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I assume that Atlas will cherry pick the models that fit into their existing lines. Some are "master" quality, some are "trainman", others might not get released by Atlas.I think most of the Lifelike/Wally split frame locos are quite good so we'll likely see most of em. As for rolling stock, only a handful of the Wally cars interest me.
Got to believe that reissuing PA's is going to be low on Atlas' list, given the other ones out there. Similarly, I wouldn't look for a LL SD7/9 ever - Atlas already does the SD7/9 series, and the LL version was plastic frame.
My worry is that since if the cars: NACC box, PD5000, ballast hoppers are too crude and Atlas will abandon them rather than spend the money to update them. The NACC box has rivets 6+ inches LONG in some places near the door. Both hoppers would need totally new end details plus a roof walkway for the PD car. The ballast car has very bulky weights and I doubt it could be remedied easily.I think the bay window caboose is on the cusp: new under frame, window glass and end rails. But they could sell. These are the same prototype that Bluflord is making.The Thrall container cars are a no-brainer. They need milled articulated joints and etched details replacing the crappy plastic. A good model would easily sell $100 at the shop.The cryo body is excellent but the under frame is garbage. That would be a fairly easy fix. I imagine they could also do a refrigerator conversion as well.The PS covered hopper won't need much to be in the Trainman line.The side dump, Greenville hopper and Russell plow could make it to the master line with little modification.Maybe we'll see the rebirth of the 50' autobox. Without warped doors this time.Does this mean Atlas will have X72s?!
I concur with this assessment. LL garnered a low reputation for fidelity and other quality issues in the early days, but in the '90s there was clearly a big effort to improve their image. However, that improvement seemed to be concentrated in their locomotive products. I have the [possibly incorrect] impression that the rolling stock was mostly left alone, that the original "lesser" tooling carried on and has subsequently outlived its usefulness.
Another interesting aspect of that. Atlas NOW has a mechanism that can support chop nosed GP7s and GP9s. They've shown their willingness to do oddball units before (SD26s, SD60Es), so we may still some day see weird stuff like Paducah Geeps from them.
What'd I miss about Deluxe? Was there a thread on that?
I'm pretty sure that is the old Roco car so it isnt in this.Mark
I think most of the Lifelike/Wally split frame locos are quite good so we'll likely see most of em.
Let's talk about duplicate entries:GP38-2. Different phase than the Atlas models. Adapt the hood and cab to the Atlas Sound equipped chassis.
Let's talk about duplicate entries:100T hopper. Will they just toss these molds? Didn't LL just copy the Atlas tooling in the first place?
If your talking about the Greenville 100 ton Aggregate hopper, no. I thought the old LL coal hopper was long gone.