I always look forward to getting and reading Classic Trains. I have learned a lot about the American railway scene, especially in the end of stream to early diesel eras from its pages. The period I model is 1950 to 1970 in 1:29 scale.
Garden Railways is also bought mainly for garden railroading information and Trains, when I can get it, provides most present day facts and figures for me. Model Railroader is not on the list but I do look at the MR web site: of particular interest is the thread about prototype information for the modeler..
The order of preference is as per the list above.
I do also enjoy reading the Classic Trains Special Issues. Here again much information of interest is to be read.
Many thanks Kalmbach.
Alan, Oliver & North Fork Railroad
https://www.buckfast.org.uk/
If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there. Lewis Carroll English author & recreational mathematician (1832 - 1898)
enough cant be said about classic trains, in the rail wasteland called florida it saves me every issue
i come from nh & i lived right near the main line for guilford rail & amtrak ,
my son & i railfanned everyday allday or we were downstairs running ho scale layout ,man i miss all that
so this is my solace thank you Ct
I can second Wallyworld's comments in toto regarding the magazine itself, but I also like TRAINS a lot and enjoy keeping uptodate with North American Railroading and rail transit from a very balanced and carefully honest perspective.
I wasn't planning on subscribing to "Classic Trains", but I was VERY favorably impressed with a rapid response from Mr. McGonigal to an e-mail of mine requesting some research assistance for a friend, so I did. Hey, one good turn deserves another, right? I'm not sorry, the magazine is a class act, I should have subscribed years ago. The only possible improvement I could see is a section devoted to in-depth coverage of railroad preservation projects and success stories, similar to "Locomotive and Railway Preservation" magazine that was around in the 90's. Yep, the old "Eleanor P." which I miss terribly.
Keep up the good work folks!
I don't know how much feedback the editorial staff gets from year to year, or month to month, but I agree, and I hope they get some satisfaction when they read your comments, and hopefully more to follow. I have only ever subscribed to two magazines in my life, now in my 60th year. They are Sky and Telescope, which I ceased years ago, and now Classic Trains. I would....should I say it...........aww, what the heck....I would pay a lot more for those four issues each year if I could be sure the same orientation, philosophy, balance, and quality were to persist until I gasp my last. I also purchase every special edition, and eagerly await the fast locomotives special about to be sent off to customers.
I really like the high overhead shots taken from aircraft, shots inside busy commuter centers and stations, technical information, and anecdotal accounts of life 'back then'.
Keep it coming, Gentlemen.
May I suggest a special edition heavy into steam mechanics, some stories about line-side fixes that helped them to get to the next service facility? What seemed to break or require an inordinate amount of attention at stops, and why? Even a comparative in-depth look at a modern steam programme would be great where the differences in what was possible, the limitations, expectations, between now and then.
Best wishes. And thanks ever so much.
Crandell
By way of unsolicited feedback, the consistency and variety of the material in Classic Trains is exceptional and is the only magazine I have subscribed to where I have not found any disagreement from my side as a reader with it's editorial prerogatives. It is a wonderfully balanced publication as well as having layouts of the most stunning images of color photography , some rare, some provoking fond memories. The D&H cover leaps out at the reader..even the non rail fan members of my family were spied thumbing through the issue simply based on the cover. I seldom ,if ever, impressed by a magazine to the extent I have with Classic Trains..a class act. ..It is very reminiscent of Trains under David P Morgan's leadership, a paean to the romance and colorful vanished world of railroads, before uniformity and local color faded away.
Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks he needs more of it than he already has.
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