Some kids do move on some do not
It would be nice if Lionel by way of the LCT/MTH division would release some early repro O gauge equipment. The small locos (150, 258, 259, etc.) and early 4 wheel cars come to mind.
The last half dozen years or so of Tinplate Traditions and now Lionel Corporation Tinplate have seen A LOT of classic period prewar trains put out with paint jobs that aren't even close to anything Lionel, Flyer or Ives even considered doing way back when. Call me jaded, but I believe a 517 caboose should be brass and/or nickel trim and heavily enameled stamped steel parts. Not rubber stamped graphics. I just think they cheapen the look of the trains.
Is it reasonable to assume that since so many of these cars now fill the LCT catalogs that Lionel/MTH are searching for revenue from the tinplate division? Adding the 6 and 7 and their associated passenger cars a few years back was the first move since the 80's that they made towards early period standard gauge. But wouldn't it make sense to add more low end sets and broaden the market appeal by producing some of the simplest trains instead of creating paint schemes that turn some of us off? There are a lot of simple locos and cars that could be stamped out using the motors and trucks they've already developed. Just my
Becky
Trains, trains, wonderful trains. The more you get, the more you toot!
Regardless of how we count, it's remarkable that this hobby that arrived 100 years ago or so still has a loyal following. Hula hoops, soap box racers, slot cars etc all peaked only to vanish in popularity and that says a great deal about not only current fads but the future of the hobby in general.
Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks he needs more of it than he already has.
Also did not Marklin?
Lionel DID give us three rail o gauge and trains made all those years ago SHOULD run on all track that is three rail
Actually that isn't quite true... 2014 *this year* would be year 100. We start counting years in year 1, not 0. This is why technically decades run from 1 to 10, not 0 to 9.
https://brentsandsusanspicutures.shutterfly.com/
This would be the centenary of Lionel O-gauge, of course, not O-gauge in general, which was introduced earlier by Maerklin.
Bob Nelson
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.
Get the Classic Toy Trains newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month