Lots of good insight, even if we have drifted away from Lou's announcement... Let's see now, where's my soapbox.
Ukaflyer wrote:
"To start producing lower quality starter sets I guess you are looking at the kids of tomorrow. This is fine, but is it possible that most of these will be one trick wonders at **** and that most of those kids will never progress to expanding much further? How many years also will have to pass before these kids do become old enough to get more involved, could be at least 15+ and more. In reality there is also the possibility that some of these kids will move into another scale altogether."
That's always a possibility. There is also the better chance that the kids would not be interested at all in model railroading or trains as they grow older. With all the hyper-electronics kids have to play with nowadays, developing a life long interest within them in model railroading is a challenge. This point seems to escape some of our 3-rail friends.
Of the 8 or so kids on my block in the 1950's, all had trains, I was the only one to maintain an interest in them. I bought a decent Lionel starter set for my oldest nephew back in the 80's. He has no interest in trains today.
markjs wrote:
"As I mentioned in another thread, whatever Lionel develops in S-gauge, give us an option of a really dependable locomotive with simple transformer controlled forward-neutral-reverse sequencing. All the extras can be added for an additional cost. This would meet the needs of the beginner as well as those of the true modeler."
There are many who have expressed a similar opinion, but I don't think it's in Lionel's DNA to offer basic AD/DC operation in the mid to upper lines. Until Lionel actually produces a starter set for Flyer, we won't have an inkling of how they're going to approach it.
Once MTH gets up and running, I fully expect they will not do the basics either. Their S starter sets are just a likely to have their "DCS Lite" as they do with O and HO.
glocker wrote:
"They (Lionel) doesn't seem to have any problem selling starter sets in O Gauge. I don't see why it would be any different in S Scale. I'm thinking quality/detail level similar to the PE Berkshire. I think it would be easier to grow the scale if people actually could START in S Scale. Getting people to convert from HO or O seems to be more difficult to me, especially since many may have significant money tied up in their "other" scale."
Again agreement. A S starter set is going to have to be price comparable to an O gauge starter set. The next thing is they are actually going to have to be at dealers, whether online or in bricks and mortar.
Plus, there's going to have to be more than just a train and oval of track available. Accessories, buildings, more track variety need to be available. One of the hardest thing to tell someone who might be interested in S is "well, you sort of have to look around." And trying to turn them to used Flyer is a non-starter.
As far as attracting form the other scales, it can be done(that's how I got here, the process took several years) but it is difficult to overcome the "if only I didn't have so much invested in..."
I've been in S since 1985, and at times it hasn't been easy. Until now, there really hasn't been a "household" name producing S trains. AM, SHS, Desplaines/SSA are small potatoes with little to no name recognition outside of S.
Lionel wasn't really a serious player trying to break out of the Gilbert mold (there was a false start around 2003 with the Mikado's, but it never really expanded much) until recently and MTH was always saying "someday."
That's all changing now. I think Lionel's finally earned some respect with the SD70's and even the Y3's from the scale crowd, while were' still waiting on MTH.
We're at the begining of what I hope will be a second reboot of S.(The first one happened in the early 1980's) Unfortunately, it is going to take a little time. But, from basic starter sets, to detailed full featured locomotives and cars and everything else inbetween, I look forward to it all.
Rusty