0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I would've absolutely been in for a MMID one,
There was one in HO. Did Maryland Midland actually have one? As MMID came into existence sometime around the 1980s (I forget exactly when), that would be late for one of these in revenue service.
It's been crickets on this thread. Did any of you guys actually acquire the DCC sound version, and if so what do you think of it? There was a note earlier to the effect that the PIKO decoder (in another loco?) may not play well with NCE. That would kill it for this NCE user.Any more information out there?Comments appreciated, Otto K.
I have the sound version. It's not horrible, but it's definitely giving me some problems. When it goes it goes (and keeps going), but stopping and starting frequently results in a stall. And even when it's not out-and-out stalling, the diesel sound will often cut in and out. Design-wise, I really hate the wired wheel-back wipers. That's going to be a nightmare to maintain. Also, I think traction tires are generally a bad idea when it comes to 4-axle diesel switchers. I mean, it's not like you need to pull 100 cars.At this point I'm thinking that the Atlas Alco S-2 with sound is a much better model.-Mark
It is actually not all that difficult to maintain (or you would have heard a lot of grumbling about it from the modeler community over the last 50 years). Yes oily fuzz can accumulate around the wipers, but it does not have to be cleaned out often. American models such as the Bachmann 44-tonner use that style of pickup, and you still gave it an "A" rating.
There's a big difference between trucks that can easily be pulled out of the chassis (like the 44-tonner's) and trucks that are hard-wired in place.-Mark