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(Attachment Link) Obviously they don't have road specific details. In fact 3 out of 4 of the numbers are incorrect for the phase used. But it looks good. Details seem to be about the same level as Kato. I have one on pre-order for the article.
My lousy iPhone photo at least illustrates the hood width difference between the Kato and ScaleTrains 40-2: (Attachment Link)
One could easily find either of those two alternatives to be acceptable if you've been around long enough to know that this is what once passed for a model of an SD40-2.
Here's what gets me. I get it that SD40-2s are hugely popular, but if you are manufacturing a model that is readily available from numerous manufacturers then why produce the same paint schemes that everyone and yourself have already done to death?
That's actually a really good point.And if this is the start of an era of decent models being available at multiple price points, I'd say that's a positive for our hobby.But who would've ever thought a Kato model would be the "bargain option"?
Not me. Am I wrong in thinking if it were not for Kato we wouldn't be having this conversation. I remember gawking the CR GP38-2 in the hobby shop window when it arrived. Now look at where N scale is.
The screwless 'shock absorber' design with the sprung middle axle has had some issues. People made too much of the trucks popping out in shipment (just pop 'em back in) but the fragile wheel wiper and the finer tooth gears are not as durable. BTW has anyone else noticed (okay I bet peteski has) that those pieces are copper on Kato and brass on Atlas and Intermountain? Probably another reason Kato runs better.
No amount of add on details will fix the hood width, too deep sills, or squinty number boards. It's one thing to add road specific details. But to fix the ways these fall short of their modern competition requires a complete rebuild.
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Good point. As far as N scale locomotives go, Kato may well be the giant upon whose shoulders the new manufacturers stand. I remember fondly how well my Kato diesels and GG1s ran. And that Kato 2-8-2...now that set the bar for N scale steam performance.
You know, the hood width stuff for N scale diesels is a real rivet counting 3 foot rule violation. Take this picture:Maybe I need more coffee or my monitor isn't that good, but I don't see a difference that matters. I mean we are griping about millimeters here guys. ...
No doubt there at all. But Kato's (originally Sekisui Kinzoku) innovation in operability was established for US N scale models in 1967 with Jim Conway's importing the PA-1. And the basic mechanism has been refined since, and copied by others, ad infinitum. This hobby niche was made on Kato's superior design.But in regards to model fidelity, which was fabulously good for 1967... well... Kato has barely moved the needle on that front in the intervening years, reissuing model after model using tooling from the 1980s. Yes, perfectly acceptable when the "three-foot rule" is invoked, but the relative newcomers have been raising that bar. We now have RTR modeling quality that almost invites the unblinking eye of close-up photography. You HO'ers... take that! Many of us serious devotees value model fidelity. The operating performance nut was cracked a long time ago. We can, thankfully, now have our cake and eat it, too.I find the ScaleTrains SD40-2 a fine-looking and fine-operating addition to the fleet. Same for every other ScaleTrains loco on my pike. Same goes for BLI's recent offering, with the decoder caveat. The Kato SD40-2 will be a superb runner, absolutely, but at this late date becomes something of a backgrounder in your diesel shop scene.
Mike,, if you are serious operator expect all those fine added-on details disappearing from those models. You even mentioned that the fine lines on the trucks are going too far. Again, do you want a museum-quality model, or an "operators model"? I know, you want the best of both worlds. As I mentioned elsewhere Kato uses no glue anywhere on their models. The molding precision and parts engineering are so tight that no glue is needed.No-glue assembly is probably the main reason they do not have things like sunshades or free standing grabs or steps. All those details also require labor (and the price goes up). And if you look really closely at your super-detailed Scale Trains model, you will see glue stains. That is the price to pay for all those details being applied at an assembly line, not by some individual applying them carefully on their hobby workbench.To me it is a difficult balance between the level of detail and robustness.