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!
prewardude wrote: Frank53 wrote: I really like my old junk. Betcha these will all still be running like champs long after the time when the stuff coming over from Asia is relegated to non-runnable shelf queen duty. My thoughts exactly, Frank. Beautiful trains, BTW. Regards,Clint
Frank53 wrote: I really like my old junk. Betcha these will all still be running like champs long after the time when the stuff coming over from Asia is relegated to non-runnable shelf queen duty.
I really like my old junk.
Betcha these will all still be running like champs long after the time when the stuff coming over from Asia is relegated to non-runnable shelf queen duty.
I couldn't have said it better myself boys.
Lionel collector, stuck in an N scaler's modelling space.
I got all new stuff and I like it. Today's stuff has new features like The Odyssey system which lets the train crawl and great Railsounds, and highly detail, etc. Old stuff is only good for shelve memories. Sure, I got great memories of these old timers (I was raised up in the post war time,early fifties). but everytime I see post war trains running (in train clubs) around the loops, they have to run 180 MPH to keep from stopping in the turns. Unrealistic.Yes, my layout has today's scale engines and the shelfs have my old happy memories trains which I'll never get rid off. Reuben
The old stuff is the good stuff and runs on the layout. My new stuff is junk and sits on the shelf with scrambled battery boards, trashed rubber band wheels, and toasted smoke units. As more people buy the new junk, the prices of the good old stuff has come down which gives me more buying power for the good old stuff.
I keep the old stuff for sentimental reasons. When I was a kid, everything was second-hand. It all gave me a lot of joy, however, and I just can't see getting rid of it. I love my big, new stuff with the fancy sounds and all, but I still run the old stuff; even the Lionel Scout engine with the bent axle!
Bob Blomberg
darianj wrote: Don't jinks me...I'm new to the hobby had I only have new stuff!
Don't jinks me...I'm new to the hobby had I only have new stuff!
jaabat wrote:Isn't she a beauty?!Jim
Why yes, yes she most certainly is!
Dave Farquhar wrote:Well, I could afford new(er) trains I suppose, but I have lots of other things I'm trying to pay for right now. Like some of the other people here, I really enjoy finding junkers from under the table at shows (or wherever else junkers lurk) and bringing them back from the dead. My wife found me a Lionel 2034 and a Marx 490 this week. The 2034 needs a few more parts but I got it running. The 490's body is pretty far gone but I can put the motor in something else.So even if and when I get to the point where I can afford to drop a grand and a half on a new locomotive, I'll probably still buy and refurbish junkers. It's really satisfying to take something that can barely move on its own, fix it up, and watch it tear around the track.
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
With only a couple exceptions (stuff that "fits") - I run my old junk exclusively. If you have any old junk (cheap tin or plastic Marx, old used pre/post-war Lionel - even some of that Flyer or Ives stuff) I'd be more than happy to take it off your hands and dispose of it properly.
I mean it's not like any of that stuff still runs after half a century or anything...
I run the old stuff (only) as I could care less about all the new control systems.
I see folks spend half an hour trying to get them "programmed" to run and give up.
Yank out a set of NP 2343's (I have an A-B-A and an A-B) and if they haven't run for a while I oil them, but they run, and they're more than half a century old.
My 225E, in the family since new, runs just fine.
I restored my Dad's 252 and gave it to my brother several years ago. Runs fine (after new wheels).
My 1950 Ford Tudor, which I've driven for 37 years, runs just fine (and faster than your chebbie!), my 1950 F-1 will go where few want to with their big, wide, new trucks.
The old stuff was built to run and last (like my Colt 1911) and my old Tube radios.
All I run is "old stuff". I have no need for anything else. I love resurrecting from the dead an old Marx, Lionel engine. I drive old resurrected vehicles. My 39 Model AA flat bed, or my 50 Plymouth 4 door clipper or my, (favorite vehicle) the 1950 5 window Chevy truck. AKA, c50truck. It's not junk. It's an under appreciated item. Rod LaFrance
Dave
It's a TOY, A child's PLAYTHING!!! (Woody from Toy Story)
Frank53 wrote:I really like my old junk. Betcha these will all still be running like champs long after the time when the stuff coming over from Asia is relegated to non-runnable shelf queen duty.
OLD saying, and still pertinent...
One's man's trash is another man's treasure.
Some say the hobby is better today than ever. It is also more divisive, and yet those divisions are mostly opinions based on personal preference: MTH vs. Lionel, postwar vs. modern, tinplate vs. hirail, scale vs. traditional, prototypical vs. imaginary, CTT vs. OGR, TMCC vs. DCS, command vs. traditional, and on and on it goes.
There's no right or wrong. The only thing that strikes me as being wrong is the intolerance over the other guy who chooses some other way to run or operate his trains.
brianel, Agent 027
"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."
The vast majority of my items are Post War. While I do have some of the newer stuff, when I got back into the hobby, my first quest was to get one of everything in the 1949 catalog. After that, I started to get some newer items and things that just caught my eye. With the quality of the postwar items and durability, they should be run and enjoyed. If you find yourself wanting to get rid of some older items, hey, drop me a line.
Dennis
TCA#09-63805
Bob Nelson
Got to run 'em. I have a lot of old trains. They all get run. This set is for under the Christmas tree. Always fun to run the really old stuff around the holidays.
Everything I have runs on my layout.Some of the rarer stuff not as much but I can't see having it if I can't run it.When I do shows it is always newer stuff,but at home you're liable to see a set of 204's or 208's as anything else.I have been collecting my trains for over fifty years so nothing gets run all the time,but I like variety.I run my newer diesels with much longer trains but there is just something about a fifty year old train still doing its job that get me.
Ed
When the banker was showing the Beverly Hillbillies their newly aquired mansion in Beverly Hills he pointed out all the fine antiqes. Granny said "why would we keep that old junk when we can afford to buy new furniture."
I think I'm more like the Beverly Hillbillies, I want new stuff in a box, even if it is new old stock. The oldest train I have is 20 years old and I bought it new. I've given away so many trains over the years, I probably don't want to know what some of it would be worth today.
Does your "old stuff (I mean old)" still run on your layout or does if ride the shelf?
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