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Guys, guys.... It's N scale. The mechanism has to work, that's priority ONE. If the calipers tell you that the proportions are off even a tiny bit, it's because the damn thing works.When you're standing next to the layout with a bourbon in your hand, and the trains are whirring around the loop at speed, three feet away without a hitch, does it really matter a rat's patoot that there's a micro millimeter of light visible between the truck and the shell if, and only if, you're laying on the layout with one eye pinched shut?If you're worried about your photographic efforts being sullied by such an afront, perhaps you should take some time and build a layout.And let's not overlook the major gaffe which is the nose herald on the WM RWB unit if you want to bellyache about something you can actually see...Sheesh.You waited 12 years for the last run of F units from Intermountain. 12 years. They aren't in a hurry to bend to your will.Lee
I'm not objecting, but there's an old saying that if you want to model EQUIPMENT you model in O scale.If you want to model a TRAIN, you go with HOIf you want to model a RAILROAD, then N is your choice.I just think that once you put the damn thing on the rails and put it to work pulling cars through a scenicked layout, all this niggling obviates itself as nonsense.They changed the pick up scheme to lower it the first tiny bit, then everyone carried on about using the soldered wires they needed to engineer to get rid of the pick up strips. Now it's something else. Some of you will never be satisfied, and to you, I humbly suggest you consider modeling in a larger scale where this type of accuracy is less likely to be compromised. Consider also, that maybe we had to wait for 10 years for this release because the poor schlubs at Intermountain were struggling desperately to design a chassis that wouldn't make a tiny percentage of their market dig out the torches and pitchforks.I may be wrong, and maybe I'm coming off wrong, but unless I miss my guess, most of you who are down in the weeds on this don't post much in the way of a functional layout. All I'm saying is stop staring at the models through a microscope, and build a diorama, a module, or a layout to run it on. Once accomplished, I can 99% guaran-damn-tee you that you won't care about a micromillimeter. Respectfully submitted,Chairman of the JFRTM Committee