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Your entire post is pretty much that attitude I had some months back. But this excerpt...well, I guess I have to say...show me. You say the perceived slack is inaccurate, yet...what have we really seen come down the pike in the past two years?
First off, it's unreasonable to expect any manufacturer to keep releasing multiple new tooling year-in and year-out.
On average, we produce two new locomotives [each year] in each scale and one re-run in each scale per month.
Two or three newly tooled wagons in each scale per year in addition to monthly re-runs and reliveried versions of existing wagons in each scale.
Jason, maybe you haven't been reading the papers, but 2007 was the beginning of the end of Western Civilization as the world economy began to collapse.
Atlas had the money to buy some K-Line tooling. Atlas had the money to buy all the Branchline train inventory and molds.
Don't think K-Line and Branchline does N scalers a hell of a lot of good.
Well, I think here might be the answer.With my n-scale blinders on, it didn't occur to me to think about the capital they shoveled into these two endeavors. And they certainly aren't gonna forego HO releases in lieu of spending money on HO tooling. N-scale takes the hit. Got it. That gives me hope that it's NOT a matter of backing off of n-scale...could very well be a short-term cash flow issue. (on top of the perfect storm....somebody's got a pair of big brass nickel-silver one's at Atlas, apparently.)Blaming it all on "perfect storm" alone doesn't explain why they are still pretty much holding steady with HO releases.