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Of course I understand that there are many other items that pushed the hobby forward, but if it wasn’t for guys who were ambitious like this, to make a kit for a railway that didn’t send the car all over North America, in a scale not yet known for custom building, where would we be? They were certainly pioneers.
Disclaimer: I did the original masters for the RLW chip car - because I decided it would be easier to have him cast them, than to build a half dozen from scratch! Considering that the prototypes were built in Portland, and run by the SP, GN, SP&S, and BN (that I know of), I'm surprised that Micro-Trains hasn't made one.
the 40' wood reefer (1976) is a PFE-specific prototype that has been released dozens of times in PFE
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Then Atlas reset the standard and established the current foundation for motive power with the introduction of the RS-3 in 1980.
1983, actually.
Hate to pick nits but the Micro Trains 40' wood reefer is a 1926 FGE / WFE prototype not a PFE car.Still a very accurate model and has been done in GN/WFE a number of times.
Hate to pick nits but the Micro Trains 40' wood reefer is a 1926 FGE / WFE prototype not a PFE car.Still a very accurate model and has been done in GN/WFE a number of times.AFAIK no one has made an accurate PFE wood reefer in N scale.Edit: here is a mostly original car in GN paint... note that in the 1930s most of these cars were modified with Hutchens steel roofs (like the ones on the Intermountain 1927 cars) (Attachment Link)
Though in nearly 50 years, MTL has yet to release an FGE scheme on the model unfortunately.
Agreed, still applies. Though in nearly 50 years, MTL has yet to release an FGE scheme on the model unfortunately.