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I've always wondered why Microscale makes Amtrak Phase I arrows and names, but no stripes, since they have a bunch of other styles of stripes.
I've always wondered why Microscale makes Amtrak Phase I arrows and names, but no stripes, since they have a bunch of other styles of stripes.However, there is a solution. Microscale 60-427 is marketed as Superliner Phase III stripes. They're actually Phase II stripes, and look identical to Phase I stripes. I've used quite a few of them. Just throw away the parts with the Superliner logo, and use the "Amtrak" name from the original 60-99 set. The colors match fine.
Maybe different widths of the stripes at the time?.. Cut Trim film into strips?Fusion scale graphics makes phase 1 stripes and it's 4 different sets of different widths..I used the Fusion decals for some El Cap High Level with the early high stripe.. it went fairly well.. Lots of Micro sol...
I tried the Fusion Scale stripes - once. Didn't have any luck at all. I applied them as a single piece, over the windows, like I do Microscale. When I tried to cut the windows out, the decal film actually stretched, the the entire strip peeled off, looking just like a piece of kitchen plastic wrap.They might work on a baggage car, or with a different technique, but I'll stick with Microscale. They've worked well for 40 years.K4 decals don't give me any trouble, or the old Walthers, of which I still have a LOT.
I was able to make them work - here's an old thread with pictures:https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=57628.msg793929#msg793929
And, if you find one that hasn't warped, all they really need to be excellent models today are Kato trucks. If you want the truck-mounted couplers, Katos are also the right length there.
I wonder what happened to the tooling for these?