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...At first, there were modellers unhappy with their Paragon sound decoders crammed in their throats. BLI finally realized (was it the survey?) that they were losing a lot of sales because of that, and they recently changed their course and started offering models without decoders. Brilliant move! But around the same time they somehow got the notion that smoke is a wonderful thing. Hmmm, maybe they should take another survey . . .
As to smoke, I may think it's lame and gimmicky, but then I realize I need to remind myself that for every self proclaimed prototype modeler, there are probably thousands of others, including wide-eyed nine year olds, who see the this hobby very differently. And if that helps sales and the development of new steam locos, I'll be happily turning my new engines into non-smokers all day long Otto
Well, that brings up an interesting question. Do we actually KNOW what kind of sales the "stealth" strategy generates? Stealth vs. Paragon 4's? And total numbers now vs. before? I'd say only time will tell how brilliant that move was...and future releases will give us a hint.As to smoke, I may think it's lame and gimmicky, but then I realize I need to remind myself that for every self proclaimed prototype modeler, there are probably thousands of others, including wide-eyed nine year olds, who see the this hobby very differently. And if that helps sales and the development of new steam locos, I'll be happily turning my new engines into non-smokers all day long Otto
I think the problem is that even the BEST smoke units (probably referring to O scale here) produces a sad looking puff of smoke. Nothing at all like a real locomotive would. Why go to all of the effort to include something that doesn't even look good to begin with?We all now know smoking produces cancer and death...isn't that what killed the steam locomotives in the first place?
Yes, when done well, in larger scales, smoke can be very realistic. This includes blow-down steam from the cylinders and some steam escaping from the back of the loco. I don't know how this is done (is it typical burning oil smoke or maybe water vapor), but the effect is pretty amazing. In N scale? not so much.
The effect is impressive - but it's still some smoke .. steam coming out of the cylinders dissipates pretty quickly as the water vapor changes temperature .. the "steam" in these floats like an eerie swamp fog ..
With your super-sensitivity to smoke, you guys are lucky you weren't around when 1:1 steam was really in action, I guess.
I was up in Strassburg a few months ago -- and the coal smoke did bother me -- I've become more sensitive to it as I've gotten older - my lungs aren't what they used to be - even though I quit smoking 30 years ago ..