Marklin 48822 - Type G 10 Boxcar Kaldewei
Prototype: German Federal Railroad (DB) type G 10 two-axle boxcar with "KALDEWEI" lettering. Version without a brakeman's cab and without a brakeman's platform, with end area reinforcement. The car looks as it did around 1952 with car number DR Brit-US-Zone 111 105 G 10. Kaelble tractor, with a German Federal Railroad (DB) Culemeyer design road roller.
Product description
Model: The boxcar has sliding doors that can be opened.
Length over the buffers approximately 10.6 cm / 4-3/16".
DC wheelset E700580.
The tractor has a frame and superstructure constructed of metal. There is a spare wheel on the flatbed. The model of the Culemeyer design road roller is a 4-axle version.
Length including drawbar approximately 11.5 cm / 4-1/2".
One-time series.
Publications
- Fall New Items 2019 - Product programme 2019/2020Prototype information
Culemeyer Design Road Roller Only a few discoveries are allowed to bear the name of the discoverer. Yet the almost revolutionary discovery of the road roller by the German State Railroad director Dr. Eng. Johann Culemeyer in the early Thirties is one of these exceptions. In order to stand up to the competition from trucks, he designed a road vehicle suitable for transporting freight cars. Thus, starting at the end of 1933 these cars could be transported by road with no problem to industrial operations without a rail connection. This "Traveling Connecting Track" with 16 to 24 wheels was built by the car builder Gotha and the firm Kaelble in Backnang developed suitable heavy-duty tractor units for it.