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I suppose we all focus on different things; I just find it amusing what one is willing to accept as a trade-off for something else.
...While similar details in H0 and larger scales might look good, and be close to scale size, in N scale they just don't work. To me less is more and betterer.
I've been reading this thread with some interest and amusement.First of all, let's get realistic about "fixing" the MTL car's proportions. It ain't happening! Of all the people here, Bryan (as a manufacturer of injection-molded kits) should know it. While some errors in the molds can be repaired/modified, the type of "fix" needed here would require a completely new mold. So if by "fix" you all mean a brand new body, then I agree.
I misspoke... or mis-typed. I should not have mentioned roofwalks (I had the old first-gen ones stuck in mind). But ladders and grabs, definitely. The separately-applied ones are simply too clunky-looking to my eye; I find MTL's cast-on ones much more acceptable, because when I look at a model, oversize details stand out much, much more than errors in proportion.To illustrate, here are three four substantially similar boxcars: prototype, MTL, InterMountain and Atlas (I added Atlas subsequently to be more thorough).
I've never said the MTL disproportional cars could be fixed. Which is why I no longer buy those bodystyles. Other MTL bodystyles, for sure. But I abandoned the 40' PS-1 series and the 50' FMC series cars long ago.
Anyone else remember when the Intermountain boxcars first came out, and the talk was how great the under body detail was? Micro Trains later modified some of their cars with better under body details. My suspicion is Micro Trains realized little, if any increase in sales, this could be a factor in their reluctance to “fix” the PS1.
The MTL body-height, thick roofwalks and ill-positioned cast-on door tracks offset the fineness of the ladders and grabs, in my opinion. That may garner eye-rolls by some. But you do see the body-height disparity in a moving n scale consist above everything else.
The irony is that the 40' PS-1 tools, especially the 20000-series, have been retooled multiple times over the decades due to tool wear. And, there have been changes in the details over the years, which are clear if you compare an original Kadee 20000-series body with a current-tooling version. So, the models could have been corrected at little additional cost.
Frankly, it is in moving N scale consists that I least see anything related to box car body height departure from prototype. Photos of real trains from my modeling period (early 1950s) seem to show a bewildering array of box car heights and construction types running in mixtures that make very ragged top profiles for those trains. So, getting more ragged height profiles on my scale trains by running proper and distorted height PS-1s in the same consist doesn't really come into my consciousness at all. Photography of a few cars on a siding against a loading platform backdrop is a different matter. No problem, though, since there are some properly proportioned cars to use for those few photos.I also want to comment on some of the recent laments that N scale is "becoming an RTR gauge and scratch building is being lost." I am not sure I agree with the "becoming" part of that. I think N scale started as an RTR scale, and those who were able to scratch build something that looked as good as a larger scale, even HO, were lauded for their skills. N scale is more about modelling the railroad than the individual cars. And, considering that more cars are needed as well as individual cars being harder to model in the smaller scale, it is little wonder that most people are going to populate their model railroads mostly with what they can get RTR, and save their scratch building and kit bashing time and efforts for those relatively few "signature" locos, rolling stock and trackside items that are the indicators of the prototype being modeled.As a B&O modeler of the transition era, I am very glad to have some high quality steam engines and cab units and rolling stock that are prototypical and available for purchase RTR. It would probably take the rest of my life to build an EM-1 2-8-8-4, a string of wagontop box cars and a wagontop caboose with anything like the quality I can get from Bachmann and Fox Valley. And, the B&O had lots more of each of those than a single train. But, there are still signature pieces like the T-3 4-8-2, the S1a 2-10-2, and a large number of individually recognizable passenger cars and express cars that will probably never become available commercially and thus give me a to-do list that exceeds my remaining lifetime. So, I really do not lament the availability of good quality RTR models, and do not think that they detract from N scale in any way. In fact, I think those RTR models actually attract people to the scale who will do the scratch building and kit bashing. If they had only the choices to scratch build everything or run toylike trains, they would probably opt for another scale, where the RTR support was better, or maybe even one of the really large scales where all they can ever run is one train with a few cars.
This is not entirely true. I've just taken a 70s-era and a 2000s-era release of the 40-foot boxcar, and compared them under magnification. Since tooling was all done by hand back in the 70s, there are telltale imperfections that wouldn't be reproduced. While the ends and roof have indeed been retooled, the car sides are still original. There are a few signs of some very minor touch-ups, but they are otherwise identical. Since most of the errors are on the sides, it might explain why they've never been corrected.