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Is that a Model Power/Lima or Atlas/Rivarossi caboose?
If anyone is looking for an excuse to put a pair of these couplers on a single FT-A, check out Georgia Northern 14 and GAS&C 16 here:http://www.railpictures.net/showphotos.php?locomotive=EMD%20FT(A)
yes it is, with MTL details
Yah, that's the later paint scheme applied by the GNRR. The earlier scheme followed the Southern's imitation aluminum up on the nose. Oddly enough, when they painted over the aluminum paint they simply sprayed over it, with traces of the old paint still visible under the maroon paint.Those were some interesting shortlines... too bad they are now run by Georgia & Florida Railnet... never anything so exotic as what the earlier roads had...
Um Bob, that is a Z scale MTL coupler (not N)! There are lots of N scale modelers out there who actually use N scale MTL couplers.
Even if you have a lot of switching these could still be used for creating blocks of cars where industries call for them. At earns new Tank Train leaps immediately to mind.
That works for those who model contemporary operations well enough, where it's unit trains galore out there. But for those who model pre-contemporary or who like to operate road freights, where shifting individual cars is king, we're still stuck with 55 gallon drums at the ends of our cars and locos. I'm will to compromise, I will gladly give up the expectation of magnetic coupling for a properly (reasonably) scaled coupler that can be sticked apart without derailing the attached units, so I'll continue to hope someone is still trying to change the functional/aesthetic paradigm.
I think it might be a good idea if MT included the new couplers with the new releases during the next few months. It a good PR move and definitely get some non-believers to at least look at them critically. I think once guys get them in their hands they will try different scenarios based on their own personal preferences. Just sayin'
I don't really think these are aimed at people who buy monthly releases.
Which is exactly what I've stated and what Joe has expressed.The primary purpose of these couplers is for use in running long consists at shows. In that context, the product is brilliantly conceived. An unintended secondary use is to close couple multiple-unit motive power that always or nearly always run together. They were not designed for standard freight operations on club layouts or home layouts, and there was no intent to have these be the successor to the current magnetic coupler product line. While this product can be re-purposed for layout operation to some extent, they will not function in the manner people are used to when trying to couple and uncouple equipment.I've played with them. They work extremely well for the purpose they were intended for. They happen to work well for the unintended purpose of close-coupling motive power. But don't go in thinking they are workable for freight switching operations. They couple when you manually press two cars together. I did not find that they coupled when utilizing motive power. The lead cars are pushed. After I submitted my eval report to MTL, I installed the loose couplers in MU'd motive power and I re-purposed the ones from the test rolling stock supplied and installed them in MU'd power as well. They work great there, I'm extremely happy in that regard.There are N-scalers who only run at shows, or who have equipment specifically designated for show-running. This product is for them. It eliminates the coupler oscillation. It reduces the possibility of derailment. It's better visually because the coupler is smaller and the coupling distance is much shorter.