwin sounds.

  5. I'm waiting to hear the sound package for myself because I am old enough to know what a Baldwin switchengine sounds like. The reason I never bought a Weaver VO1000 is because it has Lionel's EMD sound package. For $300 I want it to sound like a Baldwin.

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