0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
. . . I'm thinking somebody tried to put another manufacturer's trucks on the car, but somebody asked the question if maybe they were older Kadee MicroTrains trucks. They don't have the emprinting that I've always seen on official Micro Trains equipment, so I doubt that. . . .Bill Kepner
. . .Maybe these were knock-offs, as the coupler and box did look like MicroTrains, but the truck bolster did not.Bill Kepner
The trucks don’t appear to mention micro-trains or Kadee anywhere on them, but have the micro-trains coupler still attached.
Some of the early ones didn't have any name on them. I have quite a few like the one in his pictures, and always wondered why KD/MT made them that way.
I didn't have my micrometer, but the axle was about what I would expect on an Atlas car. I should have clarified, only one of the cars was MicroTrains. The others were a combination of other manufacturers, so I wonder if the original owner did a lot of truck swapping. Maybe these were knock-offs, as the coupler and box did look like MicroTrains, but the truck bolster did not.Bill Kepner
The Kadee/Micro-Trains axle length is and always has been .540”.
Where the Kadee or Micro-Trains name is typically seen (i.e., on products that were manufactured from the 1970s through the early 2000s), visible in Southern1970's post photo, the unmarked Kadee Micro-Trains 1003 trucks had a pair of circular depressions in the bottom of the bolster.
One reason might have been that their trademark had not been approved by the government at that early stage.
By the 1960s, Kadee® and Magne-Matic® were already registered trademarks."Priced at $1.80 a pair, Kadee® N Gauge (i.e., not a typo, as early production Kadee® Quality Products blister cards actually had the word "gauge" rather than "scale" printed on them) stock number MT-1000 Bettendorf trucks had Celcon® plastic frames and pointy ended axles, blackened cast zinc-alloy wheels (which have the propensity to corrode over time) with a centered hole and rib detail on the back side, and screwed to the truck frame with a steel screw, a draft box mounted MT-5 Magne-Matic® knuckle coupler, which was introduced in 1968."Even the earliest production Kadee Micro-Trains MT-1000 trucks bore the "Kadee USA" lettering.As the same circular depressions (produced by the tooling's ejector pins as previously noted by bigdawgks) also appear on the bottom of each Kadee MT-1500 truck bolster, it was only the MT-1500 Rapido coupler equipped Bettendorf trucks that were never factory produced with "Kadee USA" lettering.Have always thought that the Kadee N-Scale Bettendorfs that were devoid of any markings and fitted with factory installed Magne-Matic knuckle couplers were actually fabricated using the tooling for the Rapido equipped trucks, which differed from the rest of the product line.