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Among the larger manufacturers, MTL and Atlas are strongly committed to N. MTL in particular has over 100 bodystyles, releases multiple models monthly, and more often than not the bodystyles introduced in this century have been fully prototypical with accurate proportions and accurate ride height. And they still are dealing with the aftermath of a natural disaster that decimated their workforce.
I think Doug was referring to Rapido staff and not N scale in general. I'm pretty sure the Jeremy is their only N scaler and I wonder how much pull he has with his position in the company after looking through their staff about us bio's. Speaking of the bio's there is a nice tribute to Mike at the end and he holds the title N Scale Legend.
I'm old school enough that I just want stuff that doesn't derail and runs. The Intermountain ATSF reefers were fine with me, didn't need a different interpretation. Again, duplicating the market and emptying the wallet again, swallow hard. If I can't see the detail when it's on the track, don't bother, it just makes it more expensive to produce.
And having the couplers function.
Yes, thank you that is exactly right...I meant a champion as in someone within the organization who is passionate about N that is willing to put in the extra work and really fight for cycles to get projects moved forward.I certainly agree there are many manufacturers that are pushing N-scale forward in big ways. Definitely was not my intention to reference the entire industry.
Preach it!I like a well detailed item as well, but at some point, it's just becomes overkill.
My beef is with thinking that the SP waffle side boxcar or the aATSF mechanical reefer were better mass market ideas than the SP B50 boxcars.Yes the SP waffle boxes had a ton of schemes, but they are such an uncommon car that even if you model SP in Oregon in the 70's or 80's you probably only need a couple. ATSF was out of the reefer business by the 80's, so anyone from then on can only use them as sheds bought by farmers after they were retired.
One of the core problems is HO guys only see N scale at shows on modular layouts, were anything goes as far as equipment and think N scalers are just running little tinplate trains. I'm sure that this thinking affects the Rapido staff as well.
I don't care how esoteric the model is. If the model is made well and operates well, it is more likely it will sell well enough for the manufacturer to not get hurt. Maybe the barrel ore car is an exception. But everything else they've done/announced would sell or would have sold just fine if the quality thresholds are/were met. One reason being, regarding the freight equipment in particular — if the prototype operated in your era, you're inclined to buy at least one, because it is conceivable that at least one example of the prototype could wander into the region you model on any given day. I have no problem buying one example of an esoteric model if it ran in my era. The ATSF mechanical reefer is a perfect example. I could justify one visiting New England with no issue, as much as I can justify any one of the numerous PFE reefers that have been released in N. Just as I can justify any Canadian-built prototype with no issue. The Prairie Shadows gondolas (tooled by Rapido ironically) are well crafted, and I have three of them counting the McGrattan tribute car. I'd more than welcome a model of the Canadian slab side covered hopper, either variation, or both variations. They actually did run on the New Haven regularly, but I'd buy at least one model regardless — if it was well made.Quality is the most important attribute, even more so than the prototype chosen.
Quality is the most important attribute, even more so than the prototype chosen.