Same thing happened to the brass HO scale market, first mostly made in Japan, but rising labor costs combined with a devalued doller vs the Japanese yen made models unaffordable within just a few short years. Production was moved to South Korea, for the most part, and prices flattened out or dropped slightly, but so did the quality for a few years as the Koreans learned a new trade and how to make a quality model. Then labor costs rose there, just as they had in Japan and models got expenisve, but at thru those year, modelers demanded models be painted, detailed for a specific road name with even more detail. Add into the equation the plastic/diecast market also came of age with detailing rivialing the brass models at a lower cost. So what once was runs in the 500-1000 pieces, became runs of 5-25 of each road name. What once was a 200-300 doller brass diesel for example, is now near $1000 each and so fragile with all the detail, they are more of a display piece IMHO. I think Roundhouse has done it the best, maintainted consistant quality, even improving on many models over many production runs, yet kept the cost reasonable on the common models such as Lady Anne and Billy ect. Accucraft comes in second, they are fighting fast rising labor costs and inflation in China, be it natural or goverment assisted. We get used to getting things on the cheap, like the Ruby for around $300 when first released. I be they would be $600-$700 if and when they are ever produced again. Had Merlin had proper management from around the time the Mayflowers hit the market going foward, they might be still with us today like Roundhouse is. When Ian opened Pearse Loco works, if you look at the first models, they basicly took over where Merlin left off. The Accucraft UK models are much the same, like Edrig, Caradoc, just imagine the Merlin fixed outside valve motion on them and you see the family resemblance. I kind of wish they would revert back to outside valve gear, but I digress. Mike