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Can definitely agree with that. Pre COVID postage from US to Australia wasn’t too bad, but now that postage has gone through the roof...
Including material, decals and MT trucks, I've been making hopper cars for $6-7 each using a $200 3D FDM printer. I think I'm currently at about 40 cars (not to mention the 20+ I made for a club project). For about the same amount per car, I built a train representing a WWII US Army Medium Tank company (about 20 tanks, plus other vehicles and about 15 flat cars using the same printer. That included decals and paint. I haven't done the math as to how much that train would cost with the new MT sets (which would not reproduce the train anyway).My loss? My time. I can print five hoppers in about 8 hours. That's the easy part. A lot more into cleaning, painting, adding details (ladders and brake wheels), decals, flat coat, weights and loads. Perhaps a week of evenings. I've recently designed and started making my own hopper car design that shaves a lot of time off since it includes ladders and a hole for the brake wheel.I think my $200 printer investment has paid off and I've got two nice trains. Bob
Can't speak for on line and show dealers setting prices, but current mainline prices reflect the cost to manufacture, cost of materials, cost of labor and cost of shipping +... With more detail being demanded the cost goes straight up. If you've been in the hobby long enough, pull out an old 60's vintage diesel by just about any company and compare it to something that's being produced today. Level of detail, manufacturing practices, operating options, PC boards and not just grain of wheat bulbs soldered to a truck pick up and on and on. Working for a company that manufactures trains has its perks...being able to focus on what I really want to build is difficult though. LOL "hey that pretty!! I may need 6 of those...someday. LOl Joe
Working for a company that manufactures trains has its perks...being able to focus on what I really want to build is difficult though. LOL "hey that pretty!! I may need 6 of those...someday. LOl Joe
Modelling consumers have also demanded more detail, tooling, etc. that has driven up costs to manufacture. Also, the 'cheap' manufacturing in China that has dominated for several decades is no longer as inexpensive. This has driven up costs beyond inflation rates.
Like the song by glam metal band Cinderella goes "Don't know what you got Till it's gone". Speaking from the HO side people didn't want cheaper stuff like the Athearn blue box and Roundhouse kits no more. Nope, they wanted brass level details out of styrene, and they wanted it ready to run at that. They also wanted sound, DCC, and smoke and were willing to pay up. They stopped buying the cheaper stuff so Athearn, Roundhouse, and Walthers stopped making it. I don't blame the manufacturers. They just went where the money is.