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Anyone else find it ironic that the N scale PSC van should see the light of day long before the HO one. I've 14 of the PSC's on order with Jeff, with no deposit, unlike the CMT fiasco, where deposits were taken. Jeff, through Prairie Shadows, is going to become one of may favorite mfg's... wait, he already is!
They didn't make a mistake. Their primary market is Canadian HO, so the main focus understandably is there. They raised the bar with all the intricate detail on the N scale product line, which also raised the MSRP to a price-point that many N scale modelers were unaccustomed to. This, coupled with printing American fantasy schemes on the models when Kato and InterMountain were releasing prototypically-correct American schemes on less expensive models is what affected their product movement more than anything. The prototypically-correct Canadian schemes flew off the shelves, so the product itself is fine and has demand. As Jerry mentioned, we should be thankful that the high-risk HO Canadian sold as well as it did, which generated funding for some of the N scale products.We will start to see an increase in N scale releases from Rapido as the months progress. They've also committed to releasing the Pullman-Bradleys in N in 2014, which totally will be new to N scale and should sell extremely well. That will help tremendously regarding future products.
You can only go so far as the funds will allow. If the product didn't generate the revenue as timely as expected, it makes little sense to keep pushing product out before the existing stock clears. It costs more than pocket change to manufacture this stuff. So the "mistake" if anything was debuting with too much variety in N. If the consumer base had supported the product line, the focus would have remained.The models are, for the most part, stand-in's for American prototypes, which may be why they didn't move as quickly as originally anticipated. That, and the higher price point. If the CCS models are more faithful to the NCL prototype anyway -- it's academic, no?Personally I don't have an issue with the delays, which primarily were due to making sure product was as correct as possible (whether directly or indirectly via other products). If the model is 100% prototypical, such the N scale models painted in the Canadian schemes, I'm fine with it. It's not as if there is no N scale passenger product available overall. I'd rather have a model be late and accurate than on schedule with errors, and the fact that Rapido didn't give up on the N scale market when they could have focused on HO and made money is commendable.
The CMt debacle is the reason we n scalers get the van first; CMT owns the tooling and IP on the drawings so Jason can't go any further.... nor can anyone find the ex-owner of CMT...so.....
I suspect you will all get answers soon enough .. I just approved Jason's account