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1: There are also models of German "Alligator" (class E93) and a shorter, non-articulated class 144 loco. 2: It seems to me that this thread really belongs the Crew Lounge (since it is not scale specific). Or maybe back in the Prototype section since it is about boxcab electrics in general. Not an easy choice.
1: You mean like this? (eBay listing, not mine...)2: That's what I thought... Mark in Oregon
Also, this one looks to me more like an early Arnold model. Mine is a Minitrix, and it has more details and better pantographs.
Probably these: http://davidksmith.com/birth-of-n/sommerfeldt.htm
I suspect that Sommerfeldt ... got theirs from the same supplier as the other manufacturers.
???
Maybe they outsourced their pantograph manufacturing? Or do you know foe sure that they actually made them all in-house. I wrote:I suspect that Sommerfeldt either supplied pantographs to most of the European model manufacturers, or got theirs from the same supplier as the other manufacturers.
Displeased with the state of model catenary (overhead wire) at the time, he developed his own line of more realistic products in his garage. When Trix equipped an E-94 with Sommerfeldt pantographs, it proved so popular that other companies began ordering them. In 1969, a new factory was built in Hattenhofen, where around a dozen employees worked—a number that nearly doubled in just a year or two. Today the company continues to manufacture the same catenary products it has for over 65 years.
Yes, like that one, but mine is a greenish-gray color. Also, this one looks to me more like an early Arnold model. Mine is a Minitrix, and it has more details and better pantographs.
Indeed: According to the eBay listing, it is an Arnold #0321. I can only guess that since the model number starts with a "0", that means it's an early release...(?)Mark in (warm today) Oregon