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Maybe, but it's still just a small fraction of designs used during the same period. Even the most modest rosters needs more variety.Even the Atlas PS-1 as great as it is, isn't going to be accurate for many of the paint schemes they will offer, I'm curious if they'll even do some of the 10' car schemes at some point.
Not practical. Only KCS, CGW and MDT had 40' PS-1 boxcars with plug doors. Only CNW, GBW, L&C, L&N, MILW, MKT and Southern had 9' sliding doors. Not enough to tool new sides when there are at least 16 roads each (not counting scheme variations) of the 6', 7' and 8' doors. Don't look for the double sliding doors either.
That's the best thing about the Branchline cars - you could use the separate roofs and ends to build pretty much anything...at least in HO...
Plastic bodies can be cut apart. You can build pretty much anything in N as well.
I doubt, with all of the schemes possible on the current model variations, that any of the 9' (not 10') schemes will be replicated — particularly when L&C is the only road that didn't own additional 40' PS-1 cars with doors less than 9' wide.
Some of Branchline's ends and roofs couldn't be scavenged from any existing HO plastic models, two examples that come to mind are the Despatch ends and 50' roofs.To any extent the same ends and roofs offered by Branchline (and now Atlas) already exist in N scale, they need to be dimensionally accurate to have any value as kitbash fodder.
Not 10' width, but 10' inside height cars. Didn't NH have some of those?
the Dartnaught,or Carbuilders End wasn't overly common in HO before Branchline did thiers. but there are still a few ends Not done in Plastic,the ACF 40s ends, the "Lionel" end favored by B&O,GATC and Pressed Steel in the late 40s and early 50s,the Birfacated Hi Capacity Dreadnaught End, the 4/4 Improved Dreadnaught End as used in the 60s by ATSF and RI. sure there are a few other experimental ends,and the Canadian Ends similar to the Despatch ends,or earlier Canadian ends. Spikre
Atlas has said they will not tool the 6" variants, which is understandable. New Haven had both. I can live with the 10'6"-only variants, of which were the more plentiful PS-1 prototype height.
I'm wondering if they will paint the 10'6" model with 10' schemes. It's something they've done in the Master line before.Bryan, you always come with a logical manufacturing standpoint which is always appreciated, but after 30 years in the hobby, logic just doesn't seem that high on the list for what gets done and what doesn't.Let's put it in a simple way from my stand point. If the 1932 cars can get the Erie end for a single road, then it's not way out there to think the PS-1 could have had more options considering the 100s of paints schemes, especially with a half a dozen differences between early and late cars.Of course, most of my rhetoric on the subject will disappear when parts are made available. I'm all for chopping up cars, but don't like paying $20 a car to do it when you need multiple cars to make a new model.
Aside from the 10' IH and 7' door opening (if my recollection is correct), how close are these to the Microtrains PS-1?The Atlas PS-1 may have killed any motivation I had to lower the Microtrains car to a 10'6" IH, but this might be a good way to reuse them vs dumping them in favor of the Atlas cars...