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Well I should have known I'd be late to the party. Here's to hoping no one got "stuck" by this event.
Luckily I received my, probably last, order from Shapeways yesterday. A set of cab signal boxes. Soaking in Bestine now.Hopefully someone else steps up and offers services or somehow files can be made available.
Sorry, but it is BS to say this is no big loss. Yes their marketplace was expensive, and yes the quality/technology was not up to the latest standards, but the value of SW was the massive crowd-sourced library of designs available. Even if you have a 3D printer, do you have time to reinvent the wheels (millions of hours) already invested in the designs? Maybe their search engine was not ideal, but I had no problem finding unique designs from James Norris (PRR Baldwin transfer loco shells), Michael B’s PRR passenger cars, John’s PRR Parts, Jan’s massive library of vehicles, and numerous other offerings. I hope someone creates a platform that makes the SW design library available for downloading so the many designers can get some return for their work. If there is no reward, there is no incentive to create and share designs.
I find it a loss. I don’t have time to mess with 3d printing. Nor do I want to invest 3-400 into a printer to have another “hobby” on top of what little time I can devote to trains.
No letter, no e-mail, no nothing from them.
It just kinda feels like a waste though. I can't for the life of me think why the company owners tinkered with the system rather than trying to stay ahead of the market in terms of features and quality that would have made them desirable, even to folks who had their own printers. Like metal printing, or adding fret etching services, etc. It's like watching a horror movie and seeing the mass murder around the corner from where the next victim is about to round - yet another proven example of corporate life-cycle models and their multiple points of failure.