0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I suspect the bottleneck will be the support removal and assembly (if assembled couplers are offered). Of course packaging will also take time (especially if it is a one-man or a family-type operation).
I will again mention: how many very serious N scalers will want to convert their entire fleet of rolling stock?
I am already replacing wheel sets on 400+ freight cars, why not couplers? I will need to test them first but if they work as good as they look, it will be hard to resist.
I'd be willing to do my own de-spruing and assembly, if that were a path to getting parts more quickly.Ed
Absolutely! You are one of the few, the proud, prototype modelers. But how many more are out there, besides the elite you see here on TRW? Hundreds? Thousands? I don't think I'm wrong in my assessment of the countrywide number of N scale modelers who will want to modify all of their rolling stock.
If for whatever reason I can’t produce, i.e. I get run over by a bus, any number of others could pick up the ball on this. It also opens up the possibility of very cool low volume product, i.e. Atlas Shay couplers. I’m going to suggest there isn’t a more adaptable coupler spring mechanism then mine, bar none. Having the flexibility to produce specialized variants with relatively low upfront costs will let that shine.
Time will tell how this goes… But I was honestly surprised how many people who didn't know of my existence (clearly NOT on TRW) before they came across my booth were looking to buy some on the spot. They ARE that good. Existent N scale couplers are pretty lacking, both mechanically and ascetically, and even non-hyper prototype people recognize that once they're presented with something superior. I will say, confidently, that my spring mechanism is superior to all others, which enables a truly functional scale coupler that is not only uncompromising in appearance but also operates demonstrably better. The appearance difference is very much akin to Rapido to MTL… Maybe not quite that stark, but awfully close. As my non-train oriented wife says, once you see it you can't unsee it. I didn’t see very many Rapido couplers on trains in Altoona….
@robert3985 Where are you with the cross-arms and insulators?
The product delay at this time is all about my suppliers delivering me the metal parts at scale, specifically the box adapter shims, and nothing to do with producing the coupler parts at scale.
The spring was the last supplier component to fall into place, even though I'd sourced it first.