Atlas acquires select M.T.H. O scale molds

https://shop.atlasrr.com/blog.aspx

"Atlas Model Railroad Company, Inc. is proud to announce the purchase of a variety of tooling in the M.T.H. Premier O Scale Locomotive and Rolling Stock lines from M.T.H. Electric Trains of Columbia, MD. Rolling stock molds acquired include the 4-Bay Hopper, Coalporter Hopper, PS2CD High Side Hopper, 40’ PS1 Box Car, 55’ All Door Box Car, 2-Bay Centerflow Hopper, 3-Bay Centerflow Hopper , Steel Caboose , 50’ High Cube Box Car , PS2 2-Bay Hopper, 20,000 Gallon Tank Car, 50’ Airslide Hopper, Russell Plow, 8000 Gallon Tank Car, Funnel Flow Tank Car, Modern Tank Car, Crane, Crane Tender, 100 Ton Hot Metal Car, Rapid Discharge Hopper, 75’ Depressed Flat Car, Scale Test Car, 2-Bay Offset Hopper, Operating Coal and Log Dump Car, Premiere 70’ Heavyweight Passenger Cars, Premiere 70’ Streamline Passenger Cars and Amfleet Cars. Locomotive molds include the E6A/B and E8A/B, 44 Tonner, Amtrak P42 Genesis, Dash 9, SD45, F40, U30C, SD70M-2 with SD70Ace, GP38-2, SD70ACe, SD70MAC, GP40, S2, SD40-2, GP30, ES44AC&DC with ES44DC and GEVO ES-44. In addition, Atlas has also acquired the following accessories from MTH’s Railking Line: Water Column, 22 figure sets, Operating Traffic Light, Motorcycle Pack, Pedestrian Crosswalk, Floodlight Tower, Sanding Tower, Road signs, Telephone Poles and the Operating Modern Crossing Signal. Atlas has also acquired a license for the MTH Proto-Sound 3 Sound & Control Electronics Boards, which adds realistic sounds to locomotives and also allows control via DCS (Digital Command System). Part of the license will give Atlas the option to sell DCS components as well. “MTH has long been an outstanding manufacturer of model trains and we are excited to continue that legacy,” said Jarrett Haedrich, COO of Atlas. "We will be work

That’s a lot of product.

Also acquired the license for the MTH sound and DCS components.

That’s the real interesting part. I dont like DCS, but I would be happy if they managed to keep the original sounds and placed it on a NMRA DCC decoder. Besides the crew chatter, I enjoyed proto sound 3.0 sounds themselves.

I’m not a fan of how DCS was seemingly made intentionally incompatible with DCC, but at the same time I’m glad that Atlas has picked this up to give DCS users some path forward. Atlas gives some credibility to the ongoing effort to preserve some operability for DCS.