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There's a better chance of a named train getting made if it has a unique locomotive than a common one. Then it's about how much time and tooling the locomotive would need. The Little Joe lost out to the FP7 and I've heard that the Rock Island TAs have an issue with their wheelbase. I do think we'll see these some day but worry it will just be the Texas Rocket version.Jason
Kato rep was purported to have said the FP7 and the TA share a very close wheelbase if not exact. Someone on here mentioned that fact, but it was sometime last year and not sure what thread.
What is a TA (or did I miss something earlier)?
Kato did a skirted E5. Something similar could be done for the TA. Like I said, not optimal, but acceptable.
1954 "New" Dixieland. Ran Chicago to Miami across territory of 5 railroads that pooled resources to buy new Pullman sleepers, also carried an FEC observation, and in winter months a leased C&O sleeper-lounge obs (square end) ran mid train, in addition to the FEC obs on the tail.Could also make a case for the Georgian (Chicago to Atlanta) with L&N and NC&StL. But since it only occasionally carried an obs (the C&EI tavern-parlor), not likely to be done by anyone as a set.And for that matter, the Whipporwill, Chicago to Evansville (the contact point for L&N to southeast destinations)- only ran for a year (ended when the Georgian started running through to Chicago), for which that obs was built. Coach streamliner, with that parlor-tavern-obs tacked on the end and a full diner.
And like I think someone mentioned, they've don't skirted versions of their passenger trucks which have the details removed from the top.If any company can't figure out a way, it's Kato.Jason
And I think you meant "can" not "can't".
No offense taken Brian. I've been working on buying/building/bashing cars for several C&EI trains, so info was literally in front of me.One train that would be interesting would be a late 30s or post-war ACL (etc) Champion. Because the trains ran down the length of the East Coast, Kato could sell sets with PRR, RF&P, ACL and FEC locomotives, and extra cars might even be of interest to NH modelers for the run to Boston. Very similar/identical cars ran on the FEC "Flagler" which after running a couple years from Miami- Jacksonville morphed into a Miami-Chicago streamliner, the Dixie-Flagler, and became the "New Dixieland" in 1954. So cars could be painted in at least ACL and FEC, and the Dixie Flagler ran Jacksonville-Atlanta behind (usually Es but) F2s on occasion (did Kato already do an ACL F2?), behind "Dixies" or late model F3s on NC&StL, and streamlined Pacifics followed later on by Es and Fs on L&N and C&EI.Not to mention, several excuses in that group to tool E3s or E6s.....just sayin'
Word at the time was the sales of the Broadway were slow, and it delayed other name trains from continuing.
The (really nice) Broadway Limited came out at the height of the financial crisis of 2008. Javier