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I remember back after the first run of GS4, I spoke with a Kato rep at a show somewhere about the next steam. His comment was that the head guys in Japan had just developed the new small coreless motor, so it was likely to be a small steamer to compliment. A few years later, we have that coreless motor in the FEF. So, I guess that's their definition of "small steam".
Santa Fe 2-10-2 since there was NO option for a Santa Fe Northern... We do need western 2-10-2s anyhow...
Kato has a penchant for big "beauty queen" engines, at least for the US market. Just look at the Daylight and FEF.
I remember that day! The Sacramento NMRA convention. You wanted small steam, I was asking for the Hudson and 20th Century Ltd set.
A question they did NOT ask, but hope they and other manufacturers would consider- "Do you want to be able to rearrange the domes and other details?" All of the locos they are asking about have been produced in the past and it is getting to the point that N scale steam has as much variation as N scale DPM downtowns. Be great if we could detail these engines without having to dremel and patch.
I knew I was with you, but couldn't remember if it was the one in Sacramento or the Cow Palace. Was that the same show we gave Bob Knight a restroom break and drooled all over his etched kits?
I've always believed that the eventual solution for steam in N scale is a "generic" chassis followed by 3D-printed shells with correct details for a given road. Yes, there are differences in driver size and overall wheelbase but honestly, most of us can live with these (the difference between a 63" USRA 2-10-2 driver and the, say, 58" B&O driver is .031" (1/32)). No, the complete purist won't be satisfied, but if you can get a shell with all the right details in the right places, really, are you going to quibble over 1/32" on the driver size? Is anyone really going to pay any attention if the shell is a near-perfect copy of the prototype?
are you going to quibble over 1/32" on the driver size? Is anyone really going to pay any attention if the shell is a near-perfect copy of the prototype?
I'll drink to that! That would also mean no pre-orders, and no waiting on the next run. Pick up your chassis, and order you print. You have it in a matter of days!
" I've always assumed that ATSF placed the first big order, and the loco was thus named.
@brokemoto pretty much summed it up right there... though could have done without the "All Tramps Sent Free" bit :p As for the Challengers and Big Boy, the only way i would accept those if they mated the rear drivers to the mechanism like the real versions... but that will never happen...
What radius curves do you have on your layout to run them in that configuration? Some brass Big Boys were made that way and they didn't handle curves well.