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I was simply making a general statement on things I have observed. Trying to provide you an answer to why some might take offense to it. I said nothing specific to your post. If I have a problem with you or your post I will tell you directly.
(EDIT: Well, now I'm minus one again)
I believe the brake wheels shown in the micro trains add are for the old time cars where the brake wheel extended up to the roof, and The Breakmen walked on the roof to brake cars.
@Ed Kapuscinski, Here's a screenshot of everything that hasn't appeared within the last five years. Some surprising entries on the list. These are all appearances regardless of prototypical or fantasy schemes. (Attachment Link)
@Ed Kapuscinski,Just for grins and giggles, I downloaded the monthly releases and bodystyle Excel files from the MTL website, added a vlookup between the two, created a pivot table off that detail and sorted by date last released. Here's a screenshot of everything that hasn't appeared within the last five years. Some surprising entries on the list. These are all appearances regardless of prototypical or fantasy schemes. (Attachment Link)
When you consider the number of body styles they have, not doing 21 of them within a 5 year period really isn't surprising. I will admit surprise that some haven't been done in 15 or 20 years or more. I wonder if in some cases tooling was damaged, or they just had a "flop". And on 2 bay hoppers, there is a LOT of competition, initially Atlas, and Bowser, but for the past 10 years, Bluford has dominated that particular niche with several prototypes in many roadnames. Of what's on the list, if they were to do new runs, the one I would likely purchase would be the 060 and 061 composite gondolas. I don't know what the specific prototype is, but a lot of composite cars show up in freight yard photos from the 50s, and I think they are generally underrepresented in model form.
I think the largest MTL "flop" was probably the scale test car, although I think it was really neat that MTL produced it. I did buy couple myself (but will have to custom paint them for B&M). The main issue is that railroads only had one or few of them in their fleet. I'm sure MTL was aware of it, but they still made them. Maybe they hoped that the collectors would go nuts and start collecting every roadname they produced of that cute tiny car.
Well....errr....yes, I do know what the MTL brake wheels are for.My point was that MTL was using the same nomenclature to describe what my freight car books call a "non-powered vertical shaft (or sometimes vertical staff) handwheel" (where the wheel itself is horizontal) that the manufacturers of brakes use to describe a brake wheel that mounts to the brake equipment at the end of the car (with the wheel vertical).This becomes confusing with the MTL USRA cars in particular because they make them both ways- with vertical shaft brakes with the shaft extending above the roof (modeling the cars of the late teens or early 20s) OR vertical wheel brakes on the ends of the cars (cars manufactured in the later 20s, or original cars fitted with new brakes).