0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
Mostly seems like above the cylinders. Mikado's had 3 steps going up from the pilot and Pacific's had 4 steps. The platform over the cylinders was higher. I dunno thought Charlie said this was why Kato didn't use their Heavy Mike to make a Pacific. Maybe it is railroad specific.
... one of Conrail's predecessor roads (the C&O) ....John C.
I'm still baffled that people don't understand the logistics of creating and selling a locomotive. As a company, trying to make money, are you going to build a non descript completely road specific loco that is only accurate for one, maybe two roads? You might sell that loco to at best 100 fans of that road, which means small production runs and a $500-700 price tag.....Or are you going to build something that may not be perfect for every, or even any one road, but it is very close to a dozen or more different roads. Because this loco is close enough for over a dozen different roads, you have now opened up your sales to 10-20 times more customers, allowing your production run to be 20 times larger, bringing costs down and your profits up. At the same time you have made more people happy, at the risk of offending some of those original 100 people that would have bought it because it was perfect for their road. I bet out of those hundred, 50 -75 of them will still buy it in their road, even though it isn't perfect.
Well Tony, modelers have gotten lazier in the last few decades or so. Many want RTR models with the exact details for their railroad. Then there are new model companies, such as Scale Trains, that seem to cater to that type of a modeler, but offering models which have roadname-specific details. Unfortunately for the foamers, those models are only Diesel locos (at least so far). That proverbial paradigm is shifting. We are getting spoiled.
IM cab forward, Fox Valley Milwaukee Road 4-4-2, Kato GS-4, FEF-3 and didn't they also make a USRA Mikado? It IS possible to make correct steam locomotives in N scale and still make a profit. What about my previous suggesting of making a mech and digital printing the correct shells/cylinders/tenders?
@Angus Shops I thought Rapido was doing that loco? Now, it might cost an arm and a leg, but based on their prior products, it will be right. How it runs is another story(first GMD1) but they made those right and their recent diesels seem to be good runners.(Draper taper)
I could easily see Concor or Bachmann making up paint schemes, but if I'm paying $350 for an engine, I just expect more than a fantasy. After checking my files, even the Christmas loco is painted wrong
In my case, the B&O did have USRA light Pacifics (P5) and also made close clones with Vandy tenders (P6). In addition, they had a series of home-built heavy Pacifics (P1d) that have similar driver size and spacing to the USRA models (74" diameter and 13' between end axles). So, I am happy to see BLI make these.My pet peeve is the headlights centered on the smoke box doors of so many models. The B&O received locos like that, but quickly remounted the headlights on the top of the smoke box front. When Bachmann came out with the K4 and high-mounted headlight, I was hoping that they would make a B&O version with a high headlight. But, the K4 had 80" diameter drivers, like the B&O class P7 "President Class" locomotives, and some of those had low-mounted headlights (the P7d and P7e). Do the manufacturers really just love to tease us B&O modelers? Probably not, but sometimes it seems like it.