0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
... Last year at the Ottawa show I was dang near attacked by a guy who was furious that we would put a NYC paint scheme on our HO scale Cafe Bar Lounge - it wasn't prototypically correct. I was ruining the chance that someone would make the correct car; I was attacking NYC modellers, I was restricting trade.... he should really get a restraining order against us...... (I kid you not... he actually said that) The car was in a series of 4 cars built for the NYC that matched nothing else built so they would have been useless for other roads...... chance that some one would build an RTR version...zero........The good side of the move to more prototypical models, smaller runs and the like is we can get more "good stuff" than ever before... the bad side is that a small, but often vocal minority take great personal offence at anything else but 100% fidelity and that is both unhealthy for the hobby, as it makes the entrance to our hobby too expensive and it has zero chance of happening in this or any other economic climate.
Last year at the Ottawa show I was dang near attacked by a guy who was furious that we would put a NYC paint scheme on our HO scale Cafe Bar Lounge - it wasn't prototypically correct. I was ruining the chance that someone would make the correct car; I was attacking NYC modellers, I was restricting trade.... he should really get a restraining order against us...... (I kid you not... he actually said that) The car was in a series of 4 cars built for the NYC that matched nothing else built so they would have been useless for other roads...... chance that some one would build an RTR version...zero........
Tell us that it isn't 100% correct
... While I applaud Atlas and a few other manufacturers for their "*** asterisks ***" denoting a foobie, I certainly don't think it is something they HAVE to do...
And just to clarify, this isn't a Micro-Trains project. This is a company, "Custom Model Trains", contracting with Micro-Trains to produce the cars...
However, I will rephrase my comment to "100% correct within the limits of manufacturing technology". An exact scale model, in any of the common indoor scales, would be so fragile it wouldn't survive normal handling.