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Waiting almost 7 years for an Atlas RS-3
This has to be a record. It has been almost 7 years.
I am still waiting for Atlas to ship the Lehigh & Hudson River RS-3. I ordered it when it was originally announced in Jan.2010 and they re-announced it in Sept.2012. I know Atlas was blind-sided by their contract manufacture that caused big time delays. At last fall’s York Meet, they told me it was in production. As of today their estimated ship date is 4th quarter 2015, but no container or Atlas shipping date.  I am hoping it arrives soon.

Actually it has been almost 6 years, although it seems longer.

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Last edited by Richard E
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How long is long enough to wait? I'm sorry but 7 years is ridiculous. I am sure that there are people who ordered this and have died in the interim time span. Honestly I would have forgotten or moved on in that span. How many hobby shops have closed since then.

I waited 5 years for some MTH passenger cars so I do know this feeling.

This sort of thing seems to only be ok in this hobby because of how many other things come out to distract a person over that span but if a person was more disciplined in purchaces that would be too long to wait.

I'm very new to this hobby but have heard or read several similar stories about delays and cancellations from vendors.  Having owned my own business (restaurant) for 17 years I am dumbfounded by any business being able to get away with such tactics.  I guess it comes from being one of a very few vendors for the product and having a devoted audience.  For me personally I wouldn't tolerate that level of service from a vendor and I'm surprised that anyone would, but that's their concern.   I'll just satisfy myself with what is available in on-hand inventories or used equipment and save myself the aggravation.

Soo Nut posted:

The Atlas RS3 - RSD4 is oversized  compaired to plans.

Agreed.  However, after dressing 'em up with a few add-on details and some weathering, they look pretty good to me.  Then again, I'm only a "partial" rivet counter...I tend to have problems after I get to ten.

Maybe Lionel will put the former Weaver RS3 tooling to good use and bring out a true scale-sized and highly-detailed Legacy version of this iconic locomotive.

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Last edited by CNJ #1601
joeyA posted:

I'm right there with you, Richard!  I've been waiting for the blue CNJ version since the original 2010 announcement.  I'm on my third dealer, too, as a lot has happened in our hobby since I placed the initial pre-order!

 

The first dealer I ordered from went out of business. The next dealer informed me his wholesaler went out of business, But he assured me he found an other supplier.

I don't understand the math here. If it was announced in January 2010 that would make it 5 years 11 months to this point. Obviously, it's not going to show up before January so you can say 6 years but where did that extra year come in? I agree it's still a long time to wait for a locomotive but we all only have two choices in these situations and that is wait for the item to be made or make it ourselves. 

I would guess that The Lehigh and Hudson is not a big seller when it comes to road names so I don't blame you for waiting. I would too, and I would be happy that an obscure road name like that didn't get cancelled. If Mr.Muffin says it's up next that we be good enough for me. Post pictures when you get it. 

41woodie posted:

I'm very new to this hobby but have heard or read several similar stories about delays and cancellations from vendors.  Having owned my own business (restaurant) for 17 years I am dumbfounded by any business being able to get away with such tactics.  I guess it comes from being one of a very few vendors for the product and having a devoted audience.  For me personally I wouldn't tolerate that level of service from a vendor and I'm surprised that anyone would, but that's their concern.   I'll just satisfy myself with what is available in on-hand inventories or used equipment and save myself the aggravation.

Atlas has a good reputation within the hobby. I's not their fault their manufactured blind-sided them. I am surprised and grateful that they still maintained to stay in business.

Richard E posted:
Strummer posted:

Guess you could have purchased a Weaver RS-3, probably a better model anyway...

Mark in Oregon

I could have, but it was the Lehigh & Hudson River road name that I wanted.

It's not a very complicated paint scheme - I think I would have gotten another RS and painted and lettered it.

Atlas has a good reputation within the hobby. I's not their fault their manufactured blind-sided them. I am surprised and grateful that they still maintained to stay in business.

I am sorry but I will have to differ on this comment. One to two years delay for product I would agree... maybe three, but for a mfg they should be worried after two years out without new product and  have a contingency plan or two just in cases such as this. since we are down to the "Big 4" in O gauge Mfg, I am sure the comment- "where would our customers go" has set in some managers minds. One should NEVER place all their eggs in one basket. MTH and Lionel have seem to have followed this train of thought.

Last edited by prrhorseshoecurve
breezinup posted:
Richard E posted:
Strummer posted:

Guess you could have purchased a Weaver RS-3, probably a better model anyway...

Mark in Oregon

I could have, but it was the Lehigh & Hudson River road name that I wanted.

It's not a very complicated paint scheme - I think I would have gotten another RS and painted and lettered it.

I could have, but I have too many other unfinished projects.

Gentlemen,

    If you want a certain engine and you have other toys to keep you happy, let your order stand, me I am guilty of longevity waiting myself, always wanted Lionel to engineer a true Remote Control 263E Work Train, I waited from the time I was 5 or 6 till I was over 50 years old for that Train and Lionel never did make it, MTH finally made a P2 for me, and I am grateful.  I ordered it right away.   With the DCS I can run both my Conventional and my P2 263E engines from remote control, even at the same time, on the same track if I so choose.  Good things come to those who wait.

PCRR/Dave

DL&W Pete posted:
Richard E posted:
Strummer posted:

Guess you could have purchased a Weaver RS-3, probably a better model anyway...

Mark in Oregon

I could have, but it was the Lehigh & Hudson River road name that I wanted.

weaver did make a Lehigh & Hudson river RS-3 back in 2006-2007

I don't remember the Lehigh & Hudson River, but they did a Lehigh & New England.

Weaver did offer the Lehigh & Hudson River paint scheme and it appeared in the Spring 2010 catalog.  I was going to get one but wanted the Atlas instead and they were all sold out by the time it became apparent the Atlas model wasn't going to get here soon.   I attempted to paste the Weaver catalog picture here:  

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  • blobid0: Weaver U5566 - Lehigh & Hudson River RS-3

Bear in mind O scale has never been the main part of Atlas Mfg, HO and N gauge are their core business , at one time O scale may have represented a larger share of their business than it does today. Nowhere do their production numbers come close to MTH and Lionel but in recent years they have shown much improvement in delivery of the O scale rolling stock it would appear they are finally getting motive power production on track I believe the next 6 months will show if this is true. JMO

hibar posted:

Bear in mind O scale has never been the main part of Atlas Mfg, HO and N gauge are their core business , at one time O scale may have represented a larger share of their business than it does today. Nowhere do their production numbers come close to MTH and Lionel but in recent years they have shown much improvement in delivery of the O scale rolling stock it would appear they are finally getting motive power production on track I believe the next 6 months will show if this is true. JMO

Atlas has trouble getting HO & N products to market as well. Unfortunately, this can happen when you do not do your own manufacturing.

It shows the problem with contract manufacturing and how despite all the blah blah how there are  are SLA's protecting companies and so forth, the reality is that basically a manufacturer can only hope that the manufacturer actually makes what they want, when they want it, and that when it is made it is not junk. Atlas is kind of lucky they are in a niche market, if they were in something mainstream this likely would put them out of business.

 

I don't think Atlas is faultless, if they were blindsided by their manufacturer it means that they allowed this to happen, they probably did something like choose the cheapest supplier and didn't fully vet the company and its management out (kind of hard in China especially, when the manufacturers often literally pop up overnight), and didn't maintain proper oversight of what the factory was doing; they probably saved themselves some money, and now they are paying the price for it, they left themselves vulnerable. They aren't the only company to find this out and won't be the last, either.

Novel Idea....put a project into research & development, work out the bugs, put it into production, when it arrives in your warehouse advertise it and ship it to the happy customer.  Having said that, if you are alright with the delays more power to you, hope you enjoy the engine when it arrives.  I was just speaking for myself.

Last edited by 41woodie

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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