Originally Posted by Stefan Bürki:
As for the E94 as well as the BR44, MTH is advised by a former Märklin employee. It is a very smart move to offer such engine in a version of a preserved engine, this way you reach more customers (I would do the same). Busch doesn't have too much influence in details of MTH models and leaves technical details up to the ones who really know it.
Stefan, I agree that a preserved locomotive allows you to reach more customers -- IF the preserved loco looks the same as the "in service"ones did. If it doesn't, and MTH's green E94 doesn't, you lose a portion of the market that models the original look, in this case Epoch III. [ I of course say that a portion will be lost because the remaining market will be:
-- those that don't know the difference
-- those that know the differences but will try to ignore them
-- those that know the differences and will correct, or try to correct, them.]
Since surveys show, and other manufacturers' catalogues suggest, Epoch III is the largest market for DB models, with IV right behind, one would THINK you'd want the primary focus of the product to be there -- instead MTH with the E94 almost ignores it, the exception being the one-of-a-kind blue E94 which at least IS valid* in both "then and now" states.
In the same vein MTH could have done so much better with the BR 44 choices; how many [ in Germany ] model the wartime grey area -- and how many Francophones will go for a locomotive of limited application and not in their beloved 1/43.5 scale.
Maybe MTH is planning follow on versions, but instead of those two I would have done an Epoch II DRB version [ Wagner elephant ears ] and the oil fired version; and because if I were a manufacturer -- and I'm not, you and Mike are -- I would want to sell models that people not only want to buy one of, they want to buy more than one of, so I'd offer them in at least two running numbers each.
I had thought the Märklin person was providing only technical expertise on how to produce a model, not what to produce. If that's the case, I almost feel sorry for Busch, because MTH has such mouthwatering potential; the BR 44 choices really do seem like something out of a Märklin catalogue from the early '60's, which is most assuredly not the same customer base as Spur 0 in 2015.
But enough of my whining; what is being produced look like good models, and I'll certainly support them with my purchases where justified. It just looks like I'll be spending more with Herr Lenz and MBW than I thought....
With best regards as usual,
SZ
*Edited to add: Well, "valid" after what looks like 5 minutes or so with a Dremel and paint brush....