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That is a huge improvement! The packaging looks professional. Also trains for sniffing out that company. I have also looked for a custom-cut foam manufacturer but I never could find one that would do such a small run. Looks like there are some custom foam inserts in my future!I'm not sure what the DVD is for but now that begs for a custom insert in its jewel box. But that is something you can easily whip out yourself in Corel Draw. I have done several of those myself. If you want I can sent you a Corel Draw template for a standard DC jewel box.
Even if both ends have a cab, the loco is required by law to have a front, and on diesels and electrics, it is required to be labeled, even if it seems obvious. According to Noel Holley's Milwaukee Electrics book, they did, operationally, have a front. The ends were formally labeled A and B, as I think you pointed out long ago, but they almost always ran with the A end leading, because only the A cab had a kilowatt-hour meter. On the Coast Division they were turned in Othello and Tacoma so they always faced the right way.