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It does not look like there is much to be done for the Athearn/MDC wood caboose or Overton car.
You can swap in FVM friction-bearing leafspring caboose trucks. They share the same lowered bolster as the BLMA trucks and the Atlas Barber trucks on the PS-1. They are more appropriate regarding MTL at least because MTL cabooses have been equipped with roller-bearing leafspring trucks in recent years. The FVM trucks show as available on the store website.
This will lower the ride height, but I think he's also asking what to do about coupler height afterwards. The MTL cabooses are body mount and already utilize the underslung 2004(?) coupler, right? So it's going to need more surgery.
I didn't adjust my couplers and mine are kitbashes with original-design diecast floor that uses the T-shank couplers, which means the crossbeam isn't as low as on the BLMA trucks. The wood cabooses are one of the MTL models that are close to correct ride height. My main concern with them is that they've never ridden on correct trucks and the FVM trucks fill that void. I use the FVM trucks on Atlas NE5 and NE6 cabooses as well.
On coupler height.....The MTL wood caboose (which I assume is the one brokemoto is talking about given the context), with original equipment pizza cutter wheels, sits .23 inches above the rail - 36.8 scale inches. Pretty darn close to the 37.25 on the diagram mentioned above. The reason to lower it would be because of installation of low profile wheels- in which case it would be lowered by the difference in wheel diameters- but in that case, the coupler ends up in the same location relative to the rails.
When measuring height above the rail, the size of the flange shouldn't affect the measurement. (Pizza cutters on Atlas Code 55 aside, grin) I'm not sure what you were trying to say with "reason to lower because of installation of low profile wheels".
My understanding is that archbar trucks were officially banned in interchange service before the First World War, but the ban was not enforced until the 1930s. Enforcement of the ban had to be suspended between 1942 and 1946 due to wartime exigencies. As cabooses are not used in interchange service, as a rule, and, railroads tried to spend as little money as possible on them, archbar trucks would fit cabooses on a short line in the mid-1950s.