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Isn't that essentially what MP was working toward with their 2-6-0 and 4-4-0s? I believe that lots of parts were semi-interchangeable, and the undecs came with most if not all the parts.I'd love to see that line continue and grow to include a 4-6-0, 4-4-2 and maybe even a 2-8-0.Shoot, I wonder how much compatibility there is between their USRA Mikes and Pacifics and these too.
These days, however, hobbyists are less inclined to do the finish work, so I'm not sure how well it would fly. I know you mentioned "built to order" but I have a feeling the cost of this would put it out of the ballpark price wise.
At 50 kits the price would be so high that they would never be able to recover their tooling costs, let alone sell all of the kits. 500 is more of a figure that would be reasonable and even then, depending on the way they are made, the costs could be out of reach for all but a chosen few.
I was at the LHS last week and a guy was there who said he modelled the New Haven, but he was buying a Big Boy and a set of Kato Coalporters. There was less angst in the transaction than when I debate myself for a week over models that have conspicuity stripes.
Are we really that small a minority that we care what we run? That "looks really cool" is not the only litmus test we give something before we place it in service? Or are we missing out on fun? To me, anyway, I always felt re-creating a plausible scene was more fun than just running cool stuff.
Everything blends. Just a general rule of model railroading...