My first train set was a TYCO at age 8. Shorted out in 2 days. Next train set at age 10 worked well, but I quickly realized that the trucks and truck mounted couplers stunk, and the AHM GP18 was a poor runner.
About age 12 I got my first Athearn Blue Box kit. At $1.98 from Millers Appliance in Grand Island Nebraska, it was twice as expensive as the AHM and TYCO cars I could get from Woolco's.
Easy for a 12 year old to build, and it was way higher quality rolling and coupling. It was a 40 foot boxcar, the red and black with large white Santa Fe Shock Control logo. Fantastic.
Got an Athearn BB F7 "supergeared" in UP paint. Fantastic loco. Its the only BB loco that I still have after about 45 years of ownership.
At age 12 to 14, I got onto to quality and never looked back. With the exception of the crude details by today's standards, the quality of running and operation still stands the test of time.
- Douglas
deckroidIn 1978, my grandmother got me the Tyco Chattanooga Choo-Choo set. I loved that set. I still do, to this day.
Deckroid, I think it very cool that you still have some of the train-set your grandmother gifted you, and the transformer still in service. Call me sentimental, but often wish I had but just one piece from my late Pop's long, long gone old Marx O scale train-set. Remembering the joyful parts of the past are one thing, but touching it is a whole lot better. Thanks & regards, Peter
In 1978, my grandmother got me the Tyco Chattanooga Choo-Choo set. I loved that set. I still do, to this day. It was my first train and my first layout the following year when my parents got me a sheet of plywood. I was 10 and didn't know what I was doing, but in some ways that silly sheet of plywood and that horribly, wonderful engine dictates to me today what a layout is and should always be: It Is Your World.
I had my ho scale slot car track on the same sheet of wood, complete with the jumping the train tracks.
I can still smell the smoke from the engine! I still have the engine, most of the cars, caboose and controller. Fun fact, the controller I have used to power lights and other things on other layouts I have had.
To this day, I still think steam engines on a layout need to puff smoke as it chugs along.
I inherited my brother's Lionel O gauge in the late 1950s. I built it up considerably until the mid 1960s when I saw HOn3, and sold my Lionel. But I was soon off to college and didn't get back into trains until I had my own house in the mid 1970s. I bought some HO just to get started quickly, but within a few years I was lured back into O gauge by Atlas O. However, it seemed I couldn't find Atlas in my local hobby shops anymore, and interest lagged while I tried to figure out how to keep water out of my basement. By about 2000 I solved the wet basement problem, and everyone was coming out with O gauge. I did buy some new Atlas O and MTH cars to replicate some of what I had in Lionel, although in closer to scale. I also bought some of what I never had, but always wanted, like a NH EP-5. Nevertheless, 2 rail O gauge seemed a hard pull out in the boondocks where I live. Then along came the seemingly perfect compromise, On30. It was O scale, it was narrow gauge, and it was on universally available HO track. I'll keep my 4'x8' table with my 3 rail O gauge nostalgia set-up, and then I can go ahead and build my dream layout in On30.
My American Flyer tinplate made me want something that looked more like the prototype. This led me to HO and, the rest is history. Now my aim is to replicate that which I photographed in the pre-wide nosed, non-ditchlit, caboose on every train, 1980s.
Shock ControlI am also obsessed with F units and USRA 0-6-0s with the sloped tender.
I was going to say "no" until I read this sentence. Hmm... I love F units and sloped back tenders also. Maybe train sets did influence this.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
No.
My first train was a Lionel O-27 Texas Special. My first HO models were a mishmash that included a horrible Varney or Marx (can't remember which - both bad) Monon GP-7, a PRR Mantua 4-6-2, and Athern shorty B&O streamline and heavyweight passenger cars.
I now plan on modeling the Southern Pacific, although my second choice would have been the B&O because those passenger cars were awfully pretty.
Ray
No. As a kid back in Germany I had a Marklin HO layout of German prototype, built mostly by my mom, with working signals and a working catenary. All that is left from this layout are 5 locomotives in my inlaw's basement.
When building a new layout here in the US for my son (and for me, of course), we went with the railroad most associated with our current location in West Texas, the Santa Fe. Comsidering the price of European model railroad equipment (even if you buy them in Europe), selecting an US prototype will save you a lot of money.
no.
Rio Grande. The Action Road - Focus 1977-1983
My first train set was an IHC set with a blue and yellow Santa Fe SD40-2 and matching red caboose. 2 or three other miscellaneous freight cars.
I do not model Santa Fe currently.
Chris van der Heide
My Algoma Central Railway Modeling Blog
My parents got me a Triang train set when I was eight or nine years old. At the time I considered it to be super prototypical.. it consisted of of a CP Rail F7 and CP Rail painted rolling stock. It got me started in the hobby.. next purchase was an undecorated Athearn GP35 for which I bought CP Rail decals separately. My plan was to paint and letter the unit.
My First train set was my mom's American Flyer 4-8-4 set. Aside from making me love big steam, it really didn't influence my modelling preferences. My first scale trainset was The Bachmann Zenith Electronics set. My dad worked for Zenith for 50 years. Aside from being Diesel (U36B) and me putting the shell on an athearn chassis, there really wasn't much influence. I think it was mostly The Chicago Museum of Science and Industry's layout that influenced me. During the 80s, it was o-Scale with Yellow and blue warbonnet sd40-2s as the main power and that just stuck with me. So Santa Fe became my go to going forward.
When I moved out west, that expanded to all western railroads, but funny enough, I also now have more interest in Soo and C&NW, the 2 railroads in my Chicago Suburb growing up.
My toy train set in the 1960s was American Flyer S: a 4-4-0, GN boxcar, Monon gondola, and red caboose running on scale-type sectional track (not sure who made it, but similar to Atlas HO snap-track.) I do still have most of the stuff.
I don't know how much it influenced what I do now. I grew up across the street from a real railroad, and their first-generation diesels probably influenced me more than the AF did. Although, now that I think of it, one of my last purchases was an HO Spectrum 4-4-0....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dc7Fh66khs
My first train was an Athearn F7 HiFi drive in Burlington livery. My parents bought it for my 10th bithday in 1957. I still have it but that is the only Burlington loco I've ever had. I was a CN fan then but nothing was available for CN . I was attracted to CN as I could access the CN mainline with my bike,CN ran the line to the resort town where I spent summers and my grandfather was with CN police.
CN Charlie
Since my 1st train set (O-scale steamer with 4 cars and circle track), my favorite freight rolling stock has always been box cars. My 2nd train set was S-scale and, again, I was always attracted to box cars. Hence, my preference for modeling businesses that utilized them back in the 1960's-70's.
Looking out of my parents' bedroom window (as a rugrat) I had no idea that I was looking at NH (later PC) freight trains. Just knew that I enjoyed looking at the colorful rolling boxes in those slow moving trains being hauled by orange & white striped "Locomotoras" as my Dad called them (EF-4's as per Paul III ).
I'm re-doing my shelf layout and, on the freight side, I plan on having at least 2 businesses that utilize 3 to 4 forty and fifty-foot boxcars at a time. Of course, passenger trains made me go "ga-ga", but I didn't have any passenger car models until I was about 8.
(photo Credit: Ben Fiorello)
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
Shock Control...or were they a jumping off point for other railroads and other eras?
Yes.
Model RRing has come and gone in and out my life manytimes, while growing up, and continued doing so in my adults years.
My current layout is from the last "growth spurt" that started up again in 2009.
Mike.
My You Tube
I am in the same camp as Bear with a Hornby clockwork train set. Mine was a bit older. The locomotive was London & North Eastern 'apple green'. Happy days.
David
To the world you are someone. To someone you are the world
I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought
Funny you should ask.
I've spent the last three years replacing the old Bachmann train set my Grandfather gave me for my 11th birthday, one piece at a time.
Finally my childhood train set is complete again. Most of these are brand new old stock and the other two are in excellent condition. I plan to have toy train day on my layout once and a while
I like those Minneapolis and St. Louis's too. Minneapolis Northfield and Southern as well.
I have some more Minnesota rolling stock around here somewhere.
It Isn't so much the cars I had when I was a kid influencing my modeling today. It's the cars I saw in the area. It was a rare treat to see the old Great Northern and Northern Pacific boxcars amongst the Green Machines and I sure do like them.
Here's a few of em. I keep them in totes like I kept my Matchbox and Hot Wheels when I was a kid
It's high time I quit this carried away buying of micro trains rolling stock as my demand for steel wheels keeps growing larger
TF
No, for obvious reasons...
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
Never owned any trains as a kid. My Pops, a machinist by trade, set-up his Marx O scale train around the Christmas tree every year. Our house in Albany was literally a stones throw from the S.P. mainline, so there was always plenty of train sounds.
Pops good friend, a policeman, had Lionel passenger trains that actually ran thru the walls of his house and into the living room, his wife was a very special lady.
If there was something that lit my candle towards being a future model railroader it was Pops taking my brother and I to a couple open houses put on by the East Bay Model Engineers Society. The entry to the club's digs on Halleck St. in Emeryville was thru a full size caboose facade, where was sported both an O and HO layout. Some experiences are indelible, and for me, seeing those epic layouts at such an impressionable age certainly qualify.
Thanks and regards, Peter
I loved those freight cars, and the paint schemes they offered, or a few they did not offer, occupied my dreams.
I have tried to "modernize" to today's railroads but can never really accept wide cabs, and I have at various times attempted to backdate to the steam/transition era. However, I still want Alco Century diesels and the colorful 60'/70's boxcars more than anything else.
For me it all goes back to the Mantua-Tyco freight trainset of the late sixties that had a C-430 in the Santa Fe red/silver paint scheme very close to the one actually applied to Santa Fe's U28CG units. In hindsight, I've never really left the 1970's. It's those paint schemes I'm buying on freight cars (and a few of the modern "survivor" Alco Century paint schemes).
Santa Fe "Shock Control" Indian Red, ICG orange with the I-Ball logo, UP yellow/silver and still others live on for me on the layout, just on more modern models, but I have those models because I once had the Tyco models.
I kept one still operable Mantua-Tyco trolley, to remember my youth...but at 53 I'm still very much the kid playing with those trains...just nicer models or perhaps models that they actually didn't get around to making, but that we saw in real life back then.
My Dad was great and we had a lot of fun with those old trains.
John
Yes, indeed! The model trains of my youth have brought me to where I am today, both in the hobby and in life.My father is a model railroader, and I grew up with HO trains in my basement. He had a set of Rivarossi heavyweight cars painted in the black and orange stripe scheme of the New Haven Railroad. As these were expensive cars (compared to the rest of my dad's fleet), I was told I was not to play with them. Of course, I did anyways, just in secret. I was much surprised to learn later that the New Haven wasn't just some random railroad with a cool paint job, but had in fact run right next to my house for ~100 years. I wanted to know more and we happened to see the New Haven Railroad Historical & Technical Association at the next train show we attended. My father and I have been NHRHTA members ever since.Fast forward 30 years, I am now the editor of the NHRHTA's SpeedWitch magazine and the guy that digitally puts together their quarterly Shoreliner magazine. I am the "boss" of the NHRHTA's train show crew and I'm the moderator of the NHRHTA Facebook group.Because of my contacts in the NHRHTA, I got into nitpicking NH models for various companies and helping these companies "get it right" for the NH. I've worked with Athearn, BLI, Atlas, Walthers, etc., and especially Rapido. I guess I made a big enough impression with Jason Shron that in January this year he hired me to work for him part time at Rapido as a nitpicker on other model railroad products (not just NH models).All because my mother bought my father a bunch of Rivarossi NH passenger cars and they told me not to play with them. Funny how life goes...
When I was 5 my house backed up to the SP main. I've always liked SP and that may be why. I never had model trains as a kid. I started in my 50's.
Chip
Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.
ATLANTIC CENTRAL... So today I don't model the toys of my youth or the prototypes of my youth, I model this region where I was born and have lived my whole life, but I model it in a time three years before my birth...... with the freelancing thrown in. Sheldon
Sheldon
The protoypes of the models I had as a kid predated my time on the planet. I never connected with contemporaneous trains that were around as I was growing up. I always leaned toward the 1940s, 50s and very early 1960s.
Shock Control ...or were they a jumping off point for other railroads and other eras? I had PRR and B&O as a kid, and I have stuck with these ever since. There are some cars from my childhood that I absolutely adore, for example, the Athearn Minneapolis St. Louis boxcar, modeled in a color someplace between salmon and melon, that no other company has replicated, that I've seen. (No idea i the color is prototypically accurate or not.). Also love the yellow MKT livestock car from Athearn. I am also obsessed with F units and USRA 0-6-0s with the sloped tender.
...or were they a jumping off point for other railroads and other eras?
I had PRR and B&O as a kid, and I have stuck with these ever since.
There are some cars from my childhood that I absolutely adore, for example, the Athearn Minneapolis St. Louis boxcar, modeled in a color someplace between salmon and melon, that no other company has replicated, that I've seen. (No idea i the color is prototypically accurate or not.). Also love the yellow MKT livestock car from Athearn.
I am also obsessed with F units and USRA 0-6-0s with the sloped tender.
Well I have been active in this hobby since age 10 or so, but no my current modeling theme was adopted about 40 years ago when I was a young adult.
When I was young I modeled the late 60's, I did model the B&O.
Today I model the early 50's, a time before I was born. I freelance/protolance my ATLANTIC CENTRAL and have interchange with the B&O, C&O and WESTERN MARYLAND. It is September 1954 here.
So there is only a small connection to my childhood modeling.
I worked in a hobby shop by age 14, I managed the train department in one by age 18, I was a member of a well established club that has been in MR at age 15.
So I did not have "toy trains" as a child, never had LIONEL or a cheap HO set. My father got me started by building a serious 5 x 18 layout for me.
By age 15 I was buiilding wood freight car kits and Mantua locomotive kits, and doing the repairs at the hobby shop. By age 16 I was building a new larger layout on my own with hand layed track, open grid benchwork and hard shell scenery.
So today I don't model the toys of my youth or the prototypes of my youth, I model this region where I was born and have lived my whole life, but I model it in a time three years before my birth...... with the freelancing thrown in.
No. I was unjustly deprived of the electric train I so richly deserved as a child. Or so I thought, anyway.
My folks knew my little brother and I were too rough on the toys, a train set wouldn't have lasted long. I was about 17 when i got into it on my own. Dan
Shock Control"Did the Railroads/Cars You Had as a Kid Influence Your Future Directions in Model Railroading?".
As a young child, I never had trains, other than the real ones, which were just across the street from the front of our house.
Wayne
My father gave me a Lionel 027 2-6-2 train set for my 8th Christmas and I was hooked on trains. My father and an older cousin built a full basement layout for me. We moved to El Paso Tx into a house without a basement 4 years later witch dinged my Lionel trains. Two years later as a teen I bought my first HO locomotive, an MDC 0-6-0 kit. I built an around the room layout in a room behind the garage. That was in 1951 and I’ve been modeling HO ever since. I fell in love with the trains of the early to mid 1950s so that is the era I model in both steam and diesel. Mel My Model Railroad http://melvineperry.blogspot.com/ Bakersfield, California Turned 84 in July, aging is definitely not for wimps.
Shock ControlDid the Railroads/Cars You Had as a Kid Influence Your Future Directions in Model Railroading?" ...or were they a jumping off point for other railroads and other eras?
The Lionel I had in the 1950s probably played a part in my return to the hobby after retirement. I always remembered that train, even though it had been 60 years ago.
It did not play a part in my choice of scale, road name, etc. I went to N Scale and a modern time period.
York1 John