pbjwilson wrote: I'm having a blast with some old American Flyer trains I've fixed up. S gauge is a very nice size. And the Am. Flyer engines run really well. Just got a Flyer 303 engine that has choo-choo sound (a chuff chuff sound), a smoke unit to rival modern steam models, and a red light in the smoke stack. Cool stuff for an engine thats 50 years old.I'm on the verge of unloading a bunch of O gauge as I'm finding the S more suitable to my space restraints. I always looked for the smaller Lionels which are close to S proportions. Really enjoy learning about all the different models AF put out. Most are reasonably priced. And the Steam engines I have run so nice.The models being made by S-Helper and American Models are superb. Hope to add some as my layout and collection progresses.
I'm having a blast with some old American Flyer trains I've fixed up. S gauge is a very nice size. And the Am. Flyer engines run really well. Just got a Flyer 303 engine that has choo-choo sound (a chuff chuff sound), a smoke unit to rival modern steam models, and a red light in the smoke stack. Cool stuff for an engine thats 50 years old.
I'm on the verge of unloading a bunch of O gauge as I'm finding the S more suitable to my space restraints. I always looked for the smaller Lionels which are close to S proportions. Really enjoy learning about all the different models AF put out. Most are reasonably priced. And the Steam engines I have run so nice.
The models being made by S-Helper and American Models are superb. Hope to add some as my layout and collection progresses.
Whohoo Paul You are seeing what is so great about American Flyer S gauge!
I can't imagine that S-Helper, or any other manufacturer, would be interested in venturing into O gauge at this point in time. The market is already glutted with more than enough O gauge product to satisfy (probably not a good choice of wirds since nobody in this hobby seems to be "satisfied" these days) a consumer base that doesn't appear to be growing at anywhere near the rate that it did in the 90s. If anything, I expect the market to further consolidate in the years ahead, with fewer manufacturers manufacturing fewer products. Nothing I've seen, read, or heard indicates otherwise.
There's some great stuff available in S gauge, and even though I've never modeled in that scale, I'm sure glad to see that several manufacturers are giving it the attention it deserves. If I was starting over in the hobby today, I would most definitely give S scale serious consideration.
Most of the American Models rolling stock shows potential for being converted to O Gauge.
The O Gauge Trucks need to to have nylon washers, nylon tubes, and longer screws to make them fit on the S Scale cars.
They are very close in dimensions. The Lionel Traditional O Gauge cars are wider than S Scale Cars.
www.americanmodels.com
Andrew
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brianel, Agent 027
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http://ogrforum.ogaugerr.com/displayForumTopic/content/12129987972340381/page/1
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