If nothing else, I hope Bachman might look at this problem as a business opportunity. I'm not keen on having to buy $50 of parts every few years to keep a model running, but I have hundreds of dollars invested already. I'd buy a new drive-line assembly when needed. I hate the prospect of having a $250 model sitting on a shelf. I don't know how many Shays and Climaxes they have sold, likely thousands. Every one of them will need new drive-line components at some time. Mine for one, and I'll put more money in Bachman's pocket to be able to count on using the model. Just don't sell me a $250 firecracker, that once you light the fuse, it lasts as long as it lasts. I won't buy another.
The design is genious. The materials in the tiniest key components were just not up to the demand. Bachman needs to get with a manufacture, there are thousands in this country, have them manufacture an improved mechanism, and market it. Just changing the dive shafts uiversal joint yokes to brass would cure a lot, same with the truck shaft gears on the shay. The plastic components are either subject to degradation over time or can't handle the torsional stresses. You can bet GM, MoPar, and FMC make money selling replacement parts. Bachman can too. If engineered with the proper materials, not the cheapest, there is no reason a well maintained Climax should not last a modeler's lifetime, with some repair now and then.
The design is genious. The materials in the tiniest key components were just not up to the demand. Bachman needs to get with a manufacture, there are thousands in this country, have them manufacture an improved mechanism, and market it. Just changing the dive shafts uiversal joint yokes to brass would cure a lot, same with the truck shaft gears on the shay. The plastic components are either subject to degradation over time or can't handle the torsional stresses. You can bet GM, MoPar, and FMC make money selling replacement parts. Bachman can too. If engineered with the proper materials, not the cheapest, there is no reason a well maintained Climax should not last a modeler's lifetime, with some repair now and then.