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Meanwhile they are getting hammered on the GN boxcar, so the criticism isn’t limited to the N scale line.
If Rapido can't sell an overdetailed>overpriced model in N scale , how is me (Atlas or Scale Trains) buying the tooling assets going to make the models sell better?
I saw a review of this car, it was largely being panned for being midrange detail at a high end price.
Precisely. Same cost as recent Tangent cars, but with inferior detailing.The running board on the model I saw was abysmal. Think roller coaster.
So... is there still hope for the Southern Pacific 3/4 dome cars in N scale?
I'd put my money on Railsmith over Rapido at this point...
Don't the HO guys want this as well?
Ayup. Also, I get annoyed every time I unbox something and find out I spent an extra $7.50 on a bunch of dumb underframe detail that I will never see. One of Teichmuller's great captions in his PRR hopper book is of a picture of an H39 on it's side being scrapped, something to the effect of "and here is a shot of the underframe, in case you want to model your wrecks correctly".
Just to be clear- the snark in my response is to Rapido, not to you, Learmoia. It is a good question.I would guess the price would go down, for starters.Fewer long "business trips" to China that include luxury train rides and meals and hotels? Maybe Atlas just has the Chinese manufacturer send the CAD drawings via internet instead of going to view them in person. No trans-Canada bus rides for antique bus shows, and trans-Canada train rides to do a 2 day show in Vancouver, on the company dime.....I dunno, but I think Atlas and Scale-trains could probably save a lot of money. They of course, travel as well, but they have MUCH larger sales volumes to write off the cost against, and they don't produce videos about how much fun they are having with the money we send them for models.Additionally, the marketing by Scale Trains and Atlas is better by an order of magnitude, on both sides of the marketing equation. On the "what to produce" side, they are clearly more successful at making choices on what will sell well, AND have a MUCH better handle on what their customers want in terms of quality- especially on the customers' definition of quality. For instance, Atlas understands if the prototype rolls and the model does not, it is not a very good model. This is lost on Rapido. Atlas's (and Scale-trains, although they make stuff outside my modeling era) have ads that are informative and to the point. It obviously works better. I would bet that Atlas's 60' CNW cars, marketed in umpteen different foobie schemes, have far outsold Rapidos "Panorama" line of highly detailed, "poop chute" equipped (a big deal was made of it when introduced) models of CN cars that have been in production for many more years, and the new run of which was just canceled. Why? Better choice of product, and better advertising and distribution. And when Atlas had issues (rolling) in the first batch, they fixed it for the next release. And, no insults to the customers.