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Charlie,I don’t know what the market would be for your “tell all” behind the scenes history, but I would buy it!
I am not sure that Mehano or Roco tooled the SW1500 body. Jim Conway had contacts in a number of countries and the source of many of his projects is not clear.Some of them were composites of parts from multiple vendors, some of which may have been subcontractors to the “known” manufacturers.It would be interesting to document some of the behind the scenes early days of N Scale.....but since much of this happened before many N Scalers were born, is there any interest in the background of long-gone products?Charlie Vlk
I really wish there was some in depth book on the birth of N scale. Sadly many of the parts have already been lost to time (what a wonder it would be to see the original pre-Kadee Micro Trains kits).There are certainly parts of N scale I think are worthy of story - Kadee/MTL, Atlas, CC, Kato, Minitrix, Roco, Fleischmann, Arnold and Lone Star.If I was to write it? I would have a text heavy book with a coffee table folio that contained vintage photos of original equipment, artwork, vintage layouts and advertisements.
While not a book, and maybe not super-comprehensive, have you looked at our own DKS' web pages? It is exactly what you seem to pine for (at least covering the early days you say were lost to time).http://davidksmith.com/birth-of-n/index.htm and http://davidksmith.com/postage-stamp-trains/index.htm
I picked one of these up a while back to monkey around with, even after I got a couple Atlas units. Wide hood and somewhat clunky shell details aside (compared to the Atlas units), this thing runs incredibly well (on DC). Maybe my best running N scale switcher as far as smoothness and quietness goes. Funny thing is, looking at the frame and the thickness of the motor, it seems like it didn't have to have a wider frame and shell. Anyway, I've never really known what to do with it, especially since I moved to DCC and mostly sound. Sort of a shame since it runs so dang nice. As the Spookshow site says, this thing might've made a pretty big splash if it wasn't for the Atlas offering. Anyone else have one?
Will the Atlas shell fit on them?
Due to the cost of publication I don't think a "coffee table book" would be financially viable but perhaps an online version the Powerpoint can be posted after the NSE and will satisfy some of the interest in the subject for those that can't attend the convention.A new thread will be started to continue the History issue when something comes up; I will post anything I find out about the Con-Cor SW1500 here to complete that part of this thread.Charlie Vlk