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I've never had problems getting Atlas c55, but I always buy at least a couple of boxes at a time because I always need rail stock as well as flex track to keep the custom turnouts and crossings compatible. I do the same with cork. That probably gets me through the periods of unavailability.
Pretty much the same here. I have a standing order for 150 Atlas c55 track and 150 MIdwest cork each month for the AZ layout. Might as well make sure I can get it now when I can. Just received my third delivery.
DaveJust AWAG. If Peco brought out a new line of track. The sales would most likely impact (Cannibalize) PECO existing market share/sales.
Not being especially familiar with UK railroading I'm reluctant to call Peco code 55 "unrealistic." Does their track scale out correctly for UK track (the tie--er, sleeper--spacing and size)? I do understand that the "spike" detail isn't meant at all to represent North American rail spikes but rather a UK-style fastener. Just curious.
Not sure if I follow. Sure, the sales of their unprototypical (for U.S.) track would take a dive, but the sales of the new track would more than make up for that. I think they would even sell more of the new track than their old stuff, since some modelers using other brands of track (Atlas, Micro engineering) would likely switch to Peco, especially if the C55 was made like the current c55 track (the most robust flex track on the market).
In that scenario Peco spends more on new tooling and makes less profit with idle tooling, increased warehousing and distribution cost. This is all speculation.
Yeah, that's what I mean. The military does crap like that with manpower. They keep you undermanned and then--because you can't let the mission fail and you somehow make do for a while--they come in and say "See? You didn't need those billets in the first place." And then they cut those positions...because they never filled them.
That was some very good info bigdawgks - thanks! Most of us (on this side of the pond) don't know many details about British railroads or scale models.And while we have some good historical info about early American prototype N scale models (from Arnold and Trix), we know nothing about how the track was designed. Instead of using real railroad track for reference, they mught have just pulled the dimensions out of a hat. Somethgin that looked good to them...