"As some have implied, in no way was this decision meant to be anything more than a business decision. "
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . LIONEL
Consumers make business decisions, too. We call it spending money prudently on products that we can count on and companies that understand we consumers also have lots of money riding on their decisions. If we have purchased a company's products which will eventually need maintenance or parts that require technological replacement, we should be able to count on those companies to recognize that consumers have a considerable investment at stake. I buy the products that excel in the marketplace for a price that is consistent with excellence. If a company insists on demonstrating that their bottom line is all that counts, I'm all ears. For the record, my comments are absolutely not aimed at Lionel alone. I have purchased products from other companies and have heard repair technicians say, "Sorry, I cannot get that board" or "your only option is to upgrade to this" or "switch operating systems."
I may name my shelves Key West. I have lots of shelf queens.
Just sayin'
Gonna send you a bill, Elliot, I just spit coffee all over the front of my shirt I was laughing so hard at the last line........
On a more serious note, I agree with you that consumers make decisions, too. With toy trains we don't necessarily have the kind of choices we have elsewhere (for example, there are certain car companies I will never, ever buy their products again, for a number of reasons), but we can make choices. If a company charges a lot of money for its equipment and then down the road makes it so you can't repair it, it simply isn't worth buying given the cost of it. If a toaster breaks or a microwave breaks we have come to the point in time where they are cheap enough, you don't care it can't be fixed, that is different than shelling out 1500 bucks on an engine and then a couple of years later, a board goes and you can't get it repaired because the parts aren't available. US manufacturers used to do something similar, with cars and appliances they built in planned obsolescence with the idea that that would mean more sales in the near future......what they didn't count on was that other manufacturers weren't going to play the game, and they paid a steep price for it (these days, sadly, in appliances it has gone the other way again, they are much like expensive toy train engines, they are expensive and break down within 5 years and aren't worth fixing or can't be).
Without talking about this specific event, there is something known as "good will" that companies forget in their 'the bottom line means everything'. That good will is a very real accounting term and is part of the value of a company, and while it doesn't show to your investors or on a 10k, it can end up hurting the bottom line. I can name major companies that took a mighty fall because of good will loss. If people perceive Lionel's management as simply trying to sell them as much as possible and not caring about what happens down the road a bit, or if they perceive they are shutting out a segment of the market because they want them to buy only new stuff, or basically to say "we don't care, that doesn't bring us new sales", it is going to backfire. It is something the car industry figured out finally, that engineering a car that lasted didn't necessarily mean sacrificing sales, that they could get people to buy new cars by making the newer cars have things the older ones didn't, and that having cars that fell apart or were crappy rather than made people buy new cars, made them buy cars from someone else.
If TMCC is truly 'obsolete technology', then why not license it to someone else to support, both for upgrades and supplying boards? The people who buy legacy engines are not going to not buy them and buy let's say a Bachman engine with TMCC on it, that market has basically zero impact on what Lionel can sell (it would be different if they offered TMCC on their own engines). Likewise, LC+ is not a competitor to TMCC.
Anyway, as others have said it is speculation at this point, I just hope that they come up with an equitable solution with all this, especially as I have some engines I may want to upgrade eventually. At this point there is no way to know what Lionel is going to do, it could be they can't find a third party firm to take over the ERR business (or they aren't really trying for the cynical), and eventually say if you want command control buy legacy or LC+ engines from us, it could be they are going to come up with something that allows upgrading to a new platform that allows it, unlike legacy (or at least that is the impression I get, that Lionel doesn't offer legacy upgrade because it is too difficult to support....).