I am around your age an basically I collect all eras of Lionel. I have to be in the "mood" for a certain era. I love the postwar trains and I also equally like the PWC. This series defiently got me buying "new" Lionel again..the PWC stuff is just way cool. I got just about every PWC set since 2003.
To bad people don't feel like you about General Motors and Ford. All it is are shitbox Hondas and Toyotas today.
We all play into the ( shitbox") market. If you listen to a radio, watch TV, have appliances, type on your computer, use most any electronics, including the stuff that comes in the Lionel trains of today, you are playing into the foreign market. I'm for 100% USA made stuff, but I think condemning Toyota or Honda or any other foreign makers is a bit sudden, unless you've abandoned all of the items I've mentioned above. Even the GM products are full of foreign parts. Rumor has it one of the new GM SUV's is made largely in Mexico. I've checked it out and darned if it's not. So...some items are not going to be made in this country, seems as if it can't or won't be helped. Just wondered where the cut off is on what's tolerated and what's not. Jake
PS. For any one wondering, my roots go to the Native American side.
Please bare with me........("Old-Timers Memory" attack) Refresh my memory: What is PWC. Thanks.
PWC post war classic: modern reproductions of 1950s PW postwar trains. Mostly done as they were, but some with upgrades like command control, railsounds, etc.
But they do seem to deliver that brand new post war feel.
traindaddy1 wrote:Please bare with me........("Old-Timers Memory" attack) Refresh my memory: What is PWC. Thanks.
Bob Mitchell Gettysburg, PA TCA # 98-47956 LCCA# RM22839
Trying to update my avatar since 2020
MartyE and Kodi the Husky Dog! ( 3/31/90-9/28/04 ) www.MartyE.com My O Gauge Web Page and Home of Kodiak Junction!
PWC or POstwar Celebration Series as it's called is a nice idea and originally the stuff was being made in Michigan. I didn't miss a beat when I picked up the red and white executive inspection car a few years back. I really love that the box says "made and litho in USA.
These early made in U.S.A PWC pieces to me are the only ones that can come close to the magic. But really, really, if you like this stuff you should be buying originals. There is really something magical about awakening 50, 60 year old equipment and seeing it run.
Postwar Rules,
Mike S.
MartyE wrote:Actually it's PWC= Post War Celebration Series. And in my mind the PWC stuff with TMCC are the cat's meow.
That's exactly how I see it !!
Fred Bear wrote: I think condemning Toyota or Honda or any other foreign makers is a bit sudden,
I think condemning Toyota or Honda or any other foreign makers is a bit sudden,
a couple of nights of the History channel works wonders on that theory.
As for me, trains are post war, Made In The USA Lionel Trains, everything else is just a copy. albeit an entertaining one for many, but my personal train roots were planted in the 50's and I don't see myself having a change of heart anytime between now and when they plant me.
I am with you Frank, the 1950s it is. There just isn't anything like a real to goodness postwar original. They can be brought back to life and run like new. If taken care of. the value remains.
You can't do that with PWC. Turn a wheel and the value goes down. Where will you find parts for this high techno TMCC stuff in twenty years.
All Lionel all the time.
Okiechoochoo
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
The best Postwar Celebration is made by Williams...
Oops, my bad
I'm 33 and I love the PWC stuff. I respect postwar Lionel and treasure the few pieces my Dad has kept since his childhood. They have a patina that only comes with age, and are undoubtable collectibles.
But for an operator, IMHO, nothing can beat the PWC with TMCC and all the modern goodies. I have the #2544W Super Chief set and the #13150 Super O Frieght set, love 'em both. Plus they cost a fraction of what similar postwar pieces go for.
Let's just all be thankful that PWC and postwar are far superior to the MPC crap I grew up with . . .
I remember back in 52 when a friend of mine's dad would not get remote control switches. He used manual only because the manuals would always work and the remote controls would break or wear out quicker and if they came out with new stuff you would not be able to repair the old. Such is the price of change and progress.
GM made some fine cars after 57. My favorite is the 58 Ponitac Bonneville followed by the 64 GTO. As you went into the late 60's and the 70's their quality control really stank. Anybody still driving a Vega???
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