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They should finish designs BEFORE they announce the product. Jason
From my now limited experience that is not really practical. Announcing is a way to both create a buzz and gage buyer interest. The "finite" design issues, which can include specific model details, decoder selection, final truck design and a myriad of other small but highly significant issues can be almost a "last minute decision" before tooling is made ....Perhaps not what a small percentage of us want to hear (as we are uber detail oriented and "care" about such details way beyond the vast majority of the target audience) but that seems to be what is more common than we might othrwise think....
They should finish designs BEFORE they announce the product.
I think the MTL SW1500 is going to be another example of a manufacturer spending a lot of resources developing a model and then sabotaging it by releasing a less-than-state-of-the-art product. (see late LL/early Walthers, early Athearn N, Bachmann, et al) I can see some manufacturers making that mistake of thinking DCC and headlights aren't important by virtue of corporate size, n-scale as a 2nd, 3rd, 5th priority, etc. (and yet, Atlas still manages to deliver top-notch product...) But MTL has their fingers on the pulse...there's really no reason we should be having this discussion...
Out of every 100 locos sold of a particular model, how many are DCC?? Are we talking 5, 10, 25, 40, 60 or what??
DCC unfriendly designs that predate the revolution include the Arnold S2...
Really? How can you make that assessment when there is no point of relevance to base it on? The FT (the only N scale MTL locomotive to date) was well-received, so MTL is batting 1.000 on N scale locomotive models. If the SW1500 model is released and not up to current standards, then it's fair game. But you have to wait until the model is released before passing judgement.