Quote from: Len on February 14, 2021, 04:49:47 PM
Life-Like isn't exactly defunct, they, and their tooling, were bought out by Walthers. The old Life-Like "Power-Loc" track is now sold as part of their "Trainline" products. They still carry the adapter to go from "Power-Loc" track to Bachmann's "EZ-Track" for anyone wanting to expand an old Life-Like set beyond the "Power-Loc" pieces available.
Len
That's right. Additionally, some of the Life-Like scenic accents, like their figures, are now sold under the Walthers SceneMaster brand, and many of the Life-Like Proto 1000 and 2000 locomotives are now sold under the Walthers Proto brand. I'd like to also see Walthers maybe bring back the Life-Like operating accessories to be sold under the Trainline brand, as they had a bunch of neat stuff (I could see Life-Like's Power-Loc dual crossing gate upgraded with nickel-silver rails and maybe a better and more realistic paint job, like Bachmann's dual crossing gate got when it was upgraded to work with E-Z Track.)
Also, one advantage the nickel-silver Bachmann E-Z Track has over the steel track is it comes in a wide variety of lengths, radii and turnout options compared to the steel E-Z Track, so it's also a lot more suitable for tabletop layouts, like my current one. In fact, in the 1970s TYCO had their "Layout Expander System" where you could start with a train set with a basic circle of track, get their Track Layout Expander and thus enlarge it to a nice 4x8 oval with passing siding and simple blocking, and then expand it with more sidings and an inner loop. The finished plan would actually be a perfect track plan for starting out with DCC; just put the track together without any of the insulation gaps or extra terminal sections! (It could even be made with Bachmann's nickel-silver E-Z Track, knowing that a but of cutting and customization would be needed for the turnouts on the two dead-end sidings on the bottom half of the plan...
Heck, if I were building such a model train layout in the late 1970s and I was a kid or teenager, I'd go with the Layout Expander System plan, using a nice mix of Bachmann, TYCO and A.H.M. products (as Life-Like was still smaller then and didn't really get big until the 1980s when they really stole much of TYCO's thunder and took their place as Bachmann's biggest rival.)