I recently picked up some of the Reading boxcars from Menards, and I thought I'd share my first impressions after a days running with them.
I have a total of 20 cars, and I took them to the NPOG Open House and they served as some of the "pool" freight cars for some of the many folks that brought locomotives and needed something to pull.
Here they are one of their numerous outings at the Open House.
Initial impression is they have nice looking paint and sharp graphics. The individual numbers are a nice plus, and the fact that they were decidedly not-sequential made the consist all the more realistic. They have diecast trucks/couplers, a metal base, and the molded body. The cars don't have the level of added detail that many of the cars from other makers add, but in some ways that is a bonus. That leaves a lot less things to break during handling, they stand up well to handling. The added details include the air cylinder, brake wheel, and of course the doors/slides. The opening doors have considerable friction, but are not difficult to open. I like that as when you close all the doors, they actually remain closed as you run, not like many cars where the doors are in every state. They look great on the tracks, and I got a number of favorable comments on how nice the consist looked.
In general they performed well, a couple of observations from the running session.
First off, these cars do not have needle-point axles, and they will require lubrication right out of the box and on a regular basis. Since most of them had never been on the tracks, I was pulling them out of the box and just sticking them on the tracks. They quickly needed a trip into the back room for lubrication, then back in service. They have more rolling resistance than a car with needle-point axles, even after lubrication, so for really long consists, there will be a limit to how many some locomotives can pull, especially on grades. That being said, they were pulled around by a variety of locomotives, and nobody complained.
One minor complaint on the couplers is there is no tab to release them that you can reach while they're on the track. A hidden (or not hidden) tab like Lionel and MTH cars would be a nice plus.
The one significant issue is some of the cars have couplers that tend to pop open. Three of them were retired from running right away as they didn't make it half-way around the loop before dropping out. A fourth was later retired after a couple of hours as it also decoupled a couple of times.
In examining the couplers, I see one possible issue, that being the couplers don't have any slack when they coupler, they are tight against the next coupler. When they are coupled, there is no play, which I suspect needs to be addressed. My other brand cars all couple up with some slack, you can feel each car's coupler slack when a large consist starts moving. With the Menards cars, they pretty much started moving as a single unit, there was very little coupler slop.
Here's a shot of where I believe the problem area is with the couplers. I may try a different knuckle, or just knock a bit off the stock one to allow a little coupler slack.
I am going to take a couple of the trucks off and see if I can address the issues, I'll post back what I find. A couple of the couplers just open by pulling on them, so that's probably something to do with the latches, and I suspect I'll know more after taking them off and evaluating the latching mechanism.
My final analysis is that these are nice cars for the price, in spite of my one issue with the couplers. I would hope as Menards continues this product line that they can address the coupler problem, I know it's been discussed before. I'm sure I'll be able to solve these issues, but it would be much nicer if I could just take them out of the box, lube them, and then run them.