Skip to main content

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Originally Posted by tackindy:

Oh yes!  Atlas Trainman is the beginner type stuff with much MUCH less detail than regular Atlas.

Yes. They are dimensionally correct, but not as much "separately applied" pieces. I have a few of the "door & half", outside braced boxcars, and from three feet away, and weathered,  they look very nice in a long freight train.

Last edited by Hot Water

I prefer Trainman to Atlas' Master series - less delicate - and with detail that is ANYTHING but "low-end".

Well above RK in detailing (and size, of course).

 

Not that I'm putting down RK or MTH RS in general - I still prefer MTH scale RS, by and large.

It is, or at least used to be, well-detailed but more robust than the others. 

I have 15 Atlas AAR 70 ton 3-bay hoppers and a couple of PS2 3-bay hoppers and they are far from low end. Their level of detail is beyond Weaver Ultra Line, in my opinion, and on a par with MTH Rail King and Premier.

 

My Lionel PS2 2-bay hoppers, by the way, are my most detailed pieces of rolling stock, excluding cabooses, and that includes my Big O/Master Rolling Stock.

 

Speaking of cabooses, I don't care much for the Trainman cabooses. The older Big O and newer Master Rolling Stock extended vision cabooses are the best that I have seen made by anyone.

Trainman cars are a good value in a scale-sized car. They don't have a lot of the intricate detail of Atlas Masterline cars, but they're less expensive and not as fragile. You may need to add weight to them as well as they can sometimes be a bit light. They present well in a consist. One of their best offerings is the 62' bulkhead flat car which seems to be very popular. There have also been Trainman locomotive offerings which, in the 3-rail versions, were offered with or without TMCC while the 2-rail versions were conventional DC only (though I know of a couple of people who installed DCC or PS2).

 

Wouldn't call them low-end, though. Here's my first pair with a little weathering. Haven't decided on the loads yet.

2013-03-16 14.33.32

Attachments

Images (1)
  • 2013-03-16 14.33.32
Last edited by AGHRMatt
Originally Posted by Scott T Johnson:

So how do you identify Atlas from Trainman? I have purchased Trainman cars on ebay. Detail is good enough but the wheel and coupler performance is not to my liking.

Trainman is made by Atlas. Atlas has three lines of O gauge.  Industrial Rail which is thier entry level line. O27 scale.  Trainman, which is scale with alot of detail, and Master line, Scale and highly detailed. Trainman and Master line come in either 2R or 3R. Their couplers are the best on the market . For years you could remove the coupler and use Kadees. They also offfered adjust a Coupler , which was a Kadee style coupler that mounted to the truck assembly instead of the carbody like Kadees. This option was never offered by any othe manufacturer. In fact other than Weaver(which started offering metal trucks recently), Atlas was the only manufacturer to give you the ability to remove the lobster claw coupler . The  wheels although not required, do need a drop of lubrication oil once in a while for smooth operation . Thier entry level line, Industrial Rail trucks are just like MTH as you can not remove the lobster claw coupler.

 

 

Add Reply

Post

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

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×