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Here's the stock numbers included in their cancellation notice. I pulled this off their Facebook page.Athearn 40’ Fruehauf trailers• ATH-1090 N ATH 40' Fruehauf Trailer, Illinois Central ICZ #201035• ATH-1123 N ATH 40' Fruehauf Trailer, Illinois Central ICZ #201048• ATH-1108 N ATH 40' Fruehauf Trailer, XTRA XTRZ #231301• ATH-1064 N ATH 40' Fruehauf Trailer, XTRA XTRZ #231377
Well, I preordered both of the IC pigs and both of the XTRA pigs - I guess I'll be getting a big refund from Athearn ... I've been waiting forever for someone to do the IC piggys - they are iconic and I saw them in just about every train with tofcs from the late 60s through the 70s.MTL did that scheme, but they did it on a 45' trailer (Pre-ICG IC did not roster 45' trailers) Decent tooling is there from Athearn and MTL but ... the funny thing is, nobody makes the decals in N for the IC piggys.Maybe Athearn will change their mind.Mark
If you're going to get down into the weeds about the rivet pattern on a piggy back trailer, I humbly suggest you consider a larger scale. At track speed from 4 feet away in N scale, no one sees it but you.
Again, a fairly limited prototype of very limited interest to most modelers. The guy running a 10' long intermodal on an N trak rig is looking for the overall effect of a loaded piggy back train. He could (typically) not care a lick about the road names or lengths of the trailers. For a fine scale model of a particular trailer, you're paying what, $25 or so? If I'm looking to load a train, I'm looking for a box of 40 year old Herpa trailers for $10 I can weather up to give the eye something to identify as a loaded pig flat.But maybe if we weren't so demanding that every detail be spot on from the manufacturer, the cars might still cost $15 and you wouldn't feel bad about splicing on the right door....If you're going to get down into the weeds about the rivet pattern on a piggy back trailer, I humbly suggest you consider a larger scale. At track speed from 4 feet away in N scale, no one sees it but you....
Lee looks at all this through eyes of a vintage N scale railroader (not H0 modeler). 30-40 years ago, N scale models were more like toys, and you had not much choice of body styles or road names.
Well, the exception was Kadee Micro-trains, but those models were very pricey, so not very many modelers bought them.
And, if I remember right, Microscale used to make decals for IC piggyback trailers.