mrennie wrote:They look very similar to Jupiter. I wonder if a simple reskin would suffice? Do you have any information on the liveries used?
The only notable difference between the Jupiter and her sisters and the Omaha/Idaho are that the latter two have a different headlight bracket, so I have considered simply reskinning them, yes. The liveries (at least, early on) would have been largely the same, since Schenectady painted them itself. I am probably going to skin all the closest approximations to Jupiter I can find from comparing specifications, or as shown in the Appleman report http://cprr.org/Museum/Books/I_ACCEPT_the_User_Agreement/Jupiter-119_Appleman_NPS.pdf which in the appendices show a great number of locomotives more or less identical in original specification to the Jupiter and 119. There are no "clones" of the latter that could effectively be made without some degree of mesh modification (the shown locomotive, Seminole, was wood fired and had drivers six inches smaller than 119, as well as cylinders two inches shorter), but Jupiter was very much a "typical" Schenectady locomotive, and without being unreasonable, she could pretty easily be reskinned to represent UP nos. 7 and 8, and CP nos. 85, 148-152, 158-163, and 166-167, as well as the Adirondack Company's locomotive Geo. Leavitt, and the Rensaeller & Saratoga locomotive James M. Marvin. Other "clones" include UP 22-27 and 121-125, as well as the R&S locomotives Geo. H Cramer and E. Thompson Gale, but they were cosmetically different enough to require mesh modification if they are to be replicated. 7 and 8 had headlight brackets similar to the V&T "Lyon":

but that was the only difference between them and the Jupiter's class.