"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
- Mark
QUOTE: Some folks may be a bit brusque in their approach, but generally, the typical person who logs on and asks how to fix up their old Tyco gets a predictable set of responses: Don't bother, buy a halfway-decent new engine instead--an Athearn or Bachmann or P2K, typically at a cost of $100 or less. Not exactly breaking the bank, and not exactly bad advice, either.
QUOTE: Originally posted by vande I had a similar experience recently at the train store meca in Denver, CO. I was asking for some recommendations on upgrading a few TYCO pieces of rolling stock that I had from my youth. Got the same reponse. "It's junk throw it away and buy something good in a $20 car." Well, they missed the sentimental piece and I think greed and gusto gets in the way of alot of the opinions today. Replacement strategy drives revenues and the manufacturers and retailers are struggling today and need us to think in terms of replacement. But determined to preserve these old pieces, I got a reboxx tool and added P2K wheels with Kaydee couplers to my "junk TYCO's" and have perfectly good pieces of rolling stock for a fraction of the replacement costs. They perform just as well as my Accurail, Roundhouse and Genesis stock. I sit back and continue to enjoy my old friends as they clickety clack along and laugh at the fools who believe that only the new is best.
QUOTE: Originally posted by vande .... I was asking for some recommendations on upgrading a few TYCO pieces of rolling stock that I had from my youth. Got the same reponse. "It's junk throw it away and buy something good in a $20 car."
Don - Specializing in layout DC->DCC conversions
Modeling C&O transition era and steel industries There's Nothing Like Big Steam!
QUOTE: Originally posted by Virginian No. I will not stop running Tyco into the ground until all those people who keep putting up those dam#ed silver Virginian hoppers on eBay and acting like they are worth more than 50 cents, and not indicating that they are Tyco brand in the title line, quit it. Fair is fair, and it's my turn. I won't even metion the dam*ed blue and yellow VGN cabeese and engines. Tyco made cheap junk. If you modify it so it runs good, it isn't Tyco anymore. Same hold true for a lot of old Bachmann and LL stuff. They got better; Tyco as a railroad model builder died. My mother said that if you can't say something good about the dead then don't say anything. So I will just say they are dead; good.
Modeling the B&M Railroad during the transition era in Lowell, MA