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I'd be willing to bet more Confederatesets sell than Union sets.
... Sometime in the future Atlas or others may climb on the bandwagon wth more products that fit this under represented era.
I have never seen these sets as something I would buy to run on a layout. I have always seen them as a collector item on desk or in a display case.
I use them both ways. When I had full-sized layouts, I'd modeled tourist lines, thus giving me the excuse to pull them out of the display case and see them running just the way they should. I know tourist lines are highly unpopular among proto-ops-oriented modelers, but for rounders like me it's a visual feast. Plus, I can store anything I want in my yard--any era, any condition, even some foreign prototypes. It's kind of liberating to not have to slavishly adhere to some mandated era/locale/schedule. </semi-rant>
I've been tinkering with a redesign for this loco for some years now (one of those really old, dusty round tuits), and my plan was to make all of the wheels Kato-like in the sense that the axle ends turn in conductive dimples. The twist here is that they would all four turn within the same common two side pieces; in other words, there would be no trucks to turn. They don't need to turn! I've already run experiments to verify that they're just fine all mounted together--not much different from a multi-axle truck. Then, the truck sideframes would be dummies glued to the body. Logic (mine, anyway) indicates this not only should drastically improve performance, but do so at a lower cost, since there would be significantly fewer parts: metal pickup sideframes (with tabs for the motor), four wheels and dummy truck sideframes. That's got to be cheaper (and easier to assemble) than the Rube Goldberg concoction they have now. Oh, plus I'd change out the motor for a coreless, perhaps, or at least something smoother and slower-running.