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Not for the manufacturers I mention..Every car I have rides high.I have cars from Atlas,Athearn,IM,MT,ER,FVM,BLMA,older Roundhouse and Red Caboose..We could be discussing cars from different eras.I don't have any cars from the manufacturers you mention other then the Top Gons from BLMA and all my Atlas cars has truck mounts..
Those few examples [of body-mounted couplers] doesn't make it true for the majority of today's cars including Atlas's "Master Series".We're not talking about tooling that is 20-30 years old-FVM and ExactRail has shown that.It will be many years before body mounted couplers becomes a standard simply because of the curves you mention.
As far as scale handrails I agree they will be fragile to the touch but,I won't completely rule them out..Of course that is many years down the road.
Compare the modern 50' boxcars..Those are the true look alikes between brands.
So Larry is arguing that his own personal collection of cars ride high? Sure, if he doesn't have any of the cars that Bryan mentions, then he is absolutely right. But to use this as evidence that all cars ride high is bad logic.
Its common knowledge that 97% of N Scale cars ride high..The newer 3% that comes with body mounted coupler and correct ride height just may change the standards in the coming years but,doesn't lower the 97% that rides high one scale inch..
I am not going to waste my time fussing over the facts...
It doesn't change one inch of the ride height or the common knowledge the Majority of the cars ride high-including many of the newly tooled cars..
The newer 3% that comes with body mounted coupler and correct ride height just may change the standards in the coming years but,doesn't lower the 97% that rides high one scale inch.
Everything blends. Just a general rule of model railroading...