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Wouldn't the roadname or road number be the thing to tell them apart?
Pretty sure I recently read a post by Cory in which he stated he was leaving Atlas to pursue other interests.
Yes, Cory has left us but the request for FMs has been noted.
Stop it with the face. Y'all had a party when I left!
Can anyone explain why the move from the Lowry design to the boxy, simplified design? Did it just cost more and the simplified design was a way to save production costs? Or did crews not like the cab overhang?
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Let me add a vote for the FM H10/44 and H12/44. Most of the Class 1's (including the main usual suspects, like the UP, Santa Fe, SP, Pennsy (a LOT of 'em), Milwaukee, NYC, B&O, etc.) had them, and they enjoyed a long life after Class 1 operation on shortlines and in industrial switching duty. There are still many of them preserved, and I think a few run on tourist railroads. I'd be happy to have them with the VO-1000 mechanism, although I think the truck center spacing is about 3 scale feet off (30' 8" for the Baldwin VO; 33' 6" for the FM). With the production of the Alco S-2 and S-4, the FM units are really the last "iconic" widely-used transition-era switcher that we don't have in N. Don't know how S-2 sales have been, but I suspect there's a similar-sized market for the FM, although you'd probably need 3 shells: one for the H/10, one for the original Lowry version of the H12, and one for the "simplified" H12. So that's a bit of a tooling complication.John C.