But I just looked on MRC’s website and saw no sign of any former Mantua tooling in its product pages, only the Model Power N and HO products. But I did find plenty of Model Power.
Jim R., if you look at the various HO categories, like diesel engine or freight cars, you will see "Model Power," but you will also see plenty labeled "Mantua Classics," especially under the freight car category.
These items may not be as precise or detailed as other HO products out there. BUT the prices also seem very reasonable as compared to other HO products. And just as with the 3 rail market, NOT everyone is spending top dollar for high end products. The high end products may get more attention and discussed more frequently, but I think if the truth be known, it's the more budget oriented products that keep a company in business. And as with 3-rail, once people are interested in the hobby, they can work their way up should they so chose. I know several people who have bought HO starter sets for their kids and are quite happy with them, even though they are not up to the same par as many other HO products available as far as fine detail and prototypical fidelity.
I think this products would fit in very well for a HO Lionel starter set. And with Lionel's embracing of Bluetooth technology for 3-rail products, it's an easy cross over to HO utilizing some of the same technology.
As Howard Hitchcock said in the Notch6 interview, Lionel sold a quarter of a million large scale battery operated train sets. Those may not get drooled over on this forum, but that sales number is important for Lionel. And my thought: I highly doubt the entire yearly production of Lionel's high end scale product line equals a quarter million. But that said, it's the technology that was introduced in the high end products, that has now worked its way down to Lionel starter products in the form of LionChief and LionChief Plus.
Jerry Calabrese once said that Lionel could ill-afford to ignore anyone particular product line. And I think that still holds true today. It is interesting that MRC, having recently purchased the tooling themselves, should decide to sell it. But maybe it doesn't fit in with their overall scheme, just as the Industrial Rail products no longer seem to be in line where Atlas has gone with their products.