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Bought My First Kalmbach Model Railroading Books

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Bought My First Kalmbach Model Railroading Books
Posted by Engi1487 on Monday, December 28, 2020 11:36 AM

Hello everyone,

Buying from Amazon for a early Christmas present to myself, I bought my first kalmback Publishing Model Railroader "How to," books. My first I bought last year was Detailing & Upgrading Steam Locomotives, and after the post I made in regards to John Armstrong got locked, I decided I owed it to myself to buy the third edition of his guide to track planning and realistic operation.

Along with that I bought three more, being Basic DCC wiring for your model railroad, Designing & Building Multi-Deck model railroads by Tony Koester and guide to narrow gauge railways.

I am looking forward to reading these and other in future.Having books and online internet help is a very good combination.

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Posted by BigDaddy on Monday, December 28, 2020 7:46 PM

There is nothing wrong with books.  In the 80's when I built my first real layout, the Internet was still an Al Gore dream.  Kalmbach books was all I had, and it worked out pretty well.

 

Henry

COB Potomac & Northern

Shenandoah Valley

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Posted by BurlingtonNorthern2264 on Monday, December 28, 2020 10:26 PM
Indeed. As much as I have resorted to YouTube and the MR website, I will always consult the book. I still have use for my 1960's scenery books.
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Posted by SeeYou190 on Monday, December 28, 2020 10:55 PM

I would strongly suggest you try to add "Model Railroading With John Allen" to your library.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by peahrens on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 8:04 AM

I found the MR special issue "How to Build Realistic Reliable Track" to be very informative.  Out of print but occasionally available.

How to Build Realistic Reliable Track #6 Model Railroader Special Issue | eBay

If tackling DCC first time, I started with Kalmbach's "DCC Guide" (mine was Ed. 1) and found it helpful as a good introduction.

Paul

Modeling HO with a transition era UP bent

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Posted by chutton01 on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 8:30 AM

peahrens
I found the MR special issue "How to Build Realistic Reliable Track" to be very informative. 

I have that issue too, there were a few good articles (I believe the articles were not reprints, at least the cover states as much). Wonder how well that Rapido HO track that had the full back cover ad 'coming in 2010' did.
For even more nostalgia, I recently reread my copies of '22 Tips for building Model Railroad Structures' and '303 Tips for Detailing Model Railroad Scenery and Structures', both from the 1990s so there is a little outdated info, particularly in tips like printing 'color' signage and such 'new tech' (possibly the first place I read of the Superglue + baking soda tip), but many tips are still relevant (of course, all colors for painting and weathering are referenced with Polly S  or Floquil or even... Pactra. Oh well)
Also having a stable of 'Industy' series books (most by Jeff Wilson) such as 'Piggyback and Container Traffic', 'Product Traffic & Trains' and the granddaddy series of them all, 'Industries along the Tracks' 1 to 4 - Hey Kalmbach, time to crank out a few more volumes of that rather handy mini-reference/overview series.

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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 10:22 AM

 I think Jason used most of the "Bendy Track" to build his own layout. Laugh

He's not afraid to try something when he thinks there's a market for it, and at the time Atlas, the 100 pound gorilla in the market when it comes to track, was having serious problems sourcing their product. By the time Bendy Track was ready, Atlas fixed most of their supply chain problems, plus I think in general modelrs were not very willing to try something different - also it was JUST flex track, none of the rest of the ecosystem like turnouts. And all those that don't use Atlas or hand lay, they've been using Peco. No matter how good Bendy Track might be, it was more or less doomed, unless Atlas would have been unable to get their supply line up and running.

                                        --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

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Posted by richhotrain on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 10:50 AM

All good points, Randy. Is Bendy Track now off the market?

Rich

Alton Junction

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Posted by chutton01 on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 1:38 PM

richhotrain
All good points, Randy. Is Bendy Track now off the market? 


Looking around on line, it seems Rapdio disontinued selling 'Bendy' track not too long after introducing it in 2013 (no idea how long it was marketed after that date, but a 2016 post stated it was gone a few year back).
Apparently they had some supply issues. Oh well.

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Posted by dknelson on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 1:41 PM

The Jeff Wilson books on industry, all of them -- both those that focus on a specific industry and the older "industries beside the tracks" series that had multiple different industries in each book, can all be highly recommended

Ditto his (Jeff Wilson's) freight car and structure books.  There are multiple versions of each since it seemed Kalmbach preferred to have a new book rather than a second or revised edition.  

It is an out of print classic but I still like re reading Art Curren's kitbashing book.  Tony Koester's kitbashing book which is intended to replace Curren's, is good too but an entirely different way of approaching the issue.  David Frary's book on Realistic Model Railroad Scenery has gone through several editions and any of them you can find will be good to have. 

Another out of print Kalmbach book that I cannot recommend highly enough is Andy Sperandeo on freight yards.

And going way way back, there are two and maybe more "railroads you can model" books from Kalmbach, which reproduce old articles from Model Trains magazine of the 1950s and some Model Railroader articles from the 1950s and 60s.  These books are chock full of ideas for a layout.

All my Kalmbach books are well-thumbed and, where appropriate, well marked up and annotated by me with ideas and references to other books or related articles in MR and elsewhere. 

Some of them by the way are aimed more at Trains readers than MR readers and I'd mention the George Drury books - the Guide and the Historical Guide to North American railroads.  The old Diesel Spotter's Guides also contain info and photos useful to modelers, now that most of the locomotives in the Guides are in museums or scrapped!

Dave Nelson

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 2:06 PM

dknelson
It is an out of print classic but I still like re reading Art Curren's kitbashing book.  Tony Koester's kitbashing book which is intended to replace Curren's, is good too but an entirely different way of approaching the issue. 

Art Curren's book is just a lot more fun. Tony's is way too serious.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by chutton01 on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 4:32 PM

dknelson
The old Diesel Spotter's Guides also contain info and photos useful to modelers, now that most of the locomotives in the Guides are in museums or scrapped! 

The first time I cracked open a Kalmbach Diesel Spotter's guide was in Sept 1989. Now, that volume was actually the 'Contemporary Diesel Spotter's guide' - the original Diesel Spotter's guide by then had morphed into "Diesel Locomotives: The First 50 Years" (I have a copy of that volume, and it states that in its preface).  Those spotter guides did/do neatly categorize locomotives with descriptions, representative images, counts, stats and so on in a neat volume or two - remember, the accessible web we are now used to was still 4 or so years away, let alone Wikipedia and the like. Anyway, it's still somewhat interesting to leaf thru the 'First 50 Years' from time to time.

What about that Contemporary Diesel Spotter's guide you ask, why not leaf thur that - after all it's kind of historic data now as well. Glad you asked - those volumes (I have others as well, like the historical Guide to North American railroads and the historical Guide to N.A. Steam Locomotives) were "Perfect Bound", which turns out not to be perfect for the owner - if you crack or tear the spine in any, even minor way, the pages will start to become unstuck and drop out of the book.  This seems to be a cascading effect, such that my contemporary spotter's guide became a mess of loose papers I ended up having to toss.
I have looked around the web if there's anyway to reglue the pages back in (the steam locomotive guide has loose pages), nothing good seems to turn up though.

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Posted by The Milwaukee Road Warrior on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 10:53 AM

A lot of good books have been mentioned by others here.  Since I was getting back into the hobby last year after many years being out, I found Tony's book Time Saving Techniques for Building Model Railroads to be very helpful: there is a lot of information to sort thru and organize in this hobby and its easy to get bogged down with "analysis paralysis."  

Besides that book, the others I've referred to the most have been Armstrong's, Andy's Freight Yards, Steam & Diesel Servicing Terminals, and Painting Backdrops.

Where I need to supplement is in the DCC wiring/electronics area.  I have Don Fiehmann's The DCC Guide 2nd Edition, but it really gets into the weeds on things and I need to start with a simpler wiring resource first.  

Andy

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Milwaukee native modeling the Milwaukee Road in 1950's Milwaukee.

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Posted by kasskaboose on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 11:03 AM

Perhaps in the minority here but I use the books as reference after reading them once.  I often underline or similar for useful areas. 

Any books you get by Jeff Wilson is an invaluable investment. 

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Wednesday, December 30, 2020 12:22 PM

chutton01
Those volumes were "Perfect Bound", if you crack or tear the spine in any, even minor way, the pages will start to become unstuck and drop out of the book.

Wargames rulebooks published 10-20 years ago had the identical problem.

We found out we could take them to a print shop, and they could cut the spine off the book and install a plastic binding that was much better. It was only about $3.00 per book.

Then you can leaf through it again.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by ekervina on Thursday, December 31, 2020 6:53 AM

I'll add my voice to the chorus singing the praises of Jeff Wilson's books. They are well written, informative, and well-researched. I haven't followed up on all of his recommendations for additional information, but the ones I have looked into were all good.

-Eric

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