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I like the idea of auto racks, but the reality of modeling them in my preferred era (~1970) means open racks, which implies they need to be populated. Vehicle models from that era are few and far between, at least RTR, and if they were, every loaded rack would cost well north of $100. Non-RTR (3D printer output)... well... you know... do you want to be tasked with painting/detailing 50 or so automobiles just so a handful of nicely modeled railcars don't look like toys?Of course empty racks moved around the country, but what I recall from railfanning in that era is that loads were what one noticed.This was the issue that stopped me from acquiring these cars on the previous run, and obviously I'm still dealing with the same quandary.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Honestly I spent an embarrassing amount on the recently released Atlas Ford Fairmonts to populate an Athearn open tri-level, but it looks effin great.
This is a situation where @Rasputen REALLY shines
Wouldn't a Ford FAST train be a requirement for your layout?
It's rather different. And an accurate model of the NW version would be a better stand-in for so many other prototypes, as I alluded to above.
@lock4244 When I was a high school student (David & Mary Thompson), a drop-out friend used to come around and recruit some of us for the occasional low-paying, but hugely fun and exciting after-hours jobs. He worked for a guy who would buy collector cars at the Cooksville auto auction by day, and then needed drivers to pick up his purchases in the west end, drive back east across the 401, and load them onto auto racks in the yard just south of Warden and Eglinton.Damn, it was fun … Corvettes of all vintages, Barracudas, Novas; we even had three E-Type Jags once, and a late ‘40’s Bently limo (it had a velvet curtain to pull across the back so the driver couldn’t glance in, and small signal levers that flopped out of the door pillars as turn signals).Relatively expensive autos, mostly muscle cars, that we would tie down on the auto racks in prep for shipment to Vancouver. Can you imagine entrusting all of this to a bunch of yahoo 17 year olds with literally only a few MONTHS of driving experience! On my very first trip I was given the keys to a manual shift Camaro - I learned to drive a standard that night (it was NOT a pretty sight; that poor car!). Anyways, thought you’d enjoy the story ‘cause you know the ‘hood!
Holy smokes …. I can’t believe you actually have all that track & customer info for that area. Amazing!
I got excited for a moment with the two 90s photos, especially the one at City of Industry... but the flats are very different too - flush decks vs the channel side. More noticeable on #965306.
Eyeballing the proto photo, I gotta think those side panels should be silver. Maybe they'll fix that on this run.
No, the proto panels on that Southern car are white. I'm curious what they'll do with the foobs though. If you zoom in enough on the artwork they do appear to be a different color.