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What made you choose your rr company to model?

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  • Member since
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  • From: MP76-Houston, Texas
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What made you choose your rr company to model?
Posted by fwdguy on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 6:40 PM
Hello,

I choose the Burlington Northern because for one it ran by my home when I was growing up and still does somewhat( BNSF), always cool to model what you see daily.

And second because it was the first real nice locomotive paint scheme I got as a birthday gift when I was young. Atlas GP 38 High Nose.

And third, because my childhood friend was a Santa Fe modeler so I could not copy him.

He always said how much better Santa Fe was than BN, and then the BN gobbled up the Santa Fe, Im sure that ticked him off.

So is life. But that is what makes model railroading fun, everyone has there own interest.

It would be boring if everyone modeled the same company.

Mark
Moderator
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Posted by tstage on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 7:01 PM
More a victim of circumstance than anything. Three Christmases ago on a whim, I picked up an Athearn 2-8-2 Mike on sale at a LHS. Turned out to be a New York Central model . I didn't really know much about the NYC at that time, although I was familiar with the name. (I know a little more now but still have much to learn.)

Just started my layout this past May and decided to stick with the NYC theme. I only have two locomotives: A Mike and an S1 switcher - both NYC. I'm not entirely stuck on just one railroad. At some point, I may change my mind. That shouldn't change my layout much - other than the paint scheme of my freight house. [:)]

Tom

https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling

Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.

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Posted by FThunder11 on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 7:54 PM
I just thought, since it cam out a few years ago, that the Acela was so awsome looking. And once they got a model of it I knew that I had to do that.
Kevin Farlow Colorado Springs
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 9:07 PM
I gre up near the UP mainline. My dad and grandpa were members of the AOS museum and the bigboy is parked there. I rode a challenger exscursion I have seen the 844 when it was numbered 8444 and I have taken both my children to see the Challenger on both of its trips to Texas.
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Posted by Hawks05 on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 9:26 PM
i chose BN mainly because that was the first locomotive i got at a show so i just stuck with it. i have a bunch of different road name freight cars, but most of my loco's are linked back to BN somehow.

my layout will hopefully be mainly BN/BNSF power with some NS. i love the black loco and just the look of the NS locos. i love the BNSF heritage 2 color scheme and BNSF is linked to BN.
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Posted by Javern on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 9:37 PM
grew up on the Milwaukee Road, still recall the f unit, livestock cars, etc
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 9:40 PM
Needed some vintage lines for my '50s layout, my brother (and slightly larger financial contributor) suggested Chicago Burlington & Quincy, Great Northern, and Chicago NorthWestern. So, we model all 3 :) It'll be a farily large layout when complete. A late steam 4-8-4 GN passenger pulling slightly unprototypical Heavyweights in a later Empire Builder Scheme, deisel FT CBQ freight, and a deisel F7 CNW freight. It sure has taught me alot more about these lines, and that is definately part of the fun.
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  • From: Carmichael, CA
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Posted by twhite on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 10:05 PM
I like mountain railroading, and both Rio Grande and Southern Pacific ran through pretty spectacular scenery, and both had pretty spectacular steam locomotives. It was a pretty easy choice when I got serious--even though I live in California, I liked Rio Grande standard gauge steam, and grew up with SP cab-forwards. So I model a fictional California extension of the Rio Grande on which SP has trackage rights and get the best of both of my worlds.
Tom
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, October 26, 2004 11:20 PM
I'm a fan of big steam and diesel power from the transition era, so I naturally gravitated to the Union Pacific.

Also when I was young I was extremely impressed when I saw a Santa Fe Warbonnet ABBA with 20 or more passenger cars roar thru Mundelein, Illinois.

Hence, I model the UP & ATSF mainlines. I also am a big fan of John Deere so I run a JD branch line.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 12:31 AM
Outside of the USA , Union Pacific is the best known, still retains its original name
and colour scheme, and my grand-daughter prefers the yellow and grey to all others!
kiwi from new zealand
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Posted by cspmo on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 3:55 AM
When I join a model railroad club, I was going to model A.T.S.F., but majority
of the members were modeling that R.R..So I pick a railroad that came thru
the town where I live, and one that didn't go bankrupt( Rock Island).
I decided on Chicago & Northwestern.
Brian
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Posted by Virginian on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 9:28 AM
My great Grandaddy helped build the Virginian, and I love N&W steam too, so there was never any question which roads I would model.
What could have happened.... did.
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Posted by vsmith on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 9:40 AM
The freelanced Borracho Spring RR is loosly based on the Arizona Copper Co mining RR and several RR photos documented in Gerald Best's book "Mexican Narrow Gauge". I wanted to try and catch some feel of a small tram line built before the sdvent of the auto still running thru a small desert town in the 50's.

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by jhugart on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 9:43 AM
It chose me!

When I was younger, I liked the C&O trains I saw when visiting my grandparents in West Virginia.

When I got older, I liked the look of the C&NW colors on commuter cars, and thought that would be fun.

Passenger trains always appealed to me, so Amtrak was an option.

But when I went with my wife on her family's fishing trip to the upper peninsula of Michigan, there were railroad tracks you had to cross to get from the cabins to the lake. And there was this huge building on a distant hilltop that turned out to be the old rockhouse for a copper mine. And there was this neat bridge connecting Houghton and Hancock: a double-deck lift bridge, tracks on the bottom, roadway on the top.

As I investigated everything, I learned more about it -- the copper industry in the area, when trains ran, how local trolleys moved people from home to work and play, when the mines ran into trouble.

I started imagining what it would be like if the mines had continued to do well, and if the Great Lakes had been too perilous to move ore, so that the railroads really prospered, well into the 1960s.

So now my sketches and plans for the layout modules all center on the key elements of this region (the yard, the downtown warehouse area, the mine workings, a nearby timber town, and possibly a smelter for the mine). There have been a number of railroads that started and operated and failed in this area...the Soo Line was the last to actually operate trains there.

But in my plans, a company called the Keweenaw and Superior acquired control of a lot of little roads and became known as "the Copper Line" throughout the region of the UP, Wisconsin, and parts of Minnesota.

And once I get the basement improvements done, and finish my son's little layout (so we get all our modelling skills), I'll start work on the yard module for the K&SRR.
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Posted by orsonroy on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 9:51 AM
Being the som of a railfan, I'm addicted to big steam. But my dad's a 1960s LV/E-L fan, anmd I'm a 1930-1955 midwestern steam fan. Mostly, I've spent dozens of hours chasing and riding behind NKP steam (759, 765, 587), so that's where my modeling interests lay. I model central Illinois because that's where the NKP ran in my home state, and I've spent loads of time down there. And finally, since I have a deep love of history and decided to recearch and model this area prototypically, I've grown fond of the "unknown" railroads of the region, specifically the C&IM, TP&W and P&PU, all of which play major roles on my layout.

Ray Breyer

Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943

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  • From: Out on the Briny Ocean Tossed
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Posted by Fergmiester on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 10:48 AM
I have an affinity for steam. Unfortunately the only affordable steam available is either generic, USRA or US class 1stuff, No Canadian as our market is a small one. So after doing some reading and looking at what was available and what I liked I decided to go freelanced and based it on the local geography. The Musquodoboit, Eastern Shore & Sydney is based on the Sydney and Louisburg RR of Cape Breton but with a predominent C&O roster.

http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php?cat=500&ppuser=5959

If one could roll back the hands of time... They would be waiting for the next train into the future. A. H. Francey 1921-2007  

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 12:20 PM
Well, the first loco I bought was an Athearn SP SD9, followed by an Amtrak SW7, then an EMD Demo GP60. The next two additions were an A/B set of Proto C-Liners in NYC paint - at this point, I decided that modelling a museum was the only way to justify my fleet! I've since been adding more locos, mainly those I like the look of. I do try to operate locos that are owned by real museums, like my FP7 in Milwaukee Road paint - this will eventally be numbered to match the real example owned by the Illinois RR Museum.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 1:21 PM
I grew up liking Chessie, I thought it was the coolest paint scheme. Then I started sub - contracting on CSX right of ways, and I liked them as well, so I model the merger!
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Posted by jdolan on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 4:04 PM
I model the ATSF because I grew up along It's tracks in rural Illinois. I knew more about it and it's equipment.
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  • From: Louisville,Ky.
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Posted by locomutt on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 4:20 PM
I grew up in eastern Ky.,mainly around the C & O;and actually lived in both Raceland and
Russell.(car shops and mainyard)and of course not to far from Huntington,WVa.
I tried modelling the C & O,but it was to hard for me to stay totally prototype. So I
decided to model a free-lance railroad. Coal hauling,set it the area of E.Ky.,and
western WVa. Time span in the 1950s-1960s era. I can run 4 axle locos that I like,
that might not have been in use on my favorite road. I've been doing this for over
40 years and still enjoy it.(wrong;I LOVE IT!)[:D][:D]

I model in "O" Sacle now,since about 1975,but started in HO. My very first
"train set" was an Athearn "Hustler eng;Western Pacific box,a flat;and a
Santa Fe caboose. (the Hustler had rubber band drive!)[:D]

Being Crazy,keeps you from going "INSANE" !! "The light at the end of the tunnel,has been turned off due to budget cuts" NOT AFRAID A Vet., and PROUD OF IT!!

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, October 27, 2004 5:11 PM
I've been in and out of different roads, first C&O (I grew up near the old Pere Marquette line in Michigan), then the NYC (it served the Rouge steel mill in Dearborn which I wanted to model someday), then B&O (after having moved to Maryland and got my drivers license and done lots of serious railfanning on that road), now I might do some freelancing so I can model some of my favorite prototypes (incl. SD38-2's) that were never used by ANY of those lines.
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Posted by n2mopac on Friday, October 29, 2004 11:53 AM
I chose BNSF (switched from former MoPac layout) for two reasons. First, though I had no attraction to ATSF or BN previously, I lived in a BNSF town immediately after the merger and quickly fell in love with the Heritage and Heritage II paint schemes. But more importantly, I lived in the area that I model (Saginaw, TX) and found that the industrial area along the Wichita Falls sub just above North Yard simply begged to be modeled. It has a great variety of industries in a very condensed about of real estate right along the main, including a Trinity Ind. plant that builds covered hoppers. I siimply had to be done.

Ron

Owner and superintendant of the N scale Texas Colorado & Western Railway, a protolanced representaion of the BNSF from Fort Worth, TX through Wichita Falls TX and into Colorado. 

Check out the TC&WRy on at https://www.facebook.com/TCWRy

Check out my MRR How-To YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/c/RonsTrainsNThings

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, October 29, 2004 12:02 PM
My first rememberance of a train was a string Chessie System engines along Broadway in Buffalo, NY (Bison Yard?). Some 25 years later when I got back into the hobby, I saw an Athearn GP-35 at the LHS and the rest they say is history. For me, Chessie came first, then B&O, then C&O and WM. I started with the merger railroad and worked backwards.

I guess its the first one you see that always holds a special place.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, October 31, 2004 5:49 AM
Exposure to one railroad! When I was ages 3 to 12 we lived across from the Lehigh Valley mainline in Cranford, NJ. Since dad kew his son loved trains he would take the long way to Grandmoms house in Hazleton, Pa via Lehighton Pa., a major LV yard. Upon arrival at grandmoms in Hazleton there was the LV Hazleton branch. Then a visit to my other grandmom and she lived next to the LV's banch in Jeddo, Pa.

I grew up thinking there were only two railroads. LV and a smaller rr named the CNJ.
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Posted by PistolPete on Sunday, October 31, 2004 7:42 AM
BN for me. When I got back into RailRoading after 20 years out I was at a show I saw some BN rolling stock and liked the way they looked. I have since added UP and SF for
my interchange switching. I also do some MEC, BAR or any thing local to the state of Maine.
"Model Railroading is a great pastime, BUT SOCCER IS A WAY OF LIFE" Enjoy Life Pistol Pete
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Posted by Jacktal on Sunday, October 31, 2004 8:57 AM
I purchase western railroad companies locos,mainly Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific.It may sound like a strange mix,maybe so,but I like unique locos and many of them were exclusively(or nearly) UP owned prototypes(like DDA40X's,Veranda's,etc).
You can get a good variety of models with UP colors and still be prototypical without investing in custom painting and so on.

Being canadian,I wanted a canadian company on my layout also.I chose CP for their colors but mainly because it would make sense to see a CP loco parked alongside a UP consist,being both western companies.I have no knowledge yet as to how it goes in the west parts of U.S. and Canada(I live in eastern Canada),but I suppose this is a familiar occurence.
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Posted by 88gta350 on Sunday, October 31, 2004 9:03 AM
I love the area I grew up in, and when I decided to model I thought a PRR route through the area would be good. During research I found out the valley I lived in did have it's own line that was abandonded in the early '40's. Because I prefer modern railroading over the steam era, I decided to bring that line (Kishacoquillas Valley Railroad) into the present day. It's still a short line, but instead of 0-6-0's and 2-4-0's it has GP9's and GP30's, etc... I've changed the name to Indian Valley Railroad, mainly because I didn't want to try and letter everything with Kishacoquillas!

You can check out the website in my signature.
Dave M
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Posted by CP5415 on Sunday, October 31, 2004 1:20 PM
Having grown up looking out my bedroom window being able to see Canadian Pacific's Agincourt marshalling yard hump in action & having my dad take me to railfan from the parking lot in the yard when I was young, I rapidly grew fond of the CPR.
Another item that made me want to model the CPR is after reading about the history of the CPR & how it was an integral part of the history of Canada kinda makes it special to me.
After all, I AM CANADIAN!

Gordon

Brought to you by the letters C.P.R. as well as D&H!

 K1a - all the way

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, October 31, 2004 4:42 PM
I grew up in Calgary, Alberta, a Canadian Pacific city if ever there was one. I lived but a block from the main line heading west so 2-10-4 Selkirks were a daily sight. Just at the end of steam, when I was 20, I moved to Vancouver and discovered the CP's lines in southern British Columbia. Now, 50 years later, my fictional N Scale Klahowya Subdivision of the CPR is designed to reflect CP and GN/BN action in the fifties, sixties and seventies in the West Kootenay. it's great what you can do with sufficient hidden staging tracks. Pay the pike a visit at http://homepage.mac.com/pblake/webpages/klahowya.html.
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Posted by Paul3 on Sunday, October 31, 2004 8:18 PM
I model the New Haven. Why?

Probably because, like most New Englanders, I am a tad parochial in what I like and dislike. The old poster that shows the Bostonian's view of the world which shows Boston up front and Worcester (about 50 miles west) about on par with Los Angeles is not that far off. IOW, if it ain't local, I ain't interested.

Keeping that in mind, I would want to model southern New England (where I'm from) in some era, and I live right next to the NEC, A.K.A. the New Haven's Shore Line Route.

That leaves me with the past or the present. The past has a grand memory around here. The old RR's had class and style, multiple paint schemes running in the same train, so many different makes and models it makes your head spin. They had fast first class passenger trains, mile-long freights, and locals all over the place. In the past, New Engand was the industrial heartland of the USA, and the RR's moved the goods.

Today, the industry went south, west and overseas. The only long frieght trains around here are Autoracks, an occasional stack job / TOFC, and some general freight, and none of that is anywhere near me (it's in Worcester). The only freight I see are a once a day local freight. For passengers, I get the Acela, the Regional jobs, and the MBTA commuter fleet.

In 1953, there were a dozen mainline freights between Boston and New York City on the Shore Line. Today, there are zero. In the 1960's, there were multiple sleepers available to New York or Washington, D.C. Today, there are zero.

In short, I don't model the present beause it is intolerably dull, so that means I must model the past. That translates into the New Haven, as they owned the rails out here from 1893 to 1969. After that, it's been a downhill slide ever since.

Paul A. Cutler III
*****************
Weather Or No Go New Haven
*****************

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