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The Railwire is not your personal army.
as far as design goes needle point axles and vertical split frames are pushing 30 years old, at what point do they become old school?
well, peteski,you mention that kato has loco mechanisms that are wire free.wire as in the drawbar of the Mikeor wire as in a DCC decoder install or wire to the motor of the kato FEF?
at what point do they become old school?when some one makes something that is clearly better....axle wipers work, no doubt...axle point pickups are clearly better.the axle wiper went home from the bar alone.he couldn't pick-up anything!victor
I would like to see the revival of the Rivarossi Pacifics and Mikados that date originally from the late '60's, done Old School. They won't really be for us'ns. It would be closer to a mass market kind of thing, something to expose more kids to model RRing who would not have exposure otherwise. All the old shortcomings were fixable and were pretty much fixed. The last runs were very good and are probably the majority of the survivors some 30 years later. The construction is quite robust. You would only need a minimal knowledge of electrical stuff to troubleshoot, with instructions to be provided with loco and online.What I'm thinking is to have a basic reliable nearly-no-brainer N scale steam engine (stop laughing, you steam veterans!) as part of an entry level/casual runner/Christmas tree layout. Period. Low frustration factor -- anyone can run trains, though not with the quality and fine control of the more expensive locos of today. It should last for years, an alien concept nowadays because price point has become the buyer's main criterion. So the concept is like basic Lionel but in N scale, at a lower price point than Lionel really ever was. Throw in a line of cheap RR cars -- old dies would work. KISS. The Rivarossi design already exists. Add a robust existing motor. I'm not thinking of an engine that will take an hour to go from tie to tie. I'm talking about one that will run out of the box or storage. Exposed motor bearings, yup -- easy to lube. Big flanges, yup -- staying on the track at 70 scale mph is more important than being convertible to code 40. Noise? Some, probably. These are intended to be more in the toy realm and to be a gateway (drug?) to more serious model RRing.Would any manufacturer stick their necks out and re-do these things? Perhaps yes, perhaps no. But I think we do need newly-built entry-level stuff in N.Alan