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What do you look for in rolling stock?

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Posted by CP5415 on Saturday, January 29, 2005 10:15 AM
When I got back into the hobby, it was "Hey, that looks cool!"

Now it's, "Hmm, maybe."

I look for freight cars that represent my era which is Now!
I do have a few older era cars with walkways but these won't see much time on my layout.
Everything I have that came with plastic axles are being replaced with metal ones.
Detailing isn't important for me right now. It's nice to look at but I don't think it will hold up too well with my daughter.
Kadees are the norm for couplers. The cheap plastic ones that come with the car I leave on until they fail. I know I should probably replace them before putting it on the track but I hate to waste stuff.
Besides, I'm currently stock piling KD's so I can sit down one night while everyone is a sleep & replace them all at one time.
Railroad names arn't too important to me. I'm trying to have a bunch of different roadnames I'd find & or have seen in Ontario & the US Northeast.
Manufacturers are important, but I'm not spending a small fortune on one car.
I normally stick with Athearn, Accurail ( I especially love the covered hoppers ), Roundhouse & Walthers.
Most of these are simplictic kits or RTR.
I have a couple of Intermountain Kits my dad gave me, these still sit in the boxes as I don't have the time to invest in building them.
Same with a 5 car spine kit that I bought off a freind

i think that sums it up.
I hope I haven't bored anyone with this [:D]

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 NZRMac on Saturday, January 29, 2005 2:19 AM
I've got a few of the Bachmann silver series stuff, Ore cars, box cars, tank cars they come ready to roll, metal wheels, knuckle couplers they perform very well.
I'm looking at getting 24 x 40' quad hoppers from Discount trains online $7 each plus freight to New Zealand about $180US.

If I bought them at my LHS $27NZ each x 24 makes 648NZ $461US!!!!!!!![:O]
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Posted by aloco on Saturday, January 29, 2005 1:40 AM
Durability! Virtually all my cars are of the Athearn 'blue box' variety, and I never have to worry about parts breaking off when I handle them. Brands like Intermountain, Life-Like Proto 2000, McKean, Front Range, Gould, etc. look more realistic but are much too fragile for me.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, January 28, 2005 2:37 AM
Since I've been model railroadng for over 35 years, I have about all the rolling stock my layout and shelf space can hold. A lot of my older stuff is Tyco, AHM, Lionel (trainset quality), but they have all long since had Kadee body mounted couplers, LL p2K or Kadee metal wheelsets, wire stirrups installed. I now look for unusual or special-duty cars. I have very few problems with any of my rolling stock.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, January 28, 2005 12:44 AM
What do you look for in rolling stock?

Freight![:D][:D][:D]

Sorry Chip! I couldn't resist.[:D]

Not being a rivet counter, I guess I can forgo some of the fine detail of the high $$ models. I tend to purchase rolling stock in the <$10 range, for the most part. Athearn, Roundhouse and Accurail are most of what I have. Recently, though, I haven't purchased any Athearn, mostly because my older stuff doesn't really measure up to my newer Accurail or Roundhouse stuff. Since I haven't purchased any recently, I don't know how Athearn's newer stuff works. I tend to like relatively realistic appearance, but don't object to molded on handrails and the like. My main objectives are that my models not appear to be toylike and that they work well for me. I am in the process of converting everything I intend to run to metal wheels and Kaydee couplers (or compatibles) at this time. So far this is all I plan to do with my existing rolling stock, at least until I become more finicky when it comes to detail!
-Joe
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Posted by Don Gibson on Thursday, January 27, 2005 11:55 PM
ENGINES that pull.
CARS that roll,
COUPLERS that work dependably

You didn't ask:

TURNOUTS that don't derail the above
TRACK that looks reaistic
Don Gibson .............. ________ _______ I I__()____||__| ||||| I / I ((|__|----------| | |||||||||| I ______ I // o--O O O O-----o o OO-------OO ###########################
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Posted by wd45 on Thursday, January 27, 2005 3:07 PM
I have a complete mishmash of brands on my layout. The largest amount being Athearn, but I also have cars from their Genesis Line, as well as Atlas, Accurail, Roundhouse, Life-Like, Model Power, Bachmann, even old Tyco and Lionels. I'm not as particular on details like grab irons, etc., but I do try to find ones that fit my layout's era (1970s), and on ones like the Tycos and older Life-Likes, I tend to replace their trucks with ones made by Atlas, and body mount Kadee or McHenry couplers.
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Posted by trolleyboy on Thursday, January 27, 2005 1:45 PM
Hi spacemouse I look for fine detail ie wire grabs well detailed door latches etc. as such i'll grab branchline's blue ribbon line or P2K and intermountain.I model mostly canadian freight so sylvain resin caboose and car kits are also on my shopping list. i'll grab athearn BB and Mdc usually for kitbashing parts and trucks for the sylvain kits. Most resin kits come without couplers and trucks. My only other have to have is metal wheels personally I find them easier to clean and they roll better if the kit comes with them I leave them alone if they don't I'll buy P2K wheel sets. Rob
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Posted by CBQ_Guy on Thursday, January 27, 2005 12:16 AM
In general, do they fit my era and are they needed to service my industries . . . pretty much in that order

I'll buy they occasional oddball to just stick in a through train and for variety. [8D]
"Paul [Kossart] - The CB&Q Guy" [In Illinois] ~ Modeling the CB&Q and its fictional 'Illiniwek River-Subdivision-Branch Line' in the 1960's. ~
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 4:33 PM
I used to buy tyco rolling stock to "fit" my train set in the late 70's I was a child then and plastic horn and hook couplers were the rule. The track was flat so it was not revelant what kind of grades.

I recall switching from Tyco after my big brother exposed me to the "good stuff" He was showing me Athearn, Varney, Cox and others that were quite good quality at the time. Most of my stock was the Kaybee toy store variety. Back in those days they actually sold trains in HO scale at Toys R Us, Kaybee etc The LHS was for those who understood such things as PFM (Pacific Fast Mail, Kaydee couplers etc..)

I have a Intermountain Western Maryland AAR steel boxcar that was RTR. That car was very expensive at $26.00. However, it is a very good car in any train I want to put it with. It does not derail, break details etc. In general that car sorta behaves itself and does not attract attention. (derailments etc)

That one boxcar sparked a desire to tweak my Athearn Blue Box boxcars to higher levels of performance. Some of the cars have bad underframes which can easily be replace and correct that "lean" Others have wheels and trucks that just plain causes trouble everywhere they go. They are being replaced with P2K Wheels and trucks (Trucks only for the worst offenders) Of course Kaydee couplers all around. .015 shims are applied as necessary to keep the couplers at a height. The trip pins are bent up slightly to stay out of switches, frogs, crossovers etc etc. In short I will continue to work these Athearn cars until they achieve the performance equal to that Intermountain WM boxcar. Eventually all cars in my fleet will be able to run just as well.

The next thing I look at is weight. A 40 foot car in HO should weight at least 4 ounces. Ten United States Coins in the penny denominations = 1 ounce. A 50 foot car gets 5 ounces gross weight. If I weigh down the light RTR or Kits, they will stay on the track and perform like they should. Really "massive" rolling stock such as the Athearn RTR heavy duty flat with load tend to get careful treatment as they sometimes dont get along with other cars on a 3.5% grade with a 23" radius curve on it. I think it is more of a engineer issue.

In the end I hope that whatever train I put together departs and arrives in the same conditions without incident. I refuse to rest until the rolling stock meets these issues. It is alot of fun on the workbench with some of the more challenging cars.

There you have it. I am not so big on fine detail, I do enjoy them. But I prefer function over form any time. That pretty little boxcar with all the trimmings aint worth nuttin if you cannot roll it down the rail in the train from A to B without incident.
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Posted by Don Gibson on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 3:27 PM
"What do you look for in rolling stock?"(Q)

1. cars that ROLL. That means they have good trucks - or I replace them - and
I replace a lot of them.

Having started when ATHEARN , KADEE, and CENTRAL VALLEY, were all metal and rolled only 5 inches, I adopted new standards as better products came along. Currently it's KATO. I judge everything by comparison and keep a stock on hand.Are there better?, maybe - E.B.comes to mind ( they bought LINDBERG).

INTERMOUNTAIN's cars with their metal wheels and Delrin side frames roll. In fact their cars are MY STANDARD to judge all others by. Do I have others? Yes - but I think it behooves everybody to have at least ONE, as an example of what a car can be - and what you' could be missing.

MOUSE, that includes you.
Don Gibson .............. ________ _______ I I__()____||__| ||||| I / I ((|__|----------| | |||||||||| I ______ I // o--O O O O-----o o OO-------OO ###########################
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 2:57 PM
I pretty much come from the same place as orson and others. I am looking for cars that match my era and that could possibly have run on the road. I am not too picky about this, but I try to be as close as I can

What I am looking for in a car is fine detail. Fine detail to me means (among other things) separately applied grab irons, correct size strirrups, separately applied ladders, finely detailed brake gear, delicately cast rivets boards etc. To my eye these aspects improve a model's realism enormously. I started out by shaving off the grabs and ladders on Athearn and MDC cars and drilling and appling wire grabs, new ladders and strirrups. This was more work than assembling a craftsman style car kit. I now buy the high detail kits on sale and on Ebay and build them instead of detailing old stuff.

I have been replacing my Athearn and MDC cars with Red Caboose, P2k, Intermountain, RGM, Westerfield and scratchbuilt cars. While craftsaman stock cars and tank cars can take a long time to build, the boxcars (prepainted) don't take that much extra time and they do look great.

I am also not above buying RTR, but only if it is a deal. I have picked some ERTL RTR boxcars for a good price as well as their flats (4.00 each on the flats). I see RTR P2K stock cars at pretty good prices on Ebay as well.

I realize that not everyone cares about the detail and certainly I would not be buying these cars for little kids, but I happen to think the extra time and expense is worth it.

MY 2 cents,
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 2:47 PM
I have a mix of Athearn BB and Walthers freight cars - the Walthers cars are mainly intermodals though I do have one of their 41ft Amtrak MOW hoppers (these are great, take Kadee #5s as a straight swap and can be picked up cheaply as a triple-pack - keep forgetting to buy a multipack when at my LHS). Passenger cars are mostly Walthers with a couple of Athearn Bilevel commuter cars, all seem decent enough, the Athearn cars only need Kadee #58s fitting to make a really decent model. I would second the suggestion that you fit Kadees and metal wheels to everything, added expense but well worth it. Hope this is of help!
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Posted by Jetrock on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 2:40 PM
Accurail makes kits that are REALLY easy to build--they are, arguably, easier to assemble than Athearn blue-boxes. But the details are nice. Throw the couplers and wheelsets in the trash and replace them with Kadee #5 couplers and Intermountain 33" semi-scale metal wheelsets.
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Posted by BRAKIE on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 2:25 PM
DeSchane said:I found if I cut off the coupler boxes on Athearn cars and replace with Kadee coupler boxes screwed to the underside of the car, this goes along ways towards making the coupler heights correct. I also weight per the NMRA. However, that's a topic you don't want to get Brakie involved with!

Oh, Hi Brakie!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LOL! Do as s you please and do what you suits your tastes.I agree with cutting off the Athearn coupler box even though I still have quite a few cars that still has the Athearn box attached by a 2-56 screw.The main thing to watch out for is the frame being warped or the weight being bent causing the coupler to shag.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 2:24 PM
I have all Athearn rolling stock (BB and RTR). As far as I'm concerned, they're the best on the market.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 1:04 PM
Nobody has mentioned the NMRA track and wheel gauge yet. This is also an indespensable tool in my opinion. Between the Kadee coupler height gauge and the NMRA gauge, you will have most of what you need to tune up your cars.

I model the Northern Pacific, which must not have been as big of an interchanger as the eastern roads. I see photos of N.P. freight trains where the Northern Pacific Herald was on almost 1/2 the cars in the train. This is how I remember the road, also. I love box cars,too! However, I have very few roads which are not close to home. C.B. & Q., C.N.& W., S.P., Santa Fe, D. & R.G.W., etc. and a few of the bigger eastern roads.

I don't know if my statements above apply to every line.

I found if I cut off the coupler boxes on Athearn cars and replace with Kadee coupler boxes screwed to the underside of the car, this goes along ways towards making the coupler heights correct. I also weight per the NMRA. However, that's a topic you don't want to get Brakie involved with!

Oh, Hi Brakie!
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Posted by SpaceMouse on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 12:44 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by tstage



Once again, I've probably given you far more than you wanted...

Tom


Nope, keep it coming.

Chip

Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.

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Posted by tstage on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 12:22 PM
Chip,

I follow some of orsonroy's criteria in picking out rolling stock. Since accuracy is very important to me, I want my stock to be as prototypically accurate to the time period and era that I am modeling.

But, unlike orsonroy, I'm not quite as savvy yet at whether or not a paint job or details are close enough to the prototype - I hope to be better at it some day - so I usually steer toward the BLT (built) or NEW date on the side of the car. Since Branchline is about the only company to print these dates on the outside of their kits, this pretty much precludes me ordering any kit online or otherwise that I can't open up the box and look at first - along with my reading glass case. [:)]

As far as personal choces and experience, I really like Accurail rolling stock - although they are pretty much limited to box cars and hoppers. But, even in that limitation, there is a wide variety of cars and styles to choose from. They're fairly straight forward to put together and are very handsome looking cars. I particularly like their wooden or wood end box cars - very rugid looking. (Reminds you of the lines out in the ol' west, like the Durango & Rio Grande Western.)

P2K and Tichy are definitely a couple of notches above that. Their detailing is pretty phenomenal and you'll spend a few hours putting together one of their tankers, box or flat cars. (They are also limited in the variety and amount of stock.) On the P2K's, you can get them completely unassembled, partially assembled (aka "Time Saver"), or RTR.

For sheer variety, Athearn Blue box is probably the way to go, but their detail is not quite as nice as the above mentioned other brands. Roundhouse (MDC) is known for their selection of some older, early steam kits. I built one of their wooden cupola cabooses. Took some time because their directions weren't the most straight-forward for someone just starting out in MRR. I got the impression that they were making some assumptions (or presumptions) about my knowledge of prototypes that, in reality, are still in the "Pampers" stage.

Walthers also makes some nice stuff but I've had some issues with the (replacement P2K metal) wheel sets binding on the underside of the frame. I've been able to eliminate the problem on my gondolas by replacing the kit trucks with P2K Andrews trucks. But, even after using my hobby knife to pare away some of the backside of the rear stairs, my cupola caboose still binds slightly around 18" radii curved track. It's better than it was but still could use some improvement. (Great on the straight away though.)

The others that orsonroy mentioned are also very good but I haven't had any experience with them. (You might throw in Intermountain into the mix, too, but they are moving towards just RTR.) From what I've seen, their detailing is beautiful.

Once again, I've probably given you far more than you wanted...

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 Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 9:37 AM
I agree with all the recommendations so far, as far as coupler height is involved watch out for the modern Covered Hoppers, many of them are sold with 33" wheels and should have 36" wheels. In Athearns case this raises the car to the proper height so no shimming is necessary to have the correct coupler height. A good rule of thumb is that 70T cars need 33" wheels, 100T - 36" wheels, and 125T - 38" wheels. Some intermodal cars have 28" wheels due to height problems and some of the articulated units have a compbination of 38" - 28" Wheels.

Also on the subject of wheels, replace all your plastic wheels with metal wheelsets as they roll better and do not pickup track gum as readily so less wheel cleaning is needed.

Rick
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Posted by darth9x9 on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 9:35 AM
The detail on the RTR Intermountain and Kadee cars are incredible! For the price, they are worth it. There is no way I would have the time or patience so put on some of the more intricate parts plus the RTR cars don't have any glue marks!!!!

BC

Bill Carl (modeling Chessie and predecessors from 1973-1983)
Member of Four County Society of Model Engineers
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Visit the FCSME at www.FCSME.org
Modular railroading at its best!
If it has an X in it, it sucks! And yes, I just had my modeler's license renewed last week!

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 9:18 AM
I second the recommendation for the Kadee coupler height gauge; also lay in a supply of the Kadee fiber washers (they come in two sizes) for raising the height of the car above the trucks. I keep my coupler height gauge mounted on a short section of old brass track glued down on a 3' piece of 1x3, which lives right under my layout since I use it so much.

I've found just about every Athearn kit I've ever built needed a washer or two on one or both trucks to raise the coupler to the right height ,though the newer kits are a bit better, and I've had a couple not need any adjustment, or adjustment to only one truck. Once that's done, though, unintended uncoupling problems pretty much disappear.
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Posted by BRAKIE on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 9:04 AM
Simply put I look for Atlas,Athearn( BB,RTR and Genesis) Walther's (RTR) and MDC cars.Then I know I am getting some of the best cars made that fills MY needs.I have some Intermountain and KD cars as well.
As for road names anything goes just like the prototype.Now.as I mention before I collect short line boxcars so I have a large collection of those cars probably more the the law allows.[;)][:p][:D] I tend to keep my cars in their correct eras instead of mixing car eras up.

Now to make a car that operates trouble free you will need to by pass freight cars with truck mounted couplers,if you don't already have them, then you need a NMRA gauge and KD coupler height gauge to insure the wheels are in gauge and couplers and trip pins are the correct height...

I don't worry about how correct or incorrect a car is for a given road name because I buy the car simply because I like it..[:D][B)]
That's not to say I want a CSX,BNSF or NS car that is completely wrong(say) such as a 40' boxcar with a roof walk or a 34' open hopper car.[8]

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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

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Posted by SpaceMouse on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 9:04 AM
I have built several kits from MDC, and I like them. They roll very well, but I have had uncoupling problems with them.

Chip

Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 8:57 AM
Spacemouse, Given your position as you have related to me, I would buy all the Athearn Blue box, MDC, Branchline Yardmaster and Accurail kits I could get my hands on that fit your period. You mentioned you have a 4-4-0. Roundhouse (MDC) makes/made truss rod cars which would fit very nicely. Steam era or transition era cars will go with your Northern and 1st generation diesels. Branchline Yardmaster, Athearn MDC & Accurail makes plenty of these. If the kit building aspect appeals to you. C&BT Shops, Bowser and others make some cars which are a step up in difficulty. If you like more of a challenge, Red Caboose, Intermountain Branchline Blueprint and Life Like P2K are good choices. However, if you haven't built models with small delicate detail parts, only invest in one kit, to see if you like the challange.

As I don't buy and do not use RTR cars, you will need to get information from folks whom do.
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Posted by orsonroy on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 8:50 AM
Since I'm trying to closely model reality, I base my car purchases on how good a job each individual model comes to representing reality. A secondary consideration is the road name, since I regularly strip & repaint models. While this leads me towards the higher end models (Branchline, P2K, Westerfield, Sunshine, etc), I don't overlook shake the box kits, IF they come close to accurately representing reality. Accurail, Bowser and Rib Car Co. fall into this category, as do certain models from Roundhouse and Athearn.

As for trucks, wheelsets and couplers, they don't make any difference in my purchasing decision. It's actually pretty rare for a model to get this feature right, so I keep a big stock of replacement trucks on hand (transition era models are only about 50% accurate in this regard). And I've standardized on P2K wheelsets and Kadee #58 couplers for my entire fleet, meaning I've got to change virtually every car.

Guidelines for picking stuff out of the Walthers catalog? How close does the car come to the real thing, do I need one (or more), and do I want to shell out the dough for the car. (some cars, like the USRA double sheathed box, are made by several manufacturers [Westerfield, Funaro & Carmelengo, Accurail, Ertl], so it becomes a cost/labor analysis when I look to those cars).

Ray Breyer

Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943

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What do you look for in rolling stock?
Posted by SpaceMouse on Wednesday, January 26, 2005 8:35 AM
Other than the superficial--what roadname it is. My guess is that there is a certain level of detail involved, period correctness of decals, etc. as well.

But what about the mechanics? Is there a type of truck, wheels, balance, etc. that one can look for? For instance I notice that some cars uncouple too easily and others don't ride the rails, some are top heavy, etc.

What are good brands and are there variations within the brands? What brands should I give a free ticket to eBay? What brands should I keep around for future projects even though I don't have a use for them right now?

What guidelines would you use for picking them out of the Walther's catalog?

Chip

Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.

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