Available Items

30-79703

O Gauge RailKing Crane Car
  • Southern

30-79704

O Gauge RailKing Crane Tender Car
  • Southern

30-79705

O Gauge RailKing Crane Car
  • American Steel

30-79706

O Gauge RailKing Crane Tender Car
  • American Steel

30-79707

O Gauge RailKing Crane Car
  • U.S. Army

30-79708

O Gauge RailKing Crane Tender Car
  • U.S. Army

30-79709

O Gauge RailKing Crane Car
  • Great Northern

30-79710

O Gauge RailKing Crane Tender Car
  • Great Northern

30-79711

O Gauge RailKing Crane Car
  • Erie Lackawanna

30-79712

O Gauge RailKing Crane Tender Car
  • Erie Lackawanna

30-79713

O Gauge RailKing Crane Car
  • Westinghouse

30-79714

O Gauge RailKing Crane Tender Car
  • Westinghouse

September 10, 2024 - M.T.H. Electric Trains will be releasing the 2025 RailKing O Gauge Crane Cars this Winter. Each of these offerings will be available limited quantities and in unique car numbers. Complimenting Crane Tender Cars are also available and all are expected to beging shipping to M.T.H. Authorized Retailers in January 2025.

Check out each of the offerings in the list on the left.

ABOUT THE RAILKING O GAUGE CRANE CARS

In the early days of railroading, the job of cleaning up a wreck was usually done by men and horses. The first steam wrecking crane, a relatively small affair with a 20-ton lifting capacity, appeared in 1883. Its maker, Industrial Works of Bay City Michigan, introduced a fully revolving model a decade later. As the product became popular, Industrial Works, now renamed Industrial Brownhoist, and its chief competitor, Bucyrus-Erie of South Milwaukee, introduced larger and larger models to cope with increasing locomotive and car weights. By the World War I era, steam-powered cranes of 120-ton capacity, like our RailKing model, were a common size.

While a wreck train on the way to a wreck had priority over other traffic, cranes were subject to rather low speed restrictions, typically around 35 mph with the boom trailing and 25 mph if the boom was facing forward. The larger hook closer to the cab was actually the main lifting hook, used for locomotives. The hook at the end of the boom was a lower-capacity auxiliary hook, used when more reach was needed. Slings, chains, and spreader bars were used to attach the hook to the car or locomotive being lifted; the hooks were never attached directly. While some cranes were capable of limited self-propulsion, that was only for positioning at a site, not for travel to and from wrecks or jobs.

Product Features

  • Intricately Detailed, Durable ABS Body
  • Die-Cast Metal Chassis
  • Metal Wheels and Axles
  • Die-Cast 4-Wheel Trucks
  • Fast-Angle Wheel Sets
  • Needle-Point Axles
  • (2) Operating Die-Cast Metal Couplers
  • Detailed Brake Wheel
  • Operating Interior Lighting
  • Manually Operated Crane Hook & Boom
  • Near-Scale Proportions
  • Unit Measures: 12 1/4” x 2 1/2” x 4 1/2”
  • Operates On O-31 Curves