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As a rivet counter I echo Bryans opinion, if it is visible and can be faithfully reproduced, add it.
I agree with John C., it depends what the details are on for me.EnginesI also like my engines as accurate as possible. Our eyes are drawn to them, we watch them more closely than anything else on the layout.Freight CarsIf you are building a single car for a photo shoot, you want the details there. If you have a small shelf layout with only 20 freight cars, you want the details there. I run strings of hoppers on my layout. I have done 'visual tests', running lesser detailed Atlas 2-Bays in with my IM and Athearn cars. As long as they have similar degrees of weathering, no one notices. I do pull the Atlas cars out of the scene before I shoot any photos. The camera is not as forgiving as the human eye. On that note, the lower detailed cars will be replaced its better ones as I find them.I have friends with massive ore car inventories (1500+), people don't see the ore car, they see the train. After the eye finishes looking the engines over, the rest is a visual blur.I like details, I don't need over the top on freight cars, just good. Etched metal walkways, brake piping, top side grab irons. What would improve my world is a viable, mass produced, closer to scale N Scale coupler on more factory equipment.
The Railwire crew are not representative of "most customers" (maybe a better way to put it) The majority of the hobby are "buy the RTR, put it on the track" modellers. TRW is chock full of guys that represent the upper 1% of scratch builders, kitbashers and artistic masters..... while they are are breed unto themselves, I want their opinion because although many here are clearly not part of the majority, they are experienced, savvy modellers who know the hobby and have a feel for the market.
... but if you count rivets and there are no rivets to count that arguement falls mute.
I'm a big fan of manufacturers with tooling that allows different levels of detail where it makes sense, such as in unit trains. Scaletrains.com is one of these manufacturers...
They (ScaleTrains) are most likely doing this debate internally right now, what to put on - what to leave off. It's not an easy debate to go through, every scratch builder has to go through that debate granted its only one person but you have to do the debate to make or modify something.
u say? "ScaleTrains.com is one of these manufacturers...." They have not made any N Scale items / they have not announced any N scale items. Until it hits the shelf its all rumors.
In my 45 +/- years in the hobby, I've seen a lot of change. At one time, it seemed people were just happy to finally get a GP38-2 with a scale width hood. It seemed no one thought twice about purchasing, paint, decals and super detail parts to create a model of one of their favorite prototype engines. It seems now everyone wants all the bells and whistles, but they want the same price as the old shake the box models. In my opinion, 40 years ago, model railroaders were only model railroaders, now it seems you read in some of the layout tours, "besides model railroading, Herbie enjoys golfing, kayaking, mountain climbing and playing tuba in the local Oom-pah band" has our lives become so rushed, that we no longer have the free time and that is why we want all of the bells and whistles? Or is it because too many of us are involved in too many hobbies?
How can you say? "ScaleTrains.com is one of these manufacturers...." They have not made any N Scale items / they have not announced any N scale items. Until it hits the shelf its all rumors.They (ScaleTrains) are most likely doing this debate internally right now, what to put on - what to leave off. It's not an easy debate to go through, every scratch builder has to go through that debate granted its only one person but you have to do the debate to make or modify something.Take the IM kits -- the grab irons scale out over 3" in diameter out of the box, do you roll your own out of 0.005 brass wire - knowing that that is almost 10% too large or do you go with what's in the kit because it's easier, they sure don't look better. I have seen IM & Micro Trains "kits" sit on the shelf for years because ?? people are too afraid of taking on a kit? Micro Trains molded on and painted grabs look far better than the IM oversized grabs.