(There cannot be much more in the BR diesel traction fleet mainstream for a competitor to take a punt on an all new 'betterer than ever than anything before'

Yet still no one takes on Hornby with the Class 43 HST power cars.Bigmet wrote:Not a great surprise, following the Brush type 2 (30/31), as both the existing models of these two have always attracted comment on significant errors in appearance: and none of Bach, Cavalex, Dapol, Hattons, Heljan, Kernow, Rails of Sheffield, Rapido, SLW, OUTCAA; have so far made a move.
(There cannot be much more in the BR diesel traction fleet mainstream for a competitor to take a punt on an all new 'betterer than ever than anything before'model surely?)
If the HST power cars were offered 'stand alone', would they prove commercially successful'? That seems the crucial question to me.centenary wrote:Yet still no one takes on Hornby with the Class 43 HST power cars.
How would producing several mark 3 toolings be any different from the multiple versions of new 37s or even class 50s produced by Bachmann and Accurascale for their latest releases?Bigmet wrote:If the HST power cars were offered 'stand alone', would they prove commercially successful'? That seems the crucial question to me.centenary wrote:Yet still no one takes on Hornby with the Class 43 HST power cars.
Personally, I believe that several mk3 toolings would be required as a minimum, so that a representative formation in a matching livery is available: and this means a large investment, which then requires the prospect of successfully 'churning' the tooling in a great many livery variations to be sure of getting into profit
Which brings us to the lurking threat of Hornby's banked research. (Let's assume that Hornby have done this.) Their past employees were able to photograph, measure and characterise any number of now 'vanished' HST vehicle forms, both configurations and liveries. Any competitor is playing catch up there, with not a lot of truly original prototype to examine; because these have been improved, refurbished and rebranded, who knows how many times?
Look at the price that locos sell for, compared to rolling stock; that's why the various competitors to Bachmann and Hornby major on traction, it's the way to most quickly get the necessary return on the tooling investment, to keep the new business viable. Especially juicy, the fad for sound, which enables a 30% premium on price for no additional assembly work: inserting a blanking plug or one of two decoder options, same job. (Notice that manufacturers are now installing speakers routinely on new traction introductions. whether or not they are to be sold as DCC ready, fitted or sound; that's the mark that this element is vanishingly cheap to do.)centenary wrote:...How would producing several mark 3 toolings be any different from the multiple versions of new 37s or even class 50s produced by Bachmann and Accurascale for their latest releases?...
I do hope you are right. I would very much like a 'current standard' model of a complete 225 (first choice) or 125 set, as operating on the ECML in the first GNER livery. But the prospects of seeing either of these produced look vanishingly slim to me.centenary wrote: ...I'm not convinced Hornby banked research should be an issue either. There are still a number of HSTs available to take scans of, even plans and photos to take info ... from...