This item is limited to 20 per household.
――PECO is a British model railroad manufacturer founded in 1946.
――In addition to producing and selling various gauge railroad tracks, we also manufacture models such as N gauge freight cars and steam locomotives. In addition, we also manufacture and sell structure kits that are useful for layout.
――This model is a pre-painted model that reproduces a 2-axle freight car with N gauge.
--A wide lineup of pre-painted freight cars, from standard freight cars widely used in the Commonwealth countries to privately owned freight cars up to the 1980s and British Rail freight cars.
――The unique colorful paint, combined with the compactness of a two-axle freight car, makes the collection fun.
--If the vehicle has a track width of 9 mm, it can run on the tracks of various companies as well as those made by PECO. Since it comes with a standard Arnold type coupler, you can freely enjoy it in combination with various vehicles.
[PENR-43B N gauge British 2-axle freight car wooden boxcar (standard type, BR, brown)]
――This model is a 2-axle freight car model for N gauge scale model railroads.
――The main freight car with a roof that was used after the war was a wooden boxcar (box van) that used plywood for the car body. Widely used to transport a variety of cargo.
――Before the birth of the British National Railways, each company owned and operated its own wooden boxcar.
--The model wooden boxcar is equipped with a wooden body on a steel frame equipped with four wheels. The wooden body realistically expresses the details formed by combining boards.
――The side doors, ventilation windows attached to the front and back, and the external frame are also realistic.
――This model models a general-purpose wooden boxcar with a loading capacity of 12 tons.
――The gray roof and brown body coloring that are typical of railway freight cars are also attractive.
--The axle is a pivot type with low rolling resistance. With standard Arnold type coupler.
( This is a machine translation. Please allow for possible misinterpretations in the text. )