The Atlas Model Railroad Company Blog

All the news fit to print from the Atlas Model Railroad Company

Atlas Acquires Custom Signals

For Immediate Release

 

December 21, 2023

Hillside, NJ- 

Atlas Model Railroad Co Inc, Hillside, NJ announced today the acquisition of Custom Signals of Poughkeepsie, NY. Custom Signals specialized in O scale signal products and building signal systems for layouts.


The asset purchase agreement, finalized on Friday, December 15th, includes in part, the balance of inventory, the Track/Signal Configuration Library, and all Custom Signals tools, comprising molds, dies, designs, plans, and diagrams for all current and proposed products.

Paul Graf, Atlas CEO said, “This purchase will allow the expansion of our signal line from a basic Automatic Block Signaling system (ABS) to a full Absolute Permissive Block Signaling system (APB).  It will grow our N and HO signal products, and offer all customers valuable assistance in building track layouts using the Atlas All Scales Signal System.”

Atlas currently offers an extensive line of products in the Atlas All Scales Signal System. The line was first introduced in the early 2000s while working with Terry Christopher from Custom Signals.  It was revamped in 2019 with an additional line of products for use in N, HO & O scales.  With this purchase we now have a full line of products for use in N, HO and O scales.

These easy-to-install signals and signal system now make it possible to incorporate the reality of the prototype into your scale modeling experience. 

To remain updated on all Atlas products and special announcements, sign up for the Atlas Insider Email at https://shop.atlasrr.com

 

Atlas 100th Anniversary Locomotive Wrap Photo Contest!

Atlas 100th Anniversary Locomotive Wrap Photo Contest!


The Atlas 100th Anniversary wrap locomotive is now out on the rails and we want to see your photos of it in action! There are two easy ways to enter this contest on Facebook and Instagram, see the submission rules below. All acceptable submissions will be reviewed by a panel of Atlas employees to determine the contest winners. The contest concludes January 6th, 2024. Winners will be announced live on January 9th, 2024. Upon contest completion, all submissions will be posted within a special photo album on our Facebook page. We look forward to seeing all of your submissions! Please review the rules and terms of the contest before entering.

Contest prizes consist of:

1st place: HO or N scale Atlas Gold ALP-45DP/Multi-level Set NJ Transit/Atlas 100th Anniversary (ALP-45DP #4503, Cab Car #7056, Trailer #7583)

2nd place: HO or N scale Atlas Master Gold ALP-45DP NJ Transit / Atlas 100th Anniversary #4503

3rd place: HO or N scale Atlas Master Silver ALP-45DP NJ Transit / Atlas 100th Anniversary #4503

Facebook Submission Rules -

1) Like and follow the Atlas Facebook Page.
2) Photo submissions must include the Atlas 100th Anniversary Wrap Locomotive NJT #4503.
3) Submit photo entry within the comment section of this post.
4) Practice safe and considerate railfanning (absolutely no trespassing and keep a safe distance from the train).

Instagram Submission Rules -

1) Like and follow the Atlas Instagram.
2) Photo submissions must include the Atlas 100th Anniversary Wrap Locomotive NJT #4503.
3) Tag @atlasmodelrailroadco and use hashtag #atlas100 in your post to enter.
4) Practice safe and considerate railfanning (absolutely no trespassing and keep a safe distance from the train).

Atlas 100th Anniversary Locomotive Wrap Photo Contest terms: this promotion is in no way sponsored, endorsed, administered by, or associated with Meta. All entries become available for promotional reuse for Atlas Model Railroad Company Inc. who may publish or cause to be published any of the entries received. Prizes will only be sent to postal addresses within the United States. Atlas Model Railroad Company Inc. and NJ Transit employees are ineligible to win prizes, although submissions are still welcome.

Atlas Marks 100 Years with the Unveiling of NJ TRANSIT 4503 Wrapped in an Anniversary Paint Scheme

Atlas Marks 100 Years with the Unveiling of NJ TRANSIT 4503 Wrapped in an Anniversary Paint Scheme

atlas 100 logo

For Immediate Release

November 17, 2023

Hillside, NJ- To commemorate the 100th anniversary of Atlas in 2024, we have partnered with NJ TRANSIT to wrap a prototype locomotive with a brand new paint scheme celebrating 100 years of Atlas. NJ TRANSIT #4503 has been wrapped with commemorative 100th anniversary artwork that was designed in-house at Atlas and will be placed in service on the NJ TRANSIT Raritan Valley Line effective November 17th, 2023.  An official unveiling and press event will be held in New Jersey’s Newark Penn Station on Friday, December 1st at 12:30 PM.  Atlas company officers, employees and NJ TRANSIT leadership will be present for this momentous occasion. 

When the newly wrapped NJ TRANSIT #4503 enters service, Atlas will be holding a photography contest for eagle-eyed train enthusiasts who spot and photograph this locomotive traversing the NJ TRANSIT rails.  Details of the contest will be announced soon, so stay tuned to the Atlas website and social media sites for more information. 

Last month, Atlas announced a replica model of this commemorative ALP-45DP locomotive along with Bombardier passenger car models decorated in special 100th anniversary paint schemes that celebrate our company’s long history. The offering includes ALP-45DP locomotives, cab cars, multi-level trailers and multi-level trailers with toilets.  The Founders Car multilevel trailer features the years Atlas has been in operation and the names of the founders, Stephan J. Schaffan Sr. and Stephan J. Schaffan Jr.  The cab car features a thank you to our loyal customers and the toilet car is adorned with a cartoon drawing from the Atlas archives of Steve Jr.  Locomotives are available for separate sale and in 3-packs while the cab car and trailers are only sold in 3-packs.  While these models are no longer offered for guaranteed pre-order, orders can still be placed and will be fulfilled while supplies remain. 

A copy of the announcements can be downloaded by using the link below:
http://download.atlasrr.com/1023MCPDF/ASMC_100AnniversaryMSRPOnly.pdf

Atlas Tool Company was founded by Stephan Schaffan Sr. in 1924 as a general machine shop in a small garage at 330 Waverly Avenue in Newark, New Jersey. His son, Stephan Schaffan Jr. joined him in the business in 1933. As a frequent visitor to the local hobby shop, he would often ask the owner if there was anything he could do to earn some extra spending money. Tired of listening to his requests, the hobby-store owner threw some model railroad track parts his way and said, “Here, see if you can improve on this”.  In those days, railroad modelers had to assemble and build everything from scratch. Steve Jr. created a “switch kit” which sold so well, that the entire family worked on them in the basement at night, while doing business as usual in the machine shop during the day.

Steve Jr.’s accomplishments include engineering the stapling of rail to fiber track, inventing the first practical rail joiner and pre-assembled turnouts and flexible track—all of which helped to popularize model railroading and assisted in the creation of a mass-market hobby. As the business grew, their manufacturing needs went beyond what the small garage could provide, so in 1947 Steve and his father had the first factory built in Hillside, New Jersey at 413 Florence Avenue. On September 30th, 1949, Atlas Tool Company Inc. was officially incorporated as a New Jersey company.

Over time, Atlas has expanded their product line to include more than just track. At your local hobby store you can pick up Atlas track, locomotives, freight cars, signals, lighting and more in HO, N, O and even Z scale.

To remain updated on all Atlas products and special announcements, sign up for the Atlas Insider Email at https://shop.atlasrr.com

atlas 100 loco

atlas 100 loco 2

Atlas O Scale Multi-Max Production Change

The Atlas O Multi-Max represents one of our most ambitious and challenging O scale rolling stock models to date. Due to the difficulties that Atlas encountered during the design of the high quality end door details, Atlas found it necessary to have the doors glued shut. This was not an easy decision, but multiple engineers and test shipments all indicated that to maintain the integrity of this model, without shipping or handling damage, secured doors were our best option. To prevent damage, please do not attempt to open them. Thank you for your understanding and support. 

Atlas O

Wai Shing Ting, Distinguished Icon of Model Railroading

Wai Shing Ting, who built the largest model railroad manufacturing company in the world passed away Friday, March 24, age 88, in Virginia.  I met Wai Shing more than 30 years ago, and approximately 15 years ago I asked my brother Ken, a writer, to interview Wai Shing for an article to shed some light on this modest, unassuming man who built model railroad products enjoyed by millions of people throughout the world. Read the article here.

Wai Shing was the epitome of an honest, fair-minded and visionary businessman who also happened to be an extraordinary engineer. His model railroad company customers ranged from the largest to the smallest, and everywhere in-between. Regardless of size, he treated all with the same genuine respect. 

Although the Sanda Kan he built came to an end in part as a result of the Great Recession, thousands of employees who had the good fortune to be a part of that organization stand as a vanguard of many thriving model railroad companies today. 

Please enjoy the tribute article about Wai Shing Ting and I hope it gives you some indication of a remarkable man who should be recognized for his many accomplishments in the model railroad industry and for the many companies and people he readily served. 

Tom Haedrich, Chairman
Atlas Model Railroad Company 

Wai Shing Ting Tribute

The Unassuming Man Who Built a Model Railroad Empire

By Kenneth Haedrich

On the evening of September 23rd, 1990, after 50 continuous days of operation and the estimated equivalent of 23 years of normal use, a Life-Like Chesapeake & Ohio BL2 locomotive pulling six Athearn passenger cars faltered and then quietly expired its way into model railroading history. A lone security guard who witnessed the event in the basement of a former BF Goodrich building reported that the HO scale train began to “run funny” shortly before eclipsing the standing Guinness Book of World Records for endurance by roughly 343 hours.

Which is where our story begins, on a footnote that would have passed unnoticed by all but a handful of industry insiders: that the creative genius behind the stalwart locomotive in question, the designer and manufacturer of the BL2, was one Mr. WaiShing Ting, the most venerable icon of model railroading you've probably never heard of...and probably should.

He's certainly the busiest, or was at least, until his recent retirement as the CEO of Sanda Kan, the Hong Kong based train maker to the stars of model railroading. Over a span of three decades and a trail of more than a million frequent flyer miles, WaiShing Ting took Sanda Kan from a fledgling enterprise to a manufacturing behemoth. His client list—the manufacturers he manufactured for—includes names like Atlas, Lionel, Aristo-Craft, Micro-Ace, S-Helper, Hornby, Brawa, Marklin and Tomix. They and many others came to Ting, more often than not referred by one another, because his achievements—his BL2s—were no accident but his trademark. “Frankly,” says Dick Maddox, the former COO and President of Lionel, “I don't know what we would have done without him. He was the best business partner we could have had and a wonderful man to work with.”

The Early Days

WaiShing Ting did slow down just long enough in July of 2007 to accept the model railroad industry's Hall of Fame Award, “In Recognition of Outstanding Leadership and Contributions to the Model Railroad Industry.” Lewis Polk, President of Polk's Model Craft Hobbies, was on the committee that nominated Ting for the award. “I knew just how much he meant to the industry. He cared about everybody, he was a loyal friend, and he was able to face any problem in business and resolve it.”

It was always the pursuit of excellence, however, and not visions of fame that had driven Mr. Ting. “WS”—as his colleagues sometimes refer to him—was born in 1934, the first child of parents whom, he says, taught him the importance of honesty, practicality and concern for others. He was especially close with his paternal grandfather, who had retired early and then volunteered his time to the local poor who couldn't afford medical care. Not surprisingly, Ting's boyhood dream was to become an emergency room doctor and save lives.

"...he was a loyal friend, and he was able to face any problem in business and resolve it."

His father enrolled Ting in Shanghai's Xuhui Middle School - a Catholic boarding school run by priests. WaiShing soon discovered he rather liked the order imposed by the faculty. “It was like a military school,” he recalls. “We knew exactly when we had to go to sleep, get up, and arrive in class. We had 3 minutes to get everything out of the desk that we needed for class.”

Straight out of middle school, Ting enrolled in Shanghai Polytechnic. A career in medicine would have to wait: as the oldest of seven siblings, Ting felt an obligation to go to work as soon as possible to help support his large family. Three years later, he graduated with a diploma in mechanical engineering.

A Career Takes Shape

After working as an engineer for a company that made diesel engines, Ting moved to Hong Kong in 1962 to take a job with American-owned Shriro Precision Engineering. His timing was fortunate: the firm was phasing out their repair work on prop engines and focusing on the manufacture of plastic injection molds for small parts for the electronics industry - transistor radio cabinets, knobs and the like. It was Ting's first experience with making plastic molds and an important chapter in the education of a future model railroad manufacturer.

Shriro closed their doors for good in 1965, the same year that Roy Cox, a California toy maker, arrived in Hong Kong in search of a supplier of DC motors for his line of slot cars. Ting's former boss at Shriro knew Cox and had heard that he was unhappy with the quality of the motors he'd found in Hong Kong. So he arranged a meeting between the two.

The most memorable thing about it, says Ting, was its brevity: after about 5 minutes he had convinced Roy Cox that he could in fact manufacture a superior motor. A deal was struck. Cox International was formed with Ting as the new managing director, a position he would hold for years.

The Sanda Kan Years

When Ting left Cox and moved to Sanda Kan in 1979, he was no stranger to the company. Indeed, he had helped start it 6 years earlier when he and Sol Kramer of Life-Like Products launched Sanda Kan as a joint venture. Kramer needed a supplier of motors and other parts for his model railroad company. Ting, who was looking for a fresh challenge, agreed to a partnership but had a change of heart - at least for the time being - when Cox decided to start their own model railroad division. It's hard to appreciate the depth and breadth of WaiShing Ting's impact on the model railroad industry without taking stock of just how large Sanda Kan would grow under his leadership.

“I tried to create a culture of continuous learning. We always looked for ways to innovate, improve and adapt new technologies."

So try to imagine, if you will, 10 factories with over 1.2 million square feet of space in Guang Dong, one of China's most prosperous provinces. Picture upwards of 10,000 employees (and their housing) including 60 designers, 275 product and production engineers, 50 business engineers and 400 highly skilled toolmakers. Now consider that every component for every locomotive, every piece of rolling stock, track, transformer and accessory that Sanda Kan makes is created and assembled, essentially, under one roof - and you're starting to get the picture.

Maybe it's just his calm, fireside-chat manner of answering questions that throws you. But looking back on WaiShing Ting's career at Sanda Kan, it's hard to decide what's more remarkable: the fact that he managed to create all this from a company of 200 employees making a handful of products for a single brand, or the fact that he makes it sound like it was almost easy, the natural result of some guiding principles that could fit on a couple of Post-it notes. When he first started, did he have any sense of how big or how profitable Sanda Kan would become?

“No, I didn't. My vision has always been to serve my customers and put them first. I knew if I did that, we would grow and make a profit.” How did he manage to keep tabs on so many employees?

“I put trust in people. When I hired, I always valued loyalty over talent. I can teach someone to do a job, but I can't teach loyalty. I encouraged everyone to think like an owner of the company.”

As for the ongoing challenge of honing Sanda Kan's competitive edge? “I tried to create a culture of continuous learning. We always looked for ways to innovate, improve and adapt new technologies. I often told my employees that what might have been a good product yesterday may not be a good product for today.”

A Reversal Sets the Stage for a Sale...and The Future

By the mid-1990s, bolstered by China's economic reforms, a growing client list and a deep labor pool, Sanda Kan was prospering. It seemed that nothing could slow them down when WaiShing Ting was dealt a devastating blow - a serious heart attack. Had it not been for the quick work of a son-in-law who drove him to a nearby hospital, Ting might not have survived.

"He remained a tower of strength in the midst of the storm. His efforts saved the company."

His brush with death, says Ting, brought him face to face with Sanda Kan's vulnerability. And with no family successor to take his place, he knew he would have to find a buyer for Sanda Kan to protect the interests of his clients and his employees. It would be five years before a match was found, but in 2000 Sanda Kan was purchased by ZS Fund, a private equity firm. WaiShing Ting would stay on as director of day-to-day operations.

Sanda Kan would be sold twice more: in 2004 to the Hong Kong based JP Morgan Partners, and in January of 2009, after falling on difficult times, to Kader Holdings, the parent company of Bachmann Industries. Especially during Sanda Kan's most diffifuct times, says Frank Martin, Chief Executive of Hornby Plc, “WS Ting was there. He remained a tower of strength in the midst of the storm. His efforts saved the company. He was a source of inspiration to his colleagues and workers in Sanda Kan, and a trusted friend to many of his customers.”

The recent sale came during one of the most uncertain economic periods of the last 100 years. But Kaders' business and manufacturing strength in China, combined with a company founded on the principles of quality and innovation, will continue to be a driving force behind the new Sanda Kan.

Tom Haedrich, CEO of Atlas Model Railroad Co., who has worked with “WS” and the Sanda Kan organization for the past 18 years, says “The model railroading industry is always changing. We've now entered one of the most tumultuous periods ever seen.

A rare intersection of powerful local and global forces in technology, distribution, contract manufacturing, global economics and the resulting consolidations will change the face of model railroading for years to come. Thanks to the vision, hard work and dedication of WaiShing Ting and the strength of the company he created, the new Sanda Kan has an excellent opportunity to continue as the best example of worldwide model railroading production.”

WaiShing Ting is similarly upbeat. “Kader is the oldest and leading toy manufacturer in Hong Kong. They're family owned and the third generation is now starting to run the business. I believe Sanda Kan is in the right hands and that this will be good for all parties concerned.” We can think of no one who is more qualified to make that call than Mr. WaiShing Ting, the most venerable icon of model railroading.