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Gee this has been fun to watch.... Makes me wonder why we should do N scale - other than to keep my friend Puddington happy! So, a few general comments. Like many reefers, these cars were built with V-grooved siding, so the gaps or grooves between boards would be more obvious than a car sheathed with flat boards. having said that, I agree that the grooves on the Oscar Mayer image - for whatever reason - look larger than they are. I'm attaching a few shots of our gray sample. As Puddington said, in person they look great. The real model is 2-3/4" long, my screen image is 13" wide. Kind of a cruel thing to do to any model.... Bill SchneiderRapido Trains
I have a question for any reefer expects here. Why were the meat reefers so short?
And a big thank you to Rapido for continuing to hang out here, as opposed to complaining about Railwire (as if all 1000+ members here are some formless, mashed-up entity) on another forum.
Mike,thanks for pushing this cause again. My attempt to critique the size of the gaps (V-groves or whatever) was a bit ham-fisted (and I got spanked) so I shut up. The latest photos posted here again show the problem. Hopefully you won't get an earful from Bryan for comparing Apples to Oranges Atlas to Rapido. Personally, I clearly see the point you are making (whether the photos are identically scaled or not).While I'm critiquing again, one other thing I originally didn't mention was the oversize ladders. I am well aware that there is a limit of the injection molding technology which does not (yet?) allow for making properly scaled ladders. Photoetched parts? Maybe. But not plastic. MT has the same problem on the hi-cube cars where they also started using separately applied ladders. IMO, in N scale properly sized molded-in ladders look way superior to any separately added ladders.
Bill-I understand that these cars, as most wood cars, were sided with v-groove car sheathing. And it looks like the designer tried to keep the proper board width/joint spacing on the car, so that is good. However, the grooves, being bigger and deeper, are now proportionally so much of the width of a board that the look is off. The photo you posted of the roof hatches shows these proportions pretty well... look at the board joints and how much more flat surface there is than joint surface.So, this is one of those cases where a tool maker also needs to be an artist. The joints still need to appear on the model, otherwise it looks like a plywood sided car if too close to scale! However, the joints shouldn't be so deep that they cause a hard shadow and a gap for printed lettering. Here's a similar photo of an Atlas car from the M:160 galleries: While a fancy piece of tooling, the wood grain on the car shouldn't be there unless this is a survivor car with weather beaten siding in the 1970s. It affects the look of the car. Yes, tooling can be too fine and detailed. However, also look at the treatment at the eave so the roof boards don't look like sausages. The depth of the joints is less deep up there, but still too deep on the sides. The ladders, especially rungs, are much finer. These are the things that I think could be improved on future Rapido N scale offerings. Examining existing models will help recalibrate your eye to N scale from HO, and we can get beyond the immediate "wow that's small and cool" and really start looking at the details of the tooling versus the state of the N scale art. It's not a bad attempt at the first Rapido N scale freight car. But it suffers from being slightly bulky, heavy handed in the treatment of details, and doesn't push the limits of China's tool making ability. Those limits seem to be what Rapido is interested in pushing in HO, just don't loose focus on the N scale stuff just because it's small and cute.
Skibbe,Maybe not a question for you as much as Rapido, but since you brought it up... How much does groove width have to account for paint thickness? Rapido's shown an unpainted car here, so how much of that gap detail gets filled in by paint?
Will you be selling meat reefers in pants, or will the pants be provided separately , or must we provide our own?
You would be in fear and awe of my pants meat (reefer)...@rapidotrains Jason,I asked about the paint thickness more as a defense of what you'd chosen to do versus a complaint.