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I cannot say this applied to the Mack license that Athearn had, but some licensing agreements require the destruction of the tooling if the license is not renewed. Perhaps as a way to keep from destroying the tooling, Athearn decided to sell it to a company that does have an active Mack license, even if that company is only producing Mack truck models in scales larger than 1:160.Remember that Athearn also had a license to produce several different John Deere tractors. When it became public knowledge that the JD license was going to expire, I recall that the remaining unsold stock of John Deere tractors was very heavily discounted, and sold out quickly. I have no idea if Athearn was able to save the tooling or not.
Would rather see a GP40X than a CF7.
I wouldn't shortchange the legal malevolence of John Deere. They are (severely) misusing the DMCA to sue farmers repairing implements they may own or lease, claiming that doing so violates the licensing of the operating software in the various control modules. It's like Monsanto (now Bayer) with their team army of lawyers suing farmers if their fields had genetic markers from patented varieties that may have been cross-pollinated from adjacent plots.