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My oldest Loco. Please post yours, too.

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  • Member since
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  • From: Oliver B.C. Wine Capitol of Canada
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Posted by tommyr on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 10:55 PM

    Hi There;

          This is my first HO loco I got when I switched from O to HO in 1950. It is a Varney Dockside. Still running today.

                                                  Tom

 

Tom

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Posted by CSX_road_slug on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 9:56 PM

OK, here's mine - I've had this Athearn bluebox SW1200 since 1988, the year I came back into the MRR hobby.  (I'm not including the retired models that are waiting to be cannabalized for parts...)

 

-Ken in Maryland  (B&O modeler, former CSX modeler)

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Posted by CTValleyRR on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 9:32 PM

OK, I'll weigh in on this one. 

I apologize in advance for the photo quality.  It's an old digital camera and I'm not that good at using it (my wife is the shutterbug).

 If you squint, you can make out two locos that my father brought back from England in 1969.  On the left is a Mantua 0-4-0 Switcher / Tank Engine (affectionately referred to as "Thomas Covered with Tar" by my kids).  It still runs beautifully, and the only change I made was to swap out the standard British hook couplers for McHenry ones.  The other is -- I believe -- the oldest prototype yet offered here:  Stephenson's Rocket (with the original coupler).  Unfortunately, the motor seized about 10 years ago, and I have been unable to find a new one small enough to install in it.

And yes, I know it's a boring bookshelf shot.  I haven't yet installed a backdrop on my layout, and the bare concrete wall in the background just really ruins any photos I take.

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 arbe1948 on Sunday, May 20, 2007 8:34 PM

Hi, My oldest loco is this HO Athearn f-7 Soo Line 2228A from the late 1960's.  This dates from my earliest days in HO scale having begun the hobby as many others as a kid in the 50's with Marx and Lionel O gauge.  It was wrecked in a fall and as with the prototype, the nose was re-built.  Around 1999 or so, I replaced the trucks with Athearn plastic side frame style.  A newer Athearn motor and 1" A-Line flywheels supply the power.  A Walthers F unit dress up kit was applied.  Decals are Champion.  Companion B unit 501C is similarly powered. I haven't run these locos lately on my Chicago Yellowstone and Pacific under construction as they are awaiting DCC decoders.

Bob Bochenek
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Posted by dragenrider on Saturday, May 19, 2007 11:37 PM
 scottychaos wrote:

HO scale Tyco 0-4-0 circa 1979, I was 10 years old.

Scot 

That's my first locomotive!  Identical!!!   Shock [:O]  Mine's in pieces in a box.  I took it apart about 20 years ago to fix a broken side rod and never put it back together.  It's still in the box, somewhere in the basement. 

I wonder if I could get it running again?  It would need a new motor and side rod.  Hmmm...Question [?]

The Cedar Branch & Western--The Hillbilly Line!

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, May 19, 2007 5:47 PM
 neil300 wrote:

 weetle wrote:
my oldest engine is one of the models produced 1939 and 1945-46 engine but i dont know which one. the number model is 224.

68 years!? The best I can do is a L-L GP38-2 I got with my first layout Christmas 1987. It doesn't run. I dummied it.

 It was my Great Grampa's. Still runs. I'm missing the tender.SoapBox [soapbox]

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Posted by PRRT1MAN on Saturday, May 19, 2007 2:11 PM

I guess my oldest Loco was a kit.  An Arbors Model J1 PRR  Everybody thought I was nuts to try and build it. They told me it couldn't be done! Well here it is and it runs!

SamV

Sam Vastano
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Posted by Curmudgeon on Saturday, May 19, 2007 1:08 AM

In Half-0, a 1941 Varney Docksider.

In "0" 2-rail, a 1938 ScaleCraft SantaFe Mike.

In "0" 3-rail, a pea-green 252 from about 1925.

BTW, on a John English "Yardbird", contact Yardbird Trains.

He has parts and expertise.

I've restored my Uncle's from 1948 or so.

I have restored a bunch, the Athearn gear drives and Hi-F run flawlessly, gone back to my brother, I keep the die-cast, as they run and run and run and run.

 

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Posted by TDouglasH on Friday, May 18, 2007 8:47 AM

All mine are old and the newest one was purchased in the early 70's. The first HO engine was an old 0 4 0 tank engine which I purchased in the early 50's and it still runs but not well. All the rest are brass from the 60's with a few athern deisels. The one I like best is the tensodo Royal Hudson. Now it is planning time for the layout to run them on!!!!!

Douglas

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Posted by twhite on Thursday, May 17, 2007 8:51 PM
 Nieuweboer wrote:

Mine is an Akane brass  2-8-0 -the well known small Ma & Pa Consolidation - that I picked up in 1961 in Amsterdam in a long gone MR shop that specialized in second hand  MR material. It is still running on my layout as steamer on a tourist line pulling two Harriman coaches. 

Still older is a Globe FT/F3A locomotive that I bought in 1956 but is a dummy so I don't think it counts.  

I've never heard of an Akane brass locomotive still in existance that isn't still running and running well.  Somehow Akane made the best steam locomotive drive systems available for their time and they're almost indestructable.  I have a total of six Akane articulateds that I've purchased over the years, dating from about 1964 to when the company stopped importing, some with their original motors, some that I've re-motored, but I've never--I mean NEVER had to re-construct the drive mechanisms.  And all of them are wonderful runners.  They may not have the super-detail of todays' brass or plastic steamers, but of all my brass locos, they're the ones that I've had to spend the least amount of time 'tinkering' with.  They're just put together like the proverbial TANK! 

Tom Tongue [:P]

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Posted by Nieuweboer on Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:41 AM

Mine is an Akane brass  2-8-0 -the well known small Ma & Pa Consolidation - that I picked up in 1961 in Amsterdam in a long gone MR shop that specialized in second hand  MR material. It is still running on my layout as steamer on a tourist line pulling two Harriman coaches. 

Still older is a Globe FT/F3A locomotive that I bought in 1956 but is a dummy so I don't think it counts.  

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Posted by bnnrailroad on Wednesday, May 16, 2007 6:22 PM

I have a few. All belong to my dad who passed back in 1997. I have a link to my webpage were I store my pictures.

As far as I know, the oldest 3 I have are:

A Revell belt drive F-7

A Varney 0-4-0 Dockside

A Tyco Diecast 0-4-0 w/ tender. I believe this was part of a set as I have 3 cars and a caboose that goes with it.

 

All 3 engines still run, though I don't run them often. The Revell has a "slipping" issue. The Tyco and the Varney run but they take quite a bit of juice to get moving!

 

The pictures are here:  http://home.comcast.net/~ccmhet4/trains.html

Ray Boebel Boeville & Newtown RR http://home.comcast.net/~ccmhet4/trains.html
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Posted by cordon on Monday, May 14, 2007 11:19 PM

Smile

OK, you folks talked me into it.  These both come from about 1952. 

I hope you'll accept the Budd car, although it's not really an engine.  I don't recall who made it.  It has an open-frame motor and a truck full of tiny gears.  It still runs, but not well.  I am reconditioning it, especially the tiny bearings for the tiny gears.

The Diesel is a Varney, also with an open-frame motor.  It is all metal, except for necessary electrical insulation.  It came unpainted and had only two driven axles.  I added a drive for the other truck, which later became standard for Varney.  It also runs poorly.  I am reconditioning this one, too.  I bought a similar one (plastic body) at a model RR show for spare parts.

Smile  Smile

 

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Posted by steam618lover1 on Monday, May 14, 2007 10:20 PM

  Hi Model Railroaders,

 I don't have a digital camera at this time, but my oldest loco is a tyco 0-4-0 and a 0-6-0, i traded a sw1 new haven diesel for two steamers. steam rules in my house, i have 38 steam loco's and 7 diesels dating from 1956-to- today, and 250 cars and growing all from the fiftys till today, i like buying old broken locos or somebodys elses broken trains and trying to bring life back into them, i had 4 tyco locos, mantua 2-10-0, a tyco 2-8-2 camelback, the tyco general,and a 4-8-0 mastadon i think mantua, they haden't ran for 25 years cause i coulden't find good replacement motors, then someone on ebay had at least 10 replacement motors, i bought 4 of the motors and started to work on getting back to life, they all run great, my steamers are from a varity of companys, bachmann, ihc, rivorossi, tyco, mantua, walthers, all in good running shape, i have a few old cars that need trucks and couplers, i do have a few lional cars, 70's military train cars and so on, i love steam compared to diesel because a diesel sits and hums, a steam engine has a HEART that beats, and a whole lot of working parts, i just love when a film maker chases one of these things, and its so neet to watch these machines work, i enjoy being a kid at 58 years old, makes life a whole lot easer. thanks for time.

                                                              Earl

 

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Posted by fiatfan on Monday, May 14, 2007 3:26 PM
 pbjwilson wrote:

Heres a Bing clockwork engine circa ? Maybe late 20's early 30's.

Looks more like an Ives from the turn of the century thoiugh about 1920.  Might be interesting to do some research on it.

Tom 

Life is simple - eat, drink, play with trains!

Go Big Red!

PA&ERR "If you think you are doing something stupid, you're probably right!"

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Posted by scottychaos on Monday, May 14, 2007 8:21 AM

I still have my first loco..

HO scale Tyco 0-4-0 circa 1979, I was 10 years old.

(this isnt my actual loco, but a picture of an identical loco I just found on the internet)

As a teenager in the 1980's, I modified, kitbashed and painted nearly every engine I ever had, but I never touched the 0-4-0! I didnt have the heart to modify it, because it was my first engine.

I dont even model in HO scale anymore, and likely never will again, but I will never sell that switcher! :)

Scot 

 

 

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Posted by pbjwilson on Monday, May 14, 2007 7:48 AM

Heres a Bing clockwork engine circa ? Maybe late 20's early 30's.

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Posted by wccobb on Monday, May 14, 2007 1:15 AM
My oldest is a 1936 Lionel "Flying Yankee".  3 rail AC & still runs good.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, May 13, 2007 1:25 AM
My oldset model train....depends on the scale. My apartment seems to be a yards for old and near scrap model trains. I have displayed around my house plants a 1937?Marx tinplate 3 rail NYC 2-4-2. That includes the 3 tinplate cars that came with it. I think it was deliberately sabotaged(cut wire) to insure it would not be run and would stay in operating condition. I have no way to test it as I model HO scale. No one has yet to mention a 1957 Revel 0-6-0 saddle tank engine UP#3600. I found mine not described correctly on Ebay. I made short work of cleaning it up and making it operate....including the "baby rattle" inside for sound effect. Quite a contrast 50 years later to todays sound effect technology. Now a shelf queenBig Smile [:D] That sits beside the very early Athearn Hustler #56. I have several Athearn cars with metal trucks and real metal coil springs.....anyone know when Athearn stopped useing these???
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Posted by gemstone railraoder on Saturday, May 12, 2007 4:40 PM

 My oldest steam engine is a New York Central 4-6-4 Hudson W/smoke. It was my fathers and I got it after he passed away. I am guessing that it is serca 1950, but cannot confirm.

They is a serial number on the tender, No.2-0489. front pilot truck is missing and needs cleaning and repair. P.S. it is heavy in weight.

                                       Rich form Mich>

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Posted by SteamFreak on Friday, May 11, 2007 9:13 PM
 CNR engineer wrote:

well i dont have a photo as it is in storage and i dont run it for SAFETY reasons. i have an IVES 110 volt AC train set made around 1910. yes the track voltage is 110!!!!!!! wall socket voltage!!!!

That's why people had such large families back then. They knew that a large percentage of kids weren't going to survive their trainsets.

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Posted by CNR engineer on Friday, May 11, 2007 8:52 PM

well i dont have a photo as it is in storage and i dont run it for SAFETY reasons. i have an IVES 110 volt AC train set made around 1910. yes the track voltage is 110!!!!!!! wall socket voltage!!!! it uses LIGHT bulbs of different wattage to control the speed. it is about the size of the current G Scale. not really sure what you would call it. i got it from a guy about 20 years ago and he got it as a kid. he was almost 80 when it was given to me. it is a 2-6-2 and has a tender and three passenger cars. i tried it out when i got it. believe it or not it ran great after a cleaning. i stopped running it when i about FRIED my mothers cat with it...lol..

 

robert 

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Posted by mmartian22 on Friday, May 11, 2007 8:33 PM
mine is an old 1966 mantua 2-8-0  with a open frame motor in it  and barely used  it's what got me started in this hobby
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Posted by jacon12 on Friday, May 11, 2007 8:26 PM

 A Lionel 027 from 1953, still runs.

JaRRell

 HO Scale DCC Modeler of 1950, give or take 30 years.
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Posted by SteamFreak on Friday, May 11, 2007 8:14 PM

The oldest HO scale loco I have is this American Flyer 1950's Hudson.

 

This first shot taught me not to run it at full throttle. Nearly asphyxiated me: Dead [xx(]

The oldest loco I own is my father's AF S scale Hudson, but I didn't fire that up since I plan to breathe tonight.

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Posted by fiatfan on Friday, May 11, 2007 5:38 PM
 Darth Santa Fe wrote:

Wow! An Athearn 0-4-2! You don't see those very often anymore!

It was originally a 2-4-2.  I could never keep the front truck on the rail so I took it off!

Tom 

Life is simple - eat, drink, play with trains!

Go Big Red!

PA&ERR "If you think you are doing something stupid, you're probably right!"

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Posted by blueangel on Friday, May 11, 2007 5:13 PM

I have been around the hobby a long time, The two oldest locomotives I have are a Varney dockside from the late forties and a PENNLINE Reading Crusader from 1949.

The Dockside was my fathers. The Crusader I got as a box of parts. Both are still operable.

Ray

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Posted by Rich Lauty on Friday, May 11, 2007 4:58 PM
    I have and still operate, a Mantua Goat camelback 0 4 0 that I built in 1940. The locomotive was powered by a 6 volt motor. After world war 2, motors became 12 volts and Mantua replaced my 6 volt for a 12 volt for $1.
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Posted by peepsight38570 on Friday, May 11, 2007 4:19 PM
dont have a photo but my oldest engines are athearn rubber band driven and varney also had some diecast hobbytown locos .  still wish i had my lionel locos from when i was a child more than 50 years ago.  they may not run as well as the new locos but they sure bring back memorys. also have rdc athearn rubber band drive

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