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You refer to Inside height, but I don’t see how that is an accurate means of comparison.
On a side note: Is there any chance the GP30 shell will ever be retooled with correct fan spacing and removal of the conduit cover in front of the dynamic fan?
Most manufacturers of 1950s box cars have made at least some of their models too high, including MTL's PS-1, Intermountain's 1937 and 1944 AAR, and Deluxe Innovation's 1944 AAR.
The couplers are MTL 1015 clones but the coupler boxes may not be. The clearance airspace between the top of a truck-mounted coupler box and the bottom of the floor/ends would have to be accounted for.
I'm going to have to ask you to be more specific with these other models. I just measured the IM 1937 car and in terms of the height of the car from sill to eaves and it's correct. So what about that car you saying is too high?And this the second mention I've seen to an IM 1944 car, which one is that?The Deluxe car is about 1.75" too tall from sill to eaves. Jason
Inside height is just a way to differentiate from overall height or probably more specifically "ride height" which many cars have even if they are dimensionally correct. The MTL car is about 6" too tall on the body which also creates issues with other details and dimensions.And yes the 50; car have the same issue(s).One can only hope. I even tried to talk Arnold into doing one last time I saw them at a show (hey, they asked). I always hold hope whenever the Atlas catalog comes out and doesn't include GP30s that's a sign that they'll finally bring them up to current standards.Speaking of which the current catalog doesn't list them...hmm.Jason
I'll answer this, but I'm giving up on Mr. Bussey, who has been reduced to creating straw men, presumably in order to bolster his ego. Jason: IMHO, the important thing in freight car heights is the external height between the rail head and the top of the roofwalk (running boards). I know one can measure other things, but the overall external height is what I notice when I look at these models. If this external height is more than dimensioned plans, such as those on the NP site I referenced above, then I call the car "too high". BTW, I measure the height of my equipment using this jig. The horizontal bar is set based on measurement with a scale ruler. The N-scale MTL PS-1 is about 1 foot too high. I had been cutting down the bolsters to reduce that by 6". Then a couple of years ago, someone started a thread where cut back the lower edge of the MTL PS-1, allowing the shell (in theory) to be lowered. So my current preferred method for improving MTL's PS-1s now involves this as well. It allows an extra 3" from lowering the shell. The final 3" can be removed by thinning or replacing the roofwalk. This is shown in my second side-by-side image earlier in this thread. If this doesn't make sense, let me know. Mark H.
For external height, remember that the rail (bone) is connected to the wheel (bones), the wheel (bones) are connected to, etc, until you get to the roofwalk (bone)If one measurement is substantially off, but the overall height is correct, the end result isn't much different from what an accurately-dimensioned car would look like in a fun house mirror.Disclaimer - I have not been paid in the form of any desperately needed Hydra Cushion underframes for this message that are currently out of stock.
I'll answer this, but I'm giving up on Mr. Bussey, who has been reduced to creating straw men, presumably in order to bolster his ego.
Fine; you think my modified PS-1 looks like something in a funhouse mirror (...). I can live with that. I just edited my previous post to point out that people are always free to trash their MTL PS-1s and buy Atlas. At the moment, anyway, I am happy with my current MTL PS-1 mod, which is "good enough" for my purposes, despite some minor defects. The main problem with it is that mounting the lowered shell is complicated, and I am trying to find a simpler way to do this. MH
The model I was referring to is MTL's FMC 5077 - they basically shrunk the body to overcompensate for the jacked up bolsters. This car would pass your test despite looking like someone that insists on pulling their pants up to their armpits.Conversely, the MTL PS-1 body is oversized despite the jacked up bolsters, and in most attempts to salvage it, is typically going to end up being too tall, but on a more proportional basis.
Jeez, this thing about what's wrong with the MTL cars could be a separate thread.... So if I understand this, the MTL PS-1 is stretched too high, and sets on the trucks too high, compared to the prototype? And the Atlas (new model) PS-1 is about the most accurate to prototype one in N scale? And nothing can make the MTL cars right? Does this also apply to the 50ft MTL cars?
Intermountain calls their 1944 AAR-type car "10'6" Modified AAR 40' Boxcar".
Jason: IMHO, the important thing in freight car heights is the external height between the rail head and the top of the roofwalk (running boards). I also care about the height of the underframe above the rail head, but to a lesser degree, so I do that "by eye". I know one can measure other things, but the overall external height is what I notice when I look at these models. If this external height is more than dimensioned plans, such as those on the NP site I referenced above, then I call the car "too high".
The Modified AAR and 1944 AAR are not the same car. Deluxe makes the 1944.Jason
The models differ true, but just out of curiosity, what aspects of the Intermountain mode (which I own) preclude it being used to represent a 1944 AAR car? Mark H.