Randy Bezet
Doug,
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Thanks again for the information about The Atlas/Rivarossi relationship. Something else I found out about the old Atlas n structure kits. A look at Walthers 2011 N scale catalog revealed some of the Atlas/Pola molds in the hands of Faller. They are very expensive when available. It would have been great if we had? Walthers catalogs available from the early n scale days. They are so good at documenting everything that was made at the time of manufacture. ?Walthers, If my memory is correct, presented their first n scale catalog around 1976!? Thanks again! sincerely, Randy B. --- On Mon, 4/25/11, dgosha@... <dgosha@...> wrote:
From: dgosha@... <dgosha@...> Subject: Re: [a1g] Re: A1G Website: Ore Car Page Posted To: a1g@... Date: Monday, April 25, 2011, 8:08 PM ? In a message dated 4/22/11 1:11:13 AM !!!First Boot!!!, bezetr75@... writes: Wow DougI believe the last of the relationship between Atlas and Rivarossi to be the very early seventies like 1971 or 1972. The last locomotive Rivarossi made for Atlas was the Cow and Calf (SW1500 but really SW1200 with the wrong roof profile). These were probably all built within the years mentioned. The latest date on any of my Rivarossi-built Atlas passenger cars is September of 1971 for my Santa Fe combine and diner cars. The paper inserts on these have the blockier logo which was the same as the blockier Rivarossi logo they started using at the same time. The latest date on any of my Rivarossi-built Atlas freight cars is October of 1968! This is when the transistion began for Atlas to build their own freight cars here in the US as demonstrated by the latter half of some of the car series being built here and the first half, a little earlier, in Italy. You can read about this on George's site. Some cars after this were, once again, made by RoCo in Austria (the more unusual log flats, container flats, giant 96' tankers and Hi-cubes,etc) into the seventies. All of this conspires to indicate the ore cars were NOT made by Rivarossi as the 1968 date is about when the first kits appeared and the "ATLAS USA" molded into the carbody doesn't follow them being made in Italy either. I realize my data may not be completely definitive as I am basing it strictly on my own collection and my memory of what happened back then but I believe it to be fairly accurate. There was so much "mixing and matching" between European manufacturers and US importers, though, that you can never be absolutely certain. US importers grabbing any manufacturers output, no matter how small, just to be able to have something a little different than the other importers for a sales edge, was rampant. Doug [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |