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Following is a list of Atlas A1G locos: http://www.irwinsjournal.com/a1g/a1glocos/I've had several of them and they never ran as well or for as long as contemporary products from Arnold-Rapido or Con-Cor/Kato.Where would you be without any of them?
The 1st gen products, crappy as they were, became the bedrock under an industry that's grown to become the second-most popular modeling scale. If those brave souls hadn't at least tried, would be where we are now?
Based upon my experience with a few Atlas A1G-era locos, that bedrock seemed rather unstable.I'd likely have given up on N scale if it wasn't for the other Arnold-Rapido or Con-Cor/Kato locos I also had at that time.Something to contemplate is where Atlas might be today if they hadn't eventually partnered with Kato on diesel locos.
Considering that other companies moved production to China, and the Chinese model design was pretty much copied from Kato, Atlas would have been like it is now: Chinese-made, Kato-inspired mechanisms, with Atlas-designed shells, also made in China,The Atlas/Kato collaboration did not last very long. Old-school RS-3, RS-11, then those horrible stretched Geeps. Then few more Geeps and SDs using the low-friction design (which eventually became Chinese-made). At that time other manufacturers made Chinese copies of Kato's low-friction mechanism.At least that is how I recall the timeline.
The Atlas/Kato collaboration lasted about a decade, beginning with the RS3 in 1983 and subsequently the RS11, RSD12, RSD4/5, the dimensionally challenged GP7/9, RS1, U25B, SD7/9, GP30 and GP35.The new and improved Atlas GP7/9 models, with the "Chinese copy" mechanism, didn't appear until about 1995.The Life-Like GP20, introduced in 1999, is the first loco I can recall from anyone other than Atlas with a "Chinese copy" mechanism.The made-in-China Con-Cor locos of that time were made using tooling returned by Kato.Do you recall any companies who were selling locos with "Chinese copy" mechanisms concurrent with the Atlas/Kato products?
I started this thread by focusing on the models made "way back when" of German prototypes, and how much better they were than the North American models made by the same manufacturers; I still stand by that opening statement, FWIW.
I don't remember when Athearn or IM started making N scale diesels, but they don't really use the low-friction-truck design.
FWIW, IM uses Atlas trucks, at a minimum on the HTC truck equipped models.
And doesn't IM use the low-friction truck design on their F-units?