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I do dislike lumping Z and N together, but this is not the only forum to do so. The Marklin forum did the same years ago. There was the same backlash with some folks walking away. They are two different scales and should be separated. I also don't understand the logic as there is no extra cost to keep a Z section But that is the owners/moderators call. I also can't argue the point since the Z community is such a tiny factor here. Likely I am the primary poster (and defender) of Z here. Most of my posts are product announcements for American Z Line. But N scalers, be prepared. We have been targeting you fine folks for some time. We hope you take notice of all of the new products coming out for Z and see how the scale is growing. We would love for some of you to join our growing ranks. As for Z scale modeling, I would LOVE to see more on this forum. There are quite a few Z scalers doing some amazing work. They are posting on other forums though. But some of the moderators of this fine forum have done extraordinary work in Z. If they are still doing so, maybe it would be a good time to share it? I'm just saying...Rob KluzZ scale defender.
I'm gonna take a page from the Artie S. Demoulas book of management on this one. - Deal with it
Rob, obviously I would like you to continue posting AZL updates. There is no extra monetary cost in keeping a separate Z forum, but the cost in keeping a forum that no one posts in is to give other Z modelers a disincentive to post. Why bother to share in a forum that has no traffic? This is the logic behind the reasoning.With the new organization, I expect that both AZL product announcements and Z scale modeling threads will get much more views and commentary.
Code 40 Z flextrack would do wonders for the N narrow gauge market as well. Serious modelers would probably cut the ties apart and respace them, but for beginners the Z would work fine, and if it sold well enough, maybe we could convince you to make Nn3 track. Or European standard Z, with the widely spaced oversized sleepers North American modelers hate - but which would be great for N narrow gauge, and would probably be popular with Europeans looking for more accurate Z track.Also, many scenery products work for multiple scales, and having all of the product announcements in one forum will give a wider audience for them.