0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
There's a balance. Around $50 is a reasonable price IMO, but some of the asking prices on a certain auction site are a bit outrageous. I've seen some Red Caboose autoracks recently go for over $80 a car, which is a bit high. The Kato autoracks are of decent quality, in my opinion, and MSRP on a 4 car set is only $95.
Ah, so this was not about the MSRP prices (or discounted prices) of autorack models available from a hobby shop, but auction prices for out-of-production items. So it sounds like your wish would be for manufacturers to produce a new run of autoracks, in a quantity larger than what will sell out in couple of weeks.
A correct Conrail SD40-2.
Autoracks, of any manufacture that are quality. Trying to build up a handful of autoracks for a small train is a very expensive proposition these days.
Well, that pretty much eliminates Con-Cor then. ScaleTrains recently announced the Gunderson Multi-Max autorack for HO; according to ST staff they are "seriously considering" an N scale version. Although the HO version will cost $74.99 each (with slightly lower prices for quantity buys), and judging by their multi-scale product history, the N scale version is priced equally to the HO version...
Quote from: pdx1955 on December 28, 2019, 06:33:59 PM-SP B-50-15 boxcars (signature SP car - perfect for a kit manufacturer who isn't going to promise something, take $$, then disappear off the face of the earth. An N version of Westerfield Models would be great!)I would like to see these and many more of the road-specific cars from the 1920s. I lost a few bucks in that deal, too. But only had a couple bought and paid for on the "preorder special price" so my financial exposure was limited. Proved once again that a deal that seems too good to be true, is indeed too good to be true.
What's your beef with the IM ones? Other than the trucks, of course (which, well, be patient).
Dear Micro Trains:For next Christmas how about a Pullman Solarium Car. This car was much more common in the 1940s and 1950s than open platform observation cars. Thanks!(@Shipsure - Joe I gave you plans for this car several years ago - let me know if you need them).
ready to run N Scale interurbans. Preferably Pacific Electric cars...