My first early locos were a maroon 150 and a dark green 152 that belonged to the neighbor's grandfather. (It was also the first train deal I did at about 8 or 9 nine years old.)
The green 152 had gold painted handrails. ( I added the second when I was about 13.) I never paid any attention to the handrails.
Paul Wasserman showed me a 152 with gold handrails and said Jim Lyons had suggested that 150 series locos with Gold Painted handrails were specials.
Then I started looking at handrails. That was about 15 years ago.
Since then I've found a bunch and come up with three reasons for them based on looking at them, and considering all of my early O Lionel trains.
I think Jim may be correct about some of them. Short of finding boxed sets we can't prove or disprove that. I've never seen a box for just a 150 or 700 series loco. Does anyone have one?
The second reason - again I can't prove this, but it makes sense, is the ladies who painted the standard gauge locos that always had gold handrails, painted the O locos because they were used to doing it.
The third posible reason is after Lionel introduced the 250 series locos with their brass trim, and stopped making the 150 series locos, they assembled all the parts into locos and dressed them up to match the current line and sold them off.
This third reason explains the 156X with pedestal headlight and 250 seriesmotor. It explains the bright colored locos like the 154s in both body styles painted light olive.
I can't prove any of this, but it makes sense. This is the type of discussion I started this board for. What do you think?
So here are bunch of the locos I have with gold handrails:
Pictures are a bit wide for the forum. I don't want to change the sizes of them because these are inventory pictures I have on my phone. You can right click and select view image to open the whole picture. Then use the back button to come back here.
701b1 NYC oval on left, 701 on right, dark green, green vents, GOLD PAINTED HANDRAILS, type 2 motor with slots for trucks, red fiber pickup with manufacturing plate, diecast wheels, riveted couplers.
This is the only 700 series loco I have with gold handrails. I got a photo by email of a 732 Quaker loco with gold handrails when I sent pictures of this out last summer. The other Quaker locos I've seen don't have gold handrails.
152b1 Dark green Gold Painted handrails, type 4 motor with riveted brushes, red fiber with corp plate. No hole for 153 reverse. This is the loco I got when I was a kid.
152j1 Mohave Gold Painted handrails, type 4 motor with riveted brushes, black fiber with corp plate. No hole for 153 reverse. This might be one of the clean out locos, but there is no hole for reverse?
I don't have a 153 with gold handrails.
Here's some 154s. . .
154a1 Dark green with GOLD painted handrails, type 2 motor with slots for trucks, black fiber plate with manufacturing plate, cast iron wheels, stamped couplers, pedestal light, NO reverse, square roof with clipped corners, early body/frame.
154a4 Dark green with gold painted handrails, type 4 motor with riveted brushes, black fiber with nickel background corp plate , diecast wheels, stamped couplers, strap headlight no holes for pedestal, hand reverse mounted to motor, rounded roof without clipped corners, early body/frame.
These are what I think of as clean outs. The motors in them are late motors. Others I've seen match these so the motors probably were switched out later. I'm using the newest Greenberg 0 gauge book terminiology and mostly the lettering scheme which tries to have the letters in order of manufacture.
154c1 Olive green with gold painted handrails, type 4 motor with riveted brushes, black fiber corp plate, diecast wheels, stamped couplers, strap headlight no holes for pedestal, hand reverse mounted to frame, square roof without clipped corners, late body/frame.
154d1 Olive green with gold painted handrails, type 5 motor with brush tubes, black fiber corp plate, diecast wheels, stamped couplers, strap headlight no holes for pedestal, hand reverse mounted to frame, square roof with clipped corners, early body/frame.
Finally some 156 locos. . .
156d1 Olive green with gold painted handrails, type 5 motor with brush tubes, red fiber with corp plate, diecast wheels with simulated spokes, stamped couplers, strap headlight, holes in diecast wheels, weighted trucks. This loco looks mohave unless it is set beside a mohave loco when it looks greener.
I know there is a 12 wheel maroon 156 with goldpainted handrails, but I don't have one. It'd look like the 156Xc1 4 wheeler below but with pony trucks.
156x
156xb1 Dark green with gold painted handrails, type 4 motor w/riveted brushes, red fiber plate with corp plate, diecast wheels with simulated spokes, stamped couplers, strap headlight.
156Xc1 Maroon with gold painted handrails, type 2 motor with brush tubes, pickup collector replaced, diecast wheels with simulated spokes, stamped couplers, strap headlight.
That's it.
Thoughts?