It seems Hornby have learnt from the W1 packaging debacle where many locos arrived damaged due to very poor packaging. Now the box is a sturdy two part offering lined with black foam. Additionally it has two outer foam cradles to hold it secure in a second box which in turn sits in a third box for shipping.
20230808_094234 by Steve Mumford, on FlickrThe accessories pack contains the usual bits and bobs including a poorly painted crew (mine have just gone back through my paint shop) and etched plates - in reality these are oblong slabs of brass with painted shading which I shall replace in time. The loco also has Hornby’s new drawbar arrangement that includes electrical connections between loco and tender - the locking pip doesn’t look to be particularly robust.
20230808_094637 by Steve Mumford, on Flickr
20230808_094808 by Steve Mumford, on FlickrOpening up the tender reveals a completely new design to suit the latest TXS decoders. The ballast weight has a bespoke cavity to fit the sugarcube speakers Hornby now use with a 21 pin socket at the rear that positions the decoder over the top of the speaker.
20230808_095829 by Steve Mumford, on FlickrBut there is no space for a powerbank! I know that a loco with this many wheels should not need one, but I fit them as a matter of course - it can’t do any harm - and I would have thought that a bespoke cavity in that sloping piece of plastic in front of the decoder would have made sense. As it is, I have fitted mine under the imitation coal load by running the wires through existing holes in the front of the tender.
20230808_101023 by Steve Mumford, on FlickrI’ve loaded mine with the P2 sound profile on the HM7K system without any issues at all and started running it in before I add the detailing parts and crew.
20230808_110146 by Steve Mumford, on Flickr