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But who wants to buy factory-painted gondolas that look like junk cause they appear to have been dipped in cans of Krylon enamel before they were pad-printed? Nobody wants to spend their hard-earned and limited hobby dollars on stuff that has been half-assed.
I am surprised that there has not been more nineteenth century equipment from them. The box type cars, the caboose and the passenger cars that they do look nice. They do not seem to slather the paint onto the nineteenth century rolling stock.There were tank cars and hopper-bottom gondolas in the nineteenth century. In fact, I was surprised to learn that the tank car had taken its modern shape by the 1860s. They were built from iron, and, in some cases, wood but they were out there.The two locomotives that Athearn offers are also nicely done. In fact, the colorful paint schemes that it initially offered on the 2-8-0 were more attractive than the colorful paint schemes that MDC had offered. The MDC colorful schemes were good, as it was. Athearn did not slather on the paint onto any of the power, either. Two common nineteenth century locomotives that it is missing are the eight and ten wheeler.No one else has offered any nineteenth century equipment on the scale that the Athearn has. B-mann has its few pieces, the eight-wheeler recently had some improvements, but it does have a way to go. Atlas did offer the Micro-Ace 2-6-0, but nothing to run with it. The MP eight-wheeler and mogul are useful only for the very late nineteenth century; certainly no earlier than 1896.When the Bachpersonn open sided excursion cars appear, the Athearn 2-8-0s with the colorful schemes will be even better power for an excursion train to operate on a modern-era pike. Athearn may have to revive them. Or...................>>****Cue up dark clouds, lightning bolts and thunder****<<.............offer them in unlettered with various colorful paint schemes (much as did Atlas with the Micro-Ace mogul) .....................
High dollar items will continue to sell to the people who have the money, but lower priced items may be "put-off". BMW 8 Series cars are having a record sales year at $100,000 each, but GM is 180 days from bankruptcy. Middle class homes are in foreclosure, but multi-million dollar houses sell as soon as they hit the market. Things are a bit strange.
It's because the people who have a lot of money tend to have a lot of money regardless of how the economy is performing, unless they take a bath when the stock market tanks. If you're pulling down six figures a year, a 50-cent per gallon increase in fuel costs doesn't mean a thing. However, that same thing really hurts if you're making minimum wage.