Originally Posted by Ron_S:
TRW,
Was it a marketing decision or was there plenty of interest among hobbyist and dealers for this product? Having not gotten involved in TMCC or Odyssey until recent years, I missed out on the usual buildup and runout of a new system.
Ron,
A quick history of the history of the Odyssey System... In the late 1990's, Lionel announced a brushless Odyssey Motor which featured the speed control that later became synonymous with the name. It was developed outside the company, but once it started along the path to manufacturing inside Lionel's US plant, all sorts of problems arose -- costs and lack of low-speed torque being the biggest offenders. Once the electronics guys that developed the "fly-by-wire" technology for the Odyssey Motor came to the conclusion that the same thing could be accomplished using an ordinary can motor, the Motor was killed-off and the Odyssey System was born. This occurred in early 2000.
I wasn't in on the initial "informal company discussions" that led to the product rework to create the demonstrators. As such, I really couldn't tell you if it was a genuine push to get the new Odyssey System into consumer's hands, or a solution to finding new homes for slow-moving inventory, as all the OEM SD-60's and SD-70's were already in house. It probably was a little of both. The 6-18288 Demonstrators first shipped in October of that year, only beating out regular production items featuring the System by about a month or so. Some of the cataloged items scheduled for late 2000 included the Odyssey System, even though it wasn't announced.
While the exact origins of the program are a little cloudy to me, I was responsible for the initiating the paperwork and marketing direction for the rework. This included the "product release" with all the details, conferring with a graphic designer to create the logo, working with a decoration engineer to find a spot where the overprinted logo wouldn't interfere with existing graphics on any of the five paint schemes, and collaborating with a technical writer on the new instruction sheet that would accompany each piece.
The Demonstrators were advertised to dealers with a simple letter stating what was being offered. The letter made clear that road name choice would be random. If I remember correctly, there was a limit of one per dealer, although at the end, extras were probably available if you wanted more than one. I say this because the response was something of a disappointment, as the orders/production quantities were about 30% less than the forecast.
As I mentioned earlier, only eight of the ten SD-60/SD-70 SKUs were earmarked for the conversion. The TMCC versions of the BNSF and SP were virtually sold out, so none were set aside. The TMCC version of the CSX was on the conversion list, but they were also almost complete sold out at the time of the inventory "hold." Couple that with the 30% shortfall on orders, and I'm 99% certain none of these were converted.
The reason for leaving the door open just a bit on those three SKUs is because I wasn't physically in the plant when the rework occurred. There shouldn't be any TMCC BNSF and SPs out there because I never generated the correct releases for them. (These things were well documented for inventory/accounting purposes.) And while the TMCC CSX model was, in fact, authorized, the low inventory, coupled with the order shortfall and the fact that NONE have surfaced in 15 years tells me my educated hunch is correct. Having said all that, I've seen things without easy explanations come out of the plant, so I suppose anything is possible.
The other seven definitely exist. The main reason I remember the details on this stuff is I had a good friend write me wanting to know what to look for shortly after the Demonstrators shipped, and I still have my response.
I think the two feature-levels have been explained well enough, but I'll tackle it again quickly. The TMCC versions (BN and Conrail) have correct RailSounds audio boards and ElectroCouplers. The upgraded Traditional/Conventional versions have magnetic couplers and used surplus quantity RailSounds audio boards from other projects, which is why the engine name/number call-outs don't match.
I think that covers everything. It's definitely a unique project, and I encourage you to find the remaining variations you need for your collection.
Regards,
Todd Wagner