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The "fuss" about the F-7s is just that they may not continue to run fine, given the loose gear axles and Spookshow's experience when running them for a while. The rest of the "fuss" is mostly cosmetic, and largely about the backwards grills on the F-3s.
.........The rest of the "fuss" is mostly cosmetic, and largely about the backwards grills on the F-3s.
I thought that the squinty windshields, and what appears to be wrong vertical body proportions were also part of the fuss.Mind you @ntrainman , that none of these discrepancies are important to an average model railroader, but the elite Railwire nitpickers noticed that the model is not perfect. That usually start a lengthy thread about the missed opportunities of the manufacturer to design an accurate model. After all, this is an online forum where we can discuss things like this.
How many "average model railroaders" drop $250 on an F unit? I imagine the average model railroader chooses between a Kato F unit and a Bachmann F unit. I figured I had made real progress in the hobby when I moved on to choosing between Kato and IM F units.
The street price for a DCC/sound Equipped F-units is $175. That it actually quite reasonable for this type of a model. How many average model railroaders? Probably quite a few who desire F-units with factory-installed DCC/sound.I'm not defending the BLI - just being realistic (and also jaded by all the missteps I see manufacturers making when producing brand new models in the 2nd decade of the 21st Century). Still, even with all the warts and boils, those models sell quite well. I would prefer seeing newly-designed models having more correct ride height, properly placed grilles, properly scaled windshields, and not grossly exaggerated body panels, door lines or clapboard gaps. But many manufacturers seem to keep making the same mistakes over and over again.
Need I remind us all of the sound equipped mooing stock car.
Because, sadly, that ain't where the money is. I think Bachmann has figured that out too. Forget improving the engineering. Slap in a sound decoder that cost them 10 bucks, jack up the price by $100, and woo-hoo, the money pours in.Need I remind us all of the sound equipped mooing stock car.
Manufacturers.designers have now access to more research material than ever before. Between the Internet, helpful "expert" modelers, and historical societies, they have more than enough information at their disposal to produce an accurate model.
Inquire with some of the historical societies as to how often they (don't) get asked by a manufacturer to provide information relevant to an upcoming model.That being said, some historical societies seem to be more proactive than others. I've heard comments, after an inaccurate model was released, to the effect that "we're here, but they never asked us."
Part of the problem may well be that the model tooling is being made on the other side of the globe by people who have never seen the prototypes, don't speak the same language as the people who have seen the prototypes, and are not all that eager to do things differently for a small market that keeps buying their stuff, anyway.
Even those few items Kato had outsourced to China lack their typical quality. Here - I said it!
Which items were those?