I have four Spectra: two consolidations, a ten wheeler and a Richmond 4-4-0. The first two consolidations were fine out of the box. The ten wheeler had a bad wire connection inside the tender. I repaired it myself. The 4-4-0 pilot truck kept riding up on the rails. I noticed the ten wheeler had the same pilot truck and a load spring to hold it down. The 4-4-0 was missing the load spring, and it did not appear on the assembly drawing. I fabricated one and installed it with no further problems.
Since model railroading is largely a hands-on fabrication hobby, I would have to say a fair percentage of problems never reach the manufacturer. Many of us take the process one large step further by significantly modifying our new purchases. Fifty years ago, a large percentage of locomotive models were kits. Ya’ gotta’ wonder how many kits never turned a lap on the layout, and how many of these the manufacturer ever heard about. I don’t mind handling problems within my capability, but pity the person who depends on trouble-free, out-of-the-box operation.
Today the marvel is not how the manufacturers do it so well, it’s how they manage to do it at all.
Regards,
Bob
Since model railroading is largely a hands-on fabrication hobby, I would have to say a fair percentage of problems never reach the manufacturer. Many of us take the process one large step further by significantly modifying our new purchases. Fifty years ago, a large percentage of locomotive models were kits. Ya’ gotta’ wonder how many kits never turned a lap on the layout, and how many of these the manufacturer ever heard about. I don’t mind handling problems within my capability, but pity the person who depends on trouble-free, out-of-the-box operation.
Today the marvel is not how the manufacturers do it so well, it’s how they manage to do it at all.
Regards,
Bob