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The ideal solution would be the N scale equivalent of Accurail's HO 40' and 50' boxcar underframes.Whether anyone wants to cough up the $ to make them in N scale to sell at about $4 each is another story...
I only own one Atlas PS-1 (with an 8-foot door), but in comparing it to my MT PS-1s it appears that the lower door track is farther from the bottom of the sill on the MT model. Thus, cutting away the bottom of the MT sill positions the door track closer to the bottom edge of the sill, as in the Atlas model and as in the plans in Mainline Modeler magazine. This also reduces the height of the car, and filing down the bolsters reduces it more, to within a few scale inches of the prototype's 15-foot roofwalk height. For me, that's good enough for now. Remember, the rest of the stuff on even the best quality layouts is often off by more than this. I admit that the Atlas PS-1s look nice, and I was considering replacing my PS-1s with them. However, I don't like the wheelsets and the body-mounted couplers, and the Atlas design makes it difficult to switch to MT truck-mounted couplers (my layout standard). MH
In looking at the MT PS-1s, the main issue isn't underframes, it's the vertical dimension of the shell being too large. Brake detail can be made more visible via Precision Scale plastic detail parts: http://www.precisionscaleco.com/MH
What I had in mind was an underframe that's:1 - "Generic" enough to use on multiple 40' or 50' cars (vs. Hydra-Cushion, etc.)2 - plastic (less weight than metal, but easier to modify, whether to fit a specific model or to modify details);3 - accepts frame mounted couplers; and4 - bolsters that don't require trucks that overcompensate for them, e.g. BLMA
What are you willing to spend on a replacement under frame?The easiest solution is 3D printing. I need to make a couple adjustments but this is for the Athearn PS-1 cars with Hydrocushion frames.I'm doing my best to keep it around $15 in FXD and it needs add on brake detail.Jason
It depends on the model. Some are height-compressed, such as the FMC series of 50' boxcars.
The new Atlas model is superior to the MTL model in every aspect, as the reviewer on Trainboard has noted.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Likely a happy accident since the MTL car was supposed to represent the larger plate C cars with the sides compressed to compensate for the ride height...As already noted up thread...
The fact that the body is height-compressed makes it unusable in my mind. I unloaded nearly all of my 25/26/27/30000 series MTL cars years ago, and any still in my possession have been regulated permanently to the auction pile.