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I don't think its the plow solely, I just think the T4 Body is higher than the Dash 9 body. If you compare pilot deck heights you can see the T4 is higher as well. All the widecabs should be the same height. Shouldn't matter if its an AC4400CW, Dash 9, ES44AC, T4 GEVO, or a AC6000CW.I suspect I'll be getting an email from my LHS before long with my two UP units arrival. I've been told these should come with LokSound V5s, can anyone confirm this?Chris
Just wondering, what about the Operator line? How is it detailed and are the details that do need to be added, are they pre-painted or are unpainted like the HO detail parts that you have to order separate? And isn't packaged different? For $99.99, I gave thought to ordering one.Thanks, Ralph
I can't get past the idea models are so detailed, they make everything else look toy like in comparison. To a certain extent they look too detailed maybe? Sometimes I wonder if some details are maybe over scaled (I doubt it) to make them noticable, and they stand out where I wouldn't notice them in the prototype.
I believe the operator line comes with molded on parts for things like grab irons, and there is nothing to be added.
To a certain extent they look too detailed maybe?
Aint no such animal. Ed
Are the Rivet Counter UP red sill stripe versions appropriate for the late 90's? What about the BNSF?
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Yeah, if you want a museum-quality model to sit in a sealed glass case.But if a model is subjected by more or less ham-fisted operators on a layout with regular operating sessions, then there is such a thing as too much detail.
Well I should think that operators who have a habit of destroying their hosts models would tire pretty quickly of paying to replace them. Likely too they wouldn't be getting themselves invited back, but in such case then you would only be getting what you ask for. (And BTW how to they keep from knocking the models off the tracks when switching?) Anyways that's a pretty lame case for less detail. The real constraints are the cost & capacity tradeoffs, hence the separate Operator and Rivet Counter lines. Ed
It seems like the idea of supplying an "operator" level of detail with a package of customer-applied super details is being tried again by Scaletrains. The last model I know did that was the Kato Heavy Mike. I like the idea, but, from the number of Mikados I have seen that never got their hand rails applied, I suspect I am in the minority.