Hi everyone, This is not a contest nor a debate on these two forms of locomotives, rather it is an editorial on what makes more sense commercially? I took Lionel's 2014 R-T-R and Christmas catalogs and MTH's R-T-R 2014 catalog and only counted traditional sized sets without the Polar Express. For MTH I did not include tin-plate. Lionel R-T-R had 20 steam and 12 diesel sets, their Christmas had 6 steam and 1 diesel set. MTH had 5 steam and 5 diesel sets for a total of 31 steam and 18 diesel sets. Now for the question. With a product, model trains, that will only continue to grow with the influx of youth, why so many sets having an engine that those about 40 yrs. old or younger have never seen or heard one running much less seen one period? Nostalgia is great, but you first have had to experience something before you can be nostalgic about it. Dial phones, slide rules, Turkish taffy and '57 Chevy's are items to talk about and reminisce over, but they don't mean squat to the younger generations. My thought is that steam should still be built but mostly scale with a few traditional ones to get your feet wet. Diesel on the other hand should be the majority in R-T-R sets with the SD70ACe and ES44AC leading the pack because they are two of the most modern and visible on the rails.
Please don't get me wrong thinking that I'm for or against steam or diesel. I'm not! But, at almost 65 years old, I can relate more to the diesel era than to the steam era. I would love to hear from you, but remember, there is no right or wrong here, I am just making an observation with my opinion added.