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"Instead, the company produced a mediocre product priced out of the market."Sounds like they're prime for being taken over by Walthers!
The proto you are referring to us the Barber S2.
Unless you know the method used for stabilizing the truck (i.e, how the friction wedges in the bolster are sprung), there is no way to tell if it's a Barber just by the sideframe.
Yeah, it's not like they cast "Barber" into the sideframe or anything...http://jamesriverbranch.net/show_pic.asp?src=100t_asf_barber_s2_F
I thought only Barber had that concave look at the top of their 100T sideframe. Does anyone else use that type of design?
I was referring to the Con-Cor N scale truck that Nate and Dan were talking about, not a prototype truck. So in an effort to make my original statement more readable and understandable when taken as a standalone statement, I'll amend it here:Since very few N scale trucks have lettering on the sideframes dictating what type of truck they are, unless you know the method used for stabilizing the truck, and assuming that that itself was molded correctly in the ends of the bolster, there is no way to tell if the Con-Cor N scale truck is a Barber just by a sideframe description.