Buddy L cars are very nice, I have many of them and repaint or bash them for my own railroad. For the price they can't be beat. Quality and detail are surprizingly high.
The locos on the other hand, need a lot of modifications to be useful for our purposes. They cost less to be sure, but then if you add in the time and money it takes to make them work as well as a B'mann, they are no deal at all.
The Dixie D Short Line "Lux Lucet In Tenebris Nihil Igitur Mors Est Ad Nos 2001"
The Home of Articulated Ugliness
They are OK for dead flat layouts pulling a couple of cars, for that they are fine. Beyond that it will be limited, require alot of tweeking to get to run right, for the most part I would recommend a Big Hauler set over it.
Yes, my missis did get her own set, but I'm the guy thats gotta figure out how to get it to go around the steep grades on my layout. I have some ideas, nudge nudge, wink wink, say no more
Have fun with your trains
Les,
The BuddyL 2-6-2 are G scale, 1:22.5. The cars are identical to Bachmann big haulers. Vic Smith had one and sold it (and now his wife bought a whole set ). Tim Brien down in Oz has kitbashed a few and modified the drivetrain to beef it up. Unless you like tinkering to get it to run well, I wouldn't advise it.
-Brian
Ain't no such animal. Not true Buddy-L anyway. Buddy-L was a line of push trains manufactured in the 1920's and 1930's by the Moline Pressed Steel Company. They were way larger than G, close to 1:12 scale I think.
There is a company called Buddy-K that makes Buddy-L reproductions. True Buddy-L brings big $$$ on the collector market.
BTW, the quality was excellent.
I have figured out what is wrong with my brain! On the left side nothing works right, and on the right side there is nothing left!
What sort of quality are the BuddyL g gauges? What scale? Thoughts?
Les W.
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