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Couple of recent additions to the collection. Spotted by a friend of Farcebook.
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As a child I remember going past the old station site where a camping coach still stood. The station site is now a huge industrial estate and Sainsburys now occupies the coal yard site.
Lionheart made before Dapol took them over I think.Camping coaches. That is going back a bit. Nice 7mm scale wagons. Dapol?
Lionheart made before Dapol took them over I think.
Big problems with Hornby are poor quality and bad design.
They insist on retooling the big engines (whose tooling wasn't that old) and ignore the small beasties. Oxford Rail just announced a Caley Pug. For over 40 years Hornby had a rather crap rendition of this in their range. Same thing also happened with the L&Y Pug.
Hornby left their (awful) rendition of the Stanier 8F in the range too long so Bachmann grabbed it. Accurascale 'stole' the GWR 57xx off Bachmann. Rapido just announced a new 45xx pinching it (and near certainly the 4575 class) off Bachmann too.
Sadly if Hornby keep making terrible decisions they won't survive the onslaught of new, smaller manufacturers.
Running whatever you like is known as Rule 1. An awful lot of modellers do this running anything with anything without any thought to prototype operation. This is the main market manufacturers aim at.Is sad. Hornby has a lot to offer. I think the issue is their real market where they always have been good at is a generally different customer from the ones they aim to attract. It is NOT about making the most detailed finescale models which is where I believe they are getting it wrong, as to keep directly competing foe space in this area will more likely lead to dissapointment. Rather, by making more robust models and specializing in aiming them at the ones who are younger along with their families, which was always the market in the past that Hornby did best at, they recapture the areas they genuinely have always been good at.
The issue is that if we see them directly competing with others, we expect the best from them, but the best pushes them into areas that the bulk of their customers can't afford... And this is what has been going wrong. If they re-capture the segment they used to have, I genuinely believe they will do well which is a very different concept to how you and many others view it... But take a look at the bulk of customers buying Hornby. They go in and buy what looks nice. They are not buying based on it being a specific class of loco that ran on a specific railway. They are buying based on "I like that colour!" which is a totally different type of customer compared to the customers that buy other brands. (Someone on another site mentioned this, and I have to agree that he is right. If Hornby recognize this, they could save themselves).
Running whatever you like is known as Rule 1. An awful lot of modellers do this running anything with anything without any thought to prototype operation. This is the main market manufacturers aim at.
But there's a big hole. Rolling stock to go with these beautiful, often pre grouping, locos. Making accurate coaches for every pre group company is an impossibility.
The late Hattons came up with something that caused the rivet counters (people who want everything exactly as per prototype) to start frothing at the mouth in fury. High quality 4 and 6 wheel generic coaches in their Genesis range.
Within the last few weeks another range of generic bogie coaches finally came out. Rapido's Evolution range.
Now there's two ranges of brightly coloured, beautifully livered coaches that can go with anything.
Might consider , on the topic of Hornby sales, that it might be goid to draw new people kids, whatever ? by developing a intro model railway set . At a much cheaper price point.
New RR modelers need to have a affordable starting point, to develop interest , I think .
Parents often consider childs toxs as a after thought .And budgets are tight these days. Perhaps new parents of children may need a easy to decide on purchase.
They are OO and yes, I'd be very interested in O gauge versions which might happen some day. Slaters do a number of O gauge plastic coach and wagon kits. There are also the ex Ian Kirk kits. which appear occasionally.
Slaters have an extensive range of O gauge wheelsets. Peco also have wagon wheelsets both from their own, old, range of products and their purchase of Parkside's O/OO tooling a while back.Where do you buy wagon and coach wheels? Or is it easier to make them?