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i've yet to see the Big Blow in person, but I suspect that for a mass produced model, the freestanding details are as good as it gets; .007 grabs translate to slightly more than an inch in diameter, which is pretty darn amazing. However, I wonder whether it's the paint that needs to be scaled down to N scale as well; a little paint buildup in larger scales is no big deal, but in N, it's a killer. Yellow paint especially is difficult for coverage. My other thought is that the grabs just stick out too far, making them more prominent when compared to the prototype, see pics below.
Expecting a mass produced sturdy model at that level is just not realistic
If scale trains puts out ET44C4s and SD70Ace-T4s
The phosphor bronze wire is way better than brass but cannot of course be as resilient as Delrin or other plastics that are twice the diameter. The PB will bend if handled too roughly, but you can also (gently) bend it back. Commercial models have to stand up not only to normal (and heavy) modeler handling but also sometimes children and the occasional cat.
If scale trains puts out SD70Ace-T4s
The Railwire is not your personal army.
We are talking about N scale here, where we are normally too far away to see the free standing details. If this was a conversation about an O scale loco, I would be asking for the best details possible. I would want not only free standing grab irons, be moving gyrolights. But this is N scale, and as long as it looks good from 3 feet away....give me molded on grabs.
Well that is the part that I do not quite follow. If scale-sized details are too small to see at normal operating distance, why would you want to see oversized (molded-on) ones? Wouldn't it look more realistic just to omit them?Ed