Saturday, April 3, 2021

LGB STAINZ - The Engine That Made LGB - 2010 series

The very "First-Ever" LGB 2010 engine featured the -meanwhile famous - red chassis, black boiler, steam-chest, smoke stack and a green cabin. From 1968 to 1974 it appeared in black and white LGB catalogs that were published annually. They ran between 8 and 12 pages. In 1969 LGB knew they had struck gold and offered the 2010 with a smoke generator, the LGB 2010 D. The "D" model had a darker green hue in its cab as can be seen below.


LGB 2010-1

page 2 of the 1971 LGB catalog











LGB 2010 D - Courtesy of Only Trains





    


There was only one LGB 2010 in various editions but the color scheme mostly stayed green. The 2010 was used quite often in train sets. There will be a separate blog about that.
By 1974  LGB published their first colored catalog and had stopped advertising the 2010. Instead promoted the LGB 2010D, the smoke version:

LGB catalog 1974 , page 2

The 2010 was eventually offered in 8 different versions. They differed only slightly:
LGB 2010-2: like 2010 but featuring headlight plus  "1" and  whistle in gold color
LGB 2010-3: like 2010 but featuring "1" and "LGB" logo in silver color
LGB 2010-4: like 2010 but featuring "1" and "LGB" logo in gold, pick-up shoes, big headlight, square roof vent.
LGB 2010-5: like 2010 but featuring golden window frame
LGB 2010-6: like 2010 but featuring dark brown cabin
LGB 2010-7: like 2010 but featuring chassis labeled white "Letzte HU 26.6.79" (meaning: Last main check-up on 6/26/1979)
LGB 2010-8: like 2010 but featuring cabin in dark green and chassis labeled white "Letzte HU 22.6.64" (meaning : Last main check-up on 6/22/1964).

The LGB 2010/ 2010D was used in sets as in the 1988 BTO set. However, the most used "Stainz" loco in sets was the LGB 2020 (for "Stainz"-sets see future blog).

Sometime in the late 1980 manufacturing of the LGB 2010 ceased. By that time LGB had pooled various characteristics of the "Stainz" 2040, the original 2010 and the 2010D into engines in various sets and eventually sold this 'mix' as the 2121/21210 and similar. (see future blog about the 2121/21210 etc).

However, in 1979 the "STAINZ" had brought so much -financial- success to LGB that not only had they built themselves a beautiful factory but had found and installed an original  'STAINZ" version in front of their building. The typical LGB red would adorn the factory buildings only by the 1990's.
1979 LGB catalog cover 

++++++++++++++++++++ to be continued...............


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