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What kind of modeler are you?

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Posted by galaxy on Tuesday, October 12, 2010 3:53 PM

Motley

OK let's hear it. What kind of modeler are you?

There are many different facets to this hobby, and all kinds of different modelers.

So I'm wondering, which one are you?

Are you a builder? You are working on the layout more than you run the trains. You like to work on scenery, structures, etc.

Are you runner? You like to run trains. You would rather just kick back and run the trains, even if your layout doesn't have scenery.

Are you an operator? You run your layout with prototypical operations like a mini transportation system.

Are you a railfanner? You have a nicely detailed layout, but like watching the trains run through the scenery instead of operating.

Are you a tinkerer? You're not satisfied with anything, and always thinking what to change next. Pull out this structure here, move these tracks here.

Are you a locomotive guy? You like locomotives, lots and lots of locomotives. You're layout mainly consists of engine facilities.

Are you a rolling stocker? You like lots of rolling stock, building kits, weathering. Your layout mainly consists of yard operations.

Are you a collector? You may not even have a layout but have a nice collection for display.

Are you an accumulator? You keep everything, you have old stuff in boxes, you buy more than can fit on your layout. You are buying things for a future layout.

Are you show modeler? You take your module layout to shows and display them.

Let's see, for me right now, I'm in build mode. So I'm a builder. I work on the layout more than I run trains. Even though my trackwork is completed. I'm also a tinkerer. Even though my layout is new, I know I'll be always changing something.

I like engines more than rolling stock. I'm trying to start a nice collection. Starting from completely nothing just 9 months ago, I know have 12 engines.

-I like to build building kits for scenery then weather and detail them. Not so much on the scenery surrounding the layout though.

-I am a runner. I like to run the trains....roundy-round-round fashion. I can stand for an hour or so just watching the trains go around the oval...

-Operator- Definitely NOT. I will consist a train in my small yard, then run it out to the outside oval and roundy-round-round then decosist in the yard and park the engine in the engine terminal house, though. DOes that count as ops?

-I am a 1:1 railfanner, but don;t have a large layout to "run trains through scenery"

- I do not tinker much. There isn't much room on my small layout to change the layout. I will change out things to change eras on my layout...does that count?

-Locos make the trains run and I have more than my layout can bear, so I rotate both locos and eras of locos.

-rolling stock is more than my locos and layout can handle. I do not like the idea of weathering my RR cars, though, I prefer to think my RR keeps 'em clean. I forced the issue to have a small 4 spur yard inside th inner oval on my layout but I don't have space for a large yard like I would like to have.

-I collect what I like, but do not have a display space...where would I put that?

-I accumulate lots of things...not necessarily train stuff either...but you never know what this little doo-hickey here might need to be on the layout. I thought I had brains once... I bought several tool boxes that are compartmentalized to hold "things and stuff" for my layout...

-Nope, no shows here though I could throw my entire layout {3.5 feet x 5.1 feet HO ....yes HO} into my van and take it...but I'm sheepish about sharing it.

- Suffice it to say I have fun with the hobby in my way and that is all that matters right?

Now what did I do with that thing I was looking for....???

-G .

Just my thoughts, ideas, opinions and experiences. Others may vary.

 HO and N Scale.

After long and careful thought, they have convinced me. I have come to the conclusion that they are right. The aliens did it.

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Posted by vsmith on Tuesday, October 12, 2010 2:24 PM

I dunno? I have...

...built, bashed or scratched at least 40 locomotives

...built and dismantled at least 3 incarnations of my layout while at the Plywood Pacific stage

...but finally finishing my latest and smallest incarnation of a layout.

...like to run trains, but dont care for Ops

...collect pre and post-war mechanical Marx, but not anything else.

What am I?

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by St Francis Consolidated RR on Tuesday, October 12, 2010 1:57 PM

I'm a very cranky modelerHmm

The St. Francis Consolidated Railroad of the Colorado Rockies

Denver, Colorado


JTG
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Posted by JTG on Tuesday, October 12, 2010 12:40 AM

Great question! I would say my preference is probably operations.

But in order to have a layout you can operate, you have to build it.

And in order to build a layout for operation, you have to plan it carefully.

And to plan a layout carefully, you have to learn at least a bit about how railroads work.

And (for me, at least) in order to have a truly satisfying layout, it has to make sense -- geographically, historically, economically. So you better learn a little bit about all those things, as well.

And there are other pleasures along the way, like learning about the development of railroads and equipment, and choosing and buying era-specific locos and rolling stock.

But before you even get started, you better be a dreamer. Because chasing the dream layout is what this hobby is all about. I'm guessing that few of us even get close, and those who do keep dreaming up improvements to keep them busy.

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Posted by -E-C-Mills on Monday, October 11, 2010 10:19 PM

Motley

OK let's hear it. What kind of modeler are you?

 

Great question!  For me too, I am several and some not on the list.

Planner:  For some reason I find drafting, dreaming, to be great fun.  It used to be on paper but now, I use CAD.  I have several solar homes planned with train rooms that have evolved.  Of course there are layouts planned in the existing house, including N, HO, and G layouts.  I entered a couple of the planning contests.

Builder:  I think I like the construction aspects the most; woodworking, scenery, wiring, track work, and especially building models.  I like to watch the trains run, and loose operation is fine, giving the layout purpose, but most of the time, I'm building things.

Accumulator:  I seem to have lots of stuff in boxes that are waiting to be built!

Historian:  Very much into railroad and industrial history.  Lots of history books.  Love historical engineering, mining, milling, smelting, refining.  The more pipes, furnaces, and old machine stuff, the better.

Rail Fan:  Traveling to and visiting places, hunting down actual rail scenes, bridges, junctions in the middle of nowhere, odd places you come across on a map, is also something I like to do.

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Posted by the North East Rail Modeler on Monday, October 11, 2010 8:05 PM

Motley

 

Are you a tinkerer? You're not satisfied with anything, and always thinking what to change next. Pull out this structure here, move these tracks here.

Are you a locomotive guy? You like locomotives, lots and lots of locomotives. You're layout mainly consists of engine facilities.

Are you a rolling stocker? You like lots of rolling stock, building kits, weathering. Your layout mainly consists of yard operations.

Are you a collector? You may not even have a layout but have a nice collection for display.

Are you an accumulator? You keep everything, you have old stuff in boxes, you buy more than can fit on your layout. You are buying things for a future layout.

All of the above apply to me.

I don't have a layout, but I do build dioramas (and tear those up and re-build them when I learn a new technique that I can apply to it)

I also am a locomotive and rolling stock collector and accumulator.

What I do is build and detail the locomotives/ rolling stock, and place them on the diorama, in my display case,  or I put them into my home-made copy of the Athern Blue-box style box, and save them for when I get the garage cleaned up enough to have a layout in there.

I'd also like to add two more category to this list:

 The scratch-builder: You love to scratch-build everything, Locomotives, rolling stock, buildings, and everything else, from the ground up, regardless of what others tell you. You love the challenge of building complex stuff.

The kit maker: You go to a show, and buy up as many of the now Out of production Athern Blue-box kits as possible. You refuse to beleave that Athern discontinued them, and want to have a surplus of these kits built up for that unavoidable day that the Athern Blue-box kits cease to exist at a show.

I also fit thest two categories.

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Posted by canazar on Monday, October 11, 2010 6:08 PM

I am "All the Above". 

At one point or another, I go through several phases at one time... and  I can go through it several times in a phase.

 

There is no hope for me.

 

:D

Best Regards, Big John

Kiva Valley Railway- Freelanced road in central Arizona.  Visit the link to see my MR forum thread on The Building of the Whitton Branch on the  Kiva Valley Railway

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Monday, October 11, 2010 11:52 AM

Motley
OK let's hear it. What kind of modeler are you?

Are you a builder? Are you runner? Are you an operator? Are you a railfanner? Are you a tinkerer? Are you a locomotive guy? Are you a rolling stocker? Are you a collector? Are you an accumulator? Are you show modeler?

Short answer is a resounding YES.    I am constantly building things (two new moduls on the living room floor right now); I love to run trains (can spend hours with a train on a simple loop); I belong to several operating groups; I am down at the track watching trains every opportunity; my workbench is full of tinker project (I am the MASTER of installing sound in Railcommand) units; I have seas of match rolling stock for era/road/etc.; I collect Alco PAs, EMD FTs, and E units, billboard reefer (non-beer), passenger trains, and caboose;  I accumulate things that I can find when they are a good deal (just got about 30 Lionel O-32 remote turnouts for $10); And I regularly show at the Great Train Expo, regularly enter various modeling and photo contests. 

Then there are the areas you didn't mention.  Helping out railroad oriented organizations.  Vvirtual modeling with computer software and games.   Layout desiging seems to be missing from your list..   Then there are all the train games where one builds railroads and conqures the gamming world 18xx (tile) series, Empire Builder (crayon) series, Rail Baron, Tycoon, Rails through the Rockies, Silverton, etc, etc.

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Posted by aloco on Sunday, October 10, 2010 10:34 AM

Motley
Are you a locomotive guy? You like locomotives, lots and lots of locomotives.

I am definitely a locomotive guy.  I like diesels, especially diesel locomotives with body styles from the 1940s and 1950s.

 

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Sunday, October 10, 2010 8:08 AM

larak

Builder 40%

Railfanner 30%

Operator 25%

Tinkerer et. al. 5%

But the mix varies depending on the phase of the moon, the weather and a host of other things. http://stremy.net/SRA/smileys/confused0006.gif

Fits me to a 'T' although I tend to do a lot of 're'-modelling too---

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...

http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/

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Posted by larak on Saturday, October 9, 2010 9:10 PM

Builder 40%

Railfanner 30%

Operator 25%

Tinkerer et. al. 5%

But the mix varies depending on the phase of the moon, the weather and a host of other things.

The mind is like a parachute. It works better when it's open.  www.stremy.net

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Posted by Mister Mikado on Saturday, October 9, 2010 9:01 PM

My situation may be somewhat unique, and could very well sound like torture to most of you...

I got deep into trains about 2002 after a lifetime of dipping my feet back into the hobby sporadically (along with prerequisite childhood memories of an elaborate Lionel set).  For the past 8 years I've bought up a sizable collection of Genesis, Spectrum, Proto 1000/2000 and IHC steam and diesel locos, over 90 Athearn blue box freight and passengers cars, and a few accessories.  Lucky for my wallet, things were still cheap!  Hardly any DCC or sound equipped models back then.  Genesis Mikados and Spectrum steam sold for $100 or less.  Proto and Atlas diesels were going for $40-$60 on ebay, Athearn blue box old stock in the hobby stores were $4-$7 each!  I was able to collect an empire of colorful rolling stock and high quality locos and enjoy building up the kits for reasonable prices, unlike today where a good loco or freight car costs 3-4 times as much. 

I live in a small apartment and never set up even a shelf layout.  There just isn't the room, and I never knew if I'd being moving from year to year--that's the main reason.  So all train running has taken place on a four foot test track on my desk, back and forth.  Needless to say I practiced the one tie per minute crawl on many a loco.  I concentrated on modifications mostly, like adding weight to locos, changing the entire blue box fleet to kadees, painting custom details, decaling unlettered locos and cars, lubricating locos, creating small tabletop scenes, and constructing a few buildings.  I learned to get get satisfaction from inventive tasks, like changing the unrealistic factory headlamp to a yellow LED in all my steam locos or adding crew to locomotive cabs, or building my own track cleaner car from an Athearn boxcar using a piece of spring-loaded masonite.  Then I started buying used freight car lots with broken pieces and restoring them.  I replaced many a broken boxcar rung with a heavy duty staple bent into shape to match the rest, then painted to match. Stuff like that.  Great fun to while away the cold winter nights.

Now that I'm retired my wife and I can relocate to a less expensive area with the hope of buying a house.  Then I will build my first layout.  Funny though--I may not enjoy the actual track laying and scenery making as much as all those years of tinkering and inventing and repairing.

Thanks for listening,

Robby

(Mister Mikado because the Genesis Mikado is my favorite steamer, which runs like a silent Swiss watch, which I brought back from the dead by repairing those tiny fragile wires under the boiler.  But my Spectrum 3 truck Shay just cleared her little throat...all right little Miss Shay, you're my other fav.)

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Saturday, October 9, 2010 8:49 PM

tomikawaTT

...I am having fun, have been having fun and expect to continue to have fun - and, after all, that's what it's all about.

Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

AMEN.

Paul

If you're having fun, you're doing it the right way.
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Posted by tomikawaTT on Saturday, October 9, 2010 7:56 PM

Interesting...

At one time or another, I have been all of the above.  Now, since I've been granted title to enough space to build a reasonable facsimile of my dream layout, I'm no longer an accumulator and have become much more a builder.

When it comes to model railroading, it's impossible for a lone wolf to be anything but a generalist.  Only clubs (or people who can afford to employ professional builders) can make a comfortable fit for anyone who is a narrow specialist.  At the moment, I am mainly a builder (of the layout, and of some of the kits I accumulated against the day...)  I am an operator.  My inner (model) railfan will have to wait until the scenery is complete on the various sections of the layout (and the most spectacular area will be one where the benchwork is still future tense...)  I am having fun, have been having fun and expect to continue to have fun - and, after all, that's what it's all about.

Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by gear-jammer on Saturday, October 9, 2010 7:34 PM

Michael,

I am in the all of  the above category.  I recently caught the operations bug which has led to some serious changes in  the layout.  I am getting good at prying turnouts and track loose.  Some things have to be complete before proceeding with others.

Just enjoy it all,

Sue

Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.

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Posted by jecorbett on Saturday, October 9, 2010 6:50 PM

Motley

OK let's hear it. What kind of modeler are you?

There are many different facets to this hobby, and all kinds of different modelers.

So I'm wondering, which one are you?

Are you a builder? You are working on the layout more than you run the trains. You like to work on scenery, structures, etc.

Are you runner? You like to run trains. You would rather just kick back and run the trains, even if your layout doesn't have scenery.

Are you an operator? You run your layout with prototypical operations like a mini transportation system.

Are you a railfanner? You have a nicely detailed layout, but like watching the trains run through the scenery instead of operating.

Are you a tinkerer? You're not satisfied with anything, and always thinking what to change next. Pull out this structure here, move these tracks here.

Are you a locomotive guy? You like locomotives, lots and lots of locomotives. You're layout mainly consists of engine facilities.

Are you a rolling stocker? You like lots of rolling stock, building kits, weathering. Your layout mainly consists of yard operations.

Are you a collector? You may not even have a layout but have a nice collection for display.

Are you an accumulator? You keep everything, you have old stuff in boxes, you buy more than can fit on your layout. You are buying things for a future layout.

Are you show modeler? You take your module layout to shows and display them.

Let's see, for me right now, I'm in build mode. So I'm a builder. I work on the layout more than I run trains. Even though my trackwork is completed. I'm also a tinkerer. Even though my layout is new, I know I'll be always changing something.

I like engines more than rolling stock. I'm trying to start a nice collection. Starting from completely nothing just 9 months ago, I know have 12 engines.

Am I a builder. Yes, but not by choice. I would much prefer to be running the trains than building the layout. I really don't enjoy the building process. It is simply a means to an end. To get the railroad I want, it is what I must do. If a could snap my fingers and magically have the railroad I envision, I would do it in a heartbeat. If I had the funds to do so, I would pay someone to build my railroad. Since neither is an option, I have to keep slugging along, dreaming of the day when I can run a full schedule of trains over a completely scenicked layout.

My plan is to be an operator. I just don't get a lot of satisfaction from operating trains over large sections of unscenicked lumber. I know a lot of modelers commence operations long before the layout is scenicked. That just doesn't work for me. I want my layout to both function and look like the real thing.

If and when I finally get to the operator stage, maybe I will become a tinkerer, reworking parts of the layout that can use improving. I hope to have that luxury some day.

I've never considered myself a collector of either locomotives or rolling stock. I never buy anything with the idea of putting it on a display shelf. If I don't have a use for it on the layout, I won't buy it.

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Posted by B&O SteamDemon on Saturday, October 9, 2010 5:05 PM
Motley

OK let's hear it. What kind of modeler are you?

There are many different facets to this hobby, and all kinds of different modelers.

So I'm wondering, which one are you?

Are you a builder? You are working on the layout more than you run the trains. You like to work on scenery, structures, etc.

Are you runner? You like to run trains. You would rather just kick back and run the trains, even if your layout doesn't have scenery.

Are you an operator? You run your layout with prototypical operations like a mini transportation system.

Are you a railfanner? You have a nicely detailed layout, but like watching the trains run through the scenery instead of operating.

Are you a tinkerer? You're not satisfied with anything, and always thinking what to change next. Pull out this structure here, move these tracks here.

Are you a locomotive guy? You like locomotives, lots and lots of locomotives. You're layout mainly consists of engine facilities.

Are you a rolling stocker? You like lots of rolling stock, building kits, weathering. Your layout mainly consists of yard operations.

Are you a collector? You may not even have a layout but have a nice collection for display.

Are you an accumulator? You keep everything, you have old stuff in boxes, you buy more than can fit on your layout. You are buying things for a future layout.

Are you show modeler? You take your module layout to shows and display them.

Let's see, for me right now, I'm in build mode. So I'm a builder. I work on the layout more than I run trains. Even though my trackwork is completed. I'm also a tinkerer. Even though my layout is new, I know I'll be always changing something.

I like engines more than rolling stock. I'm trying to start a nice collection. Starting from completely nothing just 9 months ago, I know have 12 engines.

I'm more of the MoW of my layout, I enjoy building it and operating it on a loosely prototypical B&O operations in the late 50's early 60's.  But not mainline operations but backwater in the hills of WV where steam was phased out last for the road.  My love is running the older equipment that either I bought or was given to me 20+ years ago.  I have alot of fast mail trains and reefer expresses that run through as well as long coal drags and locals.  My great joy is super detailing equipment, my OCD to attention to detail drives my wife nuts but when you look at my equipment it doesn't look like it's a model but a miniture of that items whether it's an engine or rolling stock or a building.  But for me when running my trains on the layout I truly enjoy seeing a pair of EL-3a doubleheaded pulling a coal drag on a 2% grade with a pair of Mikes on the back end as helpers.  But everyonce in a while I get a wild hair and pull out my only Amtrak I own and run it for giggles and grins.  The love for me is building my own "world" in the layout and being able to unwind and just be a " kid" again for a little while.

As for engines.... wow I have 18 Steam engines, 15 diesels

passengers.... I have 82 passenger cars for 4 roads B&O, C&O, PRR and Amtrak

rolling stock....  I don't count that high....   lol

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Posted by ruderunner on Saturday, October 9, 2010 3:07 PM

Well, you forgot dreamer.  Kind of a variation of planner but the stipulatuion that someday may not arrive.  Seems the longer I "plan" my future layout the longer it will take to complete.

I did just tear down a woefully inadequate layout, mainly because it didn't support operatiuons the way I would like.  I haven't run a train in six months, going through with drawls righ now.

So what does a dreamer do?  Plans the ultimate layout, trackwork, benchwork, scenery all the way down to planning staging track routing and siginals.  Even a materials list.  But takes forever to do even the smallest part of actual construction.  As such in the last 3 months I haven't layed any new track but I did get 4 Hullets for my Whiskey Island section of my "dream" layout.  I need a table saw before starting to constrcut benchwork.

Of course the longer it takes to build anything the more time to plan things that can't realistically be built.

See also: analysis paraylisis.

Modeling the Cleveland and Pittsburgh during the PennCentral era starting on the Cleveland lakefront and ending in Mingo junction

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Saturday, October 9, 2010 2:39 PM

I'm a builder, too.  As the construction phase of my 5x12 foot HO layout drew to a close after 6 years, my interest started to wane.  For one thing, it lacked operational interest, despite the late addition of a couple of extra industries.  But mostly, the space was full.  The pink foam was hidden, and even the ballast was complete.  Moreover, there wasn't really room for even one more building in the crowded urban space of Moose Bay.

Now, I have embarked upon Phase 2 of my layout, and the thrill is back.  I am looking forward at least 2 or 3 years in planning the details of the new section, and then Phase 3 is already taking shape in the back of my mind.

I have, though, sewn the seeds of different things.  Phase 2 includes staging, and more interesting switching and industries.  The longer run also adds interest to the railfanning, and even the short subway loop got an upgrade, with a pair of sidings which serve as either staging or another station.

World's Greatest Hobby?  You won't get any argument from me on that one.

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by pastorbob on Saturday, October 9, 2010 12:45 PM

I like building, scenery and structures

I like operations more

I am a diesel guy

I am a freight car guy

Bob

Bob Miller http://www.atsfmodelrailroads.com/
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Posted by BRAKIE on Saturday, October 9, 2010 11:27 AM

CNJ831

Mike, I think that for many of the more serious hobbyists among us it is difficult to have only a narrow focus within the broad range of aspects offered by the hobby. I can honestly acknowledge being seriously involved in every one of the categories you posted, except perhaps "runner", since my approach there would be better classed as "operations". Plus, I regard myself as a model railroad photographer of some skill and hobby historian to boot. In my opinion, enjoying the model railroading hobby to its fullest really demands acquiring the skills and knowledge that allows the hobbyist to pursue all these facets simultaneously.  

CNJ831

John,I consider myself a  "serious" modeler but,not to the extreme.

I am more serious about operation,believable scenery and rhyme and reason for the railroad being then I am about the micky mouse stuff. .I also fully believe a industry should look like it needs rail service and I strive for that goal  with few large industrial buildings instead of several smaller industries where  50' boxcar would overwhelm the receiving/shipping docks.

So,IMHO one can be serious with narrow modeling focuses solely base on their modeling goals..

 

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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Posted by wedudler on Saturday, October 9, 2010 10:11 AM

Ok, now I'm an operator at first.

But most I like to operate at a nice layout, so I have to build it. Smile

Wolfgang

Pueblo & Salt Lake RR

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Posted by Motley on Saturday, October 9, 2010 10:06 AM

Good points Paul.

I just edited the original post to reflect the additional categories you suggested.

Michael


CEO-
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Posted by CTValleyRR on Saturday, October 9, 2010 10:06 AM

Lately, I've been finding myself in the category of "I'll-get-to-it-some-day-er".  I don't really consider myself a dreamer, because I have a concrete list of "to do" items for my layout.  I'm not a collector, because I'm not acquiring any new stuff.  With a couple of exceptions, I have everything I need.  Nor am I an operator, because my work has stalled in a spot that leaves a large part of my layout inaccessible to trains (plus my layout is basically a continuous loop, which disqualifies me in some people's eyes.)

Usually, though, between work, kids activities (and of course, my foolish decision to both coach youth soccer and be Cubmaster for the local Pack), and required chores / maintenance, I get about 10 minutes to myself at the end of the day, and it's too late to start anything.

So I guess, for the moment, I'm a frustrated builder.  Hoping that will change once the cold weather sets in!

Connecticut Valley Railroad A Branch of the New York, New Haven, and Hartford

"If you think you can do a thing or think you can't do a thing, you're right." -- Henry Ford

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Saturday, October 9, 2010 9:49 AM

Nice list. 

I would separate the collector into Collector (capital C).  Usually collects Lionel/American Flyer toy trains, but they exist in all scales.  For the Collector, the collection is the thing - frequently they specialize and buy multiple variations.  Usually has multiple display cabinets and shelves to display the collection in an organized fashion.

Then there's the collector (little c) or better known as the Accumulator.  Some are impulse buyers, some accumulate for that future dream layout.  This group has way more than they can use on the layout.  If they switch scales they keep everything from the old scale.  They usually have everything they ever bought or were given.  The "collection" is stored in boxes stuffed under the layout (if they have one), in closets, the garage, etc.  These are the guys who buy back issues of Model Railroader (and other mags).

As noted above I would add the Operator category for those who try to operate the layout as a transportation system in miniature.

Then there's the Railfan who likes a nicely detailed layout, but likes watching the trains run through the scenery instead of operating..

Currently, I am an Accumulator.  Sometime this winter I'll be in Builder mode for the dream layout and once I have enough of the layout built in the Operator mode as well.

Enjoy

Paul

 

If you're having fun, you're doing it the right way.
  • Member since
    June 2006
  • From: Maryville IL
  • 9,577 posts
Posted by cudaken on Saturday, October 9, 2010 7:42 AM

 Good question Micheal.

 I mainly just like to watch the train's run. Part of my layout is pretty well done, lots of tress and hills / Mountains but, lot of it is thin out door carpet. I enjoy watching the trains as much on the carpeted section as I do on the nicer section.

  I kind of gone in phase's. When I first got started I was in to tinkering with old engines and cheap rolling stock. Reason was I did not have the funds for new, so I was E bay happy. Learning to fix things early in the hobby has served me well. My fleet of Tyco Old dutch Hoppers roll and track as well now as my Inter Mountain hoppers.

 In this first phase, it was all so about numbers, how many Engines and Rolling Stock could I have. At one point I had around 50 engines and 300 cars. I cut back after I went DCC and gave away around 20 engines and some where around 50 cars.

 Next came the scenery stage, started buying and building Kits, I have around 70 buildings now, most are sitting in boxes. Next I started making tress, probably around 300 + now.  Then I started on the K-10 Mining and Grain Elevator section. I started this section after I had been on the this site for around a year and a half. Used foam on top of plywood, has a grade and cliffs are up to 14 inches. Looks pretty good.

 Stage I am in to now is adding a small yard, passing spurs and a Passenger Train section. All so starting to rip out the carpet a section at a time.

                      Cuda Ken

I hate Rust

  • Member since
    April 2001
  • From: US
  • 3,150 posts
Posted by CNJ831 on Saturday, October 9, 2010 6:35 AM

Mike, I think that for many of the more serious hobbyists among us it is difficult to have only a narrow focus within the broad range of aspects offered by the hobby. I can honestly acknowledge being seriously involved in every one of the categories you posted, except perhaps "runner", since my approach there would be better classed as "operations". Plus, I regard myself as a model railroad photographer of some skill and hobby historian to boot. In my opinion, enjoying the model railroading hobby to its fullest really demands acquiring the skills and knowledge that allows the hobbyist to pursue all these facets simultaneously.  

CNJ831

  • Member since
    September 2004
  • From: Dearborn Station
  • 24,281 posts
Posted by richhotrain on Saturday, October 9, 2010 6:09 AM

Tinkerer.

I can never leave well enough alone. 

I am always thinking about moving a turnout or crossover, adding another tier, looking for ways to turn my trains around (i.e., wye, helix, etc.).

I drive myself nuts.

Rich

Alton Junction

  • Member since
    October 2001
  • From: OH
  • 17,574 posts
Posted by BRAKIE on Saturday, October 9, 2010 5:23 AM

In my best Jimmy Stewart voice.

Well gee whiz Michael,I'm a collector,a operator and I never got into that change game unless it was necessary and I enjoy doing scenery work...I hate building a layout and in that light I won't tear out a layout when its "finish".

 

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt  Safety First!"

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