QUOTE: There's one more disclaimer. Most of these models are from the postwar and late prewar years. For many contemporary items, it's too soon yet to say whether they have stood the test of time. Rest assured, though, that before long a new crop of sleepers and duds will surface.
Bob Keller
QUOTE: Originally posted by Kooljock1 I STILL think it's a great idea for a whole series of articles, and no I didn't agree with all the choices! But wasn't that the point? But you want controversy? Do a MTH over/under rated article and watch the reaction! I can see it now: "They're ALL under rated!" -TRex "It is my considered opinion after years of studious research at the academic level that the choices were ill advised at best, and loathesome at worst." -Allan Miller "They're all over-rated!" -BigJim "My head is gonna blow any second..." -OGaugeoverlord Jon [8D]
Trying to update my avatar since 2020
MartyE and Kodi the Husky Dog! ( 3/31/90-9/28/04 ) www.MartyE.com My O Gauge Web Page and Home of Kodiak Junction!
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QUOTE: Originally posted by BigJim I guess to the casual vistor to these forums or those that don't actually "read" what I post, may think that I am just trying to create "much ado about nothing". I can assure you that is not the case. What I am actually trying to do is wake people up to the fact that things can be done better. That a job worth doing is worth doing right...the first time! It seems that far too many people want to take the easy way out, do the least to get by, and charge the most money they can, instead of putting out a quality product worthy of the "Made in the Good Ol' USA" label. And don't give me that "well everything is made in China now" mumbo jumbo. The people over here have to sign off on it don't they? Wake up people. Demand the best! Give the best! Be the best that you can be!!! It's up to you. Are you up to the challenge? If you are, then get on the train. If not, then stay off!
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
QUOTE: But I STILL don't see how this applies to the article in question GIVEN the caveat cited by the aurthor in his last paragraph before the list started.
QUOTE: What does that have to do with this thread? Now, you're ranting about the train manufacturers. When you started this thread, you were complaining about CTT's content.
QUOTE: write an article and show us how it should be done. Come on flap-jaw--put your money where your mouth is.
QUOTE: many of us who LOVE this hobby would not be in it if products were still 100% made in the Good ol' USA.
QUOTE: Originally posted by BigJim QUOTE: What and pay CTT to publish something that I wrote? I thought it was supposed to be the other way around. Then, I have heard that the pay is pretty low if you get paid at all. It would be of benefit to all of us in the hobby for the major publications to speak up in their reviews and take the manufacturers to task about some of the latest glaring flaws that have shown up models lately. Flaws that could have been easily avoided by manufacturers that cared about their product! OH, I forgot, the magazines didn't receive any of those for testing. How convienient. Regarding payment and rates: Sorry BigJim, we pay probably the highest rates around and pay for articles on acceptance (payment for photos for Photo Album are on publication). Maybe you're thinking of when Myron owned OGR and he'd pay after publication, if you submitted a bill to him. Regarding reviews: I'll give you the benfit of a doubt, since you clearly don't have any idea of how we go about the review process. A fraction of readers want a review that says something is garbage even when it isn't. The bottom line is that most everything is made to the same standard of quality, which is generally pretty good. I've written about Lionel locomotives that needed to be pushed to get through curves, MTH O-72 locomotives that derailed on O-72 and multi-unit diesels that had motors that didn't work; K-Line locomotives with crappy paint jobs and wheels that fall off the tender and more. You simply need to read the reviews to discover what I find wrong with the products. My mandate when I was hired was to write reviews for the reader without regard to advertiser influence. I've done that. I've also received complaints from manufacturers because I've pointed out faults and we've lost advertising because I've pointed out those faults. While I'll request additional samples if I encounter a major problem, we don't guarantee reviews, nor do we give the manufacturers the 'right" to pull a product we find defective. You don't like the reviews in OGR or CTT, get the engines, test them yourself, and published them on your own website. Or send them to the club publications of LOTS, the LCCA, or TCA. Oh, and most of the manufacturers have discovered the simple truth: Send a locomotive in for a review. It will get reviewed. Don't send it in and it probably won't. Bob Keller Reply Dave Farquhar Member sinceApril 2004 From: MO 886 posts Posted by Dave Farquhar on Friday, January 6, 2006 1:36 PM I'll chime in here, since a lot of people don't seem to know how magazines work (or are supposed to work, since there are exceptions). I am not, and never have been, an employee of Kalmbach, the publisher of CTT. I am a published author and have edited a couple of small publications in the past. There is a perception that magazines do whatever their advertisers want. Most magazines do everything they can to keep this from happening. Sometimes they go to the extent of putting the editorial staff in an entirely different building from the advertising staff. It's very common for them to be housed in different sections of the building with different elevators. That way, if an advertiser calls up its account rep and says, "I want you to march down to [editor's name]'s office and tell him if he doesn't print a retraction, you'll never see another dollar from me!" the account rep can honestly say, "Well, I see him once a year at the company Christmas party." The company may pull its ads anyway. This is a problem all magazines and newspapers face. Most companies end up eventually advertising again, because it's not like there are 72 other places out there to run ads. So a magazine like CTT actually has the upper hand when it comes to being objective. Now, some smaller magazines have staff members who are both on the editorial and advertising side. In these instances there's a lot more room for conflicts of interest. Reviews are in the eye of the beholder, which is the eternal struggle. Some people just want a piece to run well and as long as it vaguely resembles a train, they're perfectly happy. Others want the piece to be an exact scale replica of the original and don't care much how it runs because they don't even have a layout to begin with. Some want both, and they want it to run on O-31 track (O-27 is for sissies, after all) and they want it to cost $199, but they'll wait for the blowout so they can get it for $68. Probably your expectations are going to be different from those of the reviewer. But if the reviewer is careful, the review will contain enough information to let you decide whether you should buy a piece or not. The reviewer's job isn't to agree with you, nor is it to do your thinking for you. His/her job is to give you enough knowledge to let you make an informed decision. I hope I don't sound too much like I'm kissing up. I'm just tired of seeing CTT being dragged through the mud by someone who doesn't know much about how journalism works. Dave Farquhar http://dfarq.homeip.net Reply Richard A Member sinceMarch 2004 From: Western New York 193 posts Posted by Richard A on Friday, January 6, 2006 1:43 PM QUOTE: Richard, The way the cover reads, it makes absolutely no distinction about eras. Only certain manufacturers are noted. As presented in the body of the magazine, the authors text is miniscule compared to the space provided the authors choices. I would suspect that most of you simply scan through your magazine before sitting down to absorb every word, thus reading the smileys and frowns before reading the text. Big Jim, Thanks for your "clarification". You've helped me tremendously to properly qualify any future post of yours that I may accidently read. Whether your life is good or bad, trains will make it better! Reply Richard A Member sinceMarch 2004 From: Western New York 193 posts Posted by Richard A on Friday, January 6, 2006 1:51 PM Bob Keller, I don't know whether you drew the short straw or not, but I hope you hang around as (one of?) the Administrator(s) for a long time. Your information and CANDOR is welcomed and refreshing. [No disparagemnt intended toward any of your predecessors!] Whether your life is good or bad, trains will make it better! Reply LS1Heli Member sinceDecember 2005 From: 28 Sager Place Irvington, NJ 07111 265 posts Posted by LS1Heli on Friday, January 6, 2006 4:50 PM I personally enjoy CTT. Could careless about them not mentioning crap from MTH or K-line. Keep up the good work CTT. Reply BigJim Member sinceApril 2001 From: Roanoke, VA 2,019 posts Posted by BigJim on Saturday, January 7, 2006 4:17 PM QUOTE: Regarding payment and rates: Sorry BigJim, we pay probably the highest rates around and pay for articles on acceptance (payment for photos for Photo Album are on publication). Actually Bob, If you go back and look, the pay reference was meant for Dennis B., but thanks for the information. QUOTE: Oh, and most of the manufacturers have discovered the simple truth: Send a locomotive in for a review. It will get reviewed. Don't send it in and it probably won't. Bob, Let me ask you this. This statement reads as though a review is similar to payola in radio. Suppose a manufacturer doesn't send in a "HOT" item. Do you not try to go out and find one to review yourself? In other words, can you say, we need to review this model now because it is in the news but so-and-so hasn't sent one in yet or maybe never will. Can you go find one at a hobby shop to do a review? One more thing that I just thought about concerning the "Dud" "Fire Car". Mr. Grams states that "What if the fire is a block away from the tracks? Does someone quickly build a spur to it?" The answer is; Thanks to K-Line and "Super Streets" you can now run your "Fire Car" directly to the fire and hope that it doen't shoot "DUDS". Or should that be "SUDS"? . Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 7, 2006 5:55 PM QUOTE: Originally posted by BigJim QUOTE: Regarding payment and rates: Sorry BigJim, we pay probably the highest rates around and pay for articles on acceptance (payment for photos for Photo Album are on publication). Actually Bob, If you go back and look, the pay reference was meant for Dennis B., but thanks for the information. ????? Call me dense, but your reply to Bob makes no sense whatsoever. I went back and looked and this is what you said: QUOTE: What and pay CTT to publish something that I wrote? I thought it was supposed to be the other way around. Then, I have heard that the pay is pretty low if you get paid at all.. Can you explain exactly how the pay reference refers to me? Reply Edit Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 7, 2006 6:29 PM Oh, Richard A, I'm with you, bud--on both counts. Reply Edit Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 7, 2006 6:39 PM For two short weeks I was the proud owner of a cattle car/yard. I remembered it fondly from my uncles AF layout. When I read the article I thought better dump this puppy on Ebay before everyone reads the article :) Dave Reply Edit Bob Keller Member sinceJuly 2003 From: Wisconsin 2,877 posts Posted by Bob Keller on Saturday, January 7, 2006 6:58 PM BigJim has been blocked from posting for 30 days for failure to play well with others. Please note that I'm not deleting anything he's written. I am reacting to complaints from forum members. Bob Keller Reply Frank53 Member sinceJanuary 2005 1,991 posts Posted by Frank53 on Saturday, January 7, 2006 7:01 PM I find it interesting that on this forum and in North Korea, there is some perception that the publications are being "paid off" in locomotives for writing reviews. It really is a hilarious assumption. If someone wants a shot at having a review of their new $1600.00 loco in any magazine, it is incumbent on them to send a sample. Big Jim wants the mags to go out and buy one, which is absurd. Should Road and Track go out and buy a Ferrari so they can write a report on it? Reply Kooljock1 Member sinceJanuary 2001 From: Colchester, Vermont 1,136 posts Posted by Kooljock1 on Saturday, January 7, 2006 7:50 PM I think I can weigh in on the Payola/Plugola vs. Product For Review issue. I have to sign an affidavit several times a year proclaiming that I have not accepted money for playing records. (And for the record, the FCC form still uses the phrases "records" and "sock hops"...very quaint!) The way payola/plugola works in radio is this: a record company pays under the table a radio station program director to add a song to the stations' playlist. This is called payola/ If I've been hired to DJ a dance, and I get payed on the number of people who attend, and I use my show to plug said dance, this would be plugola. If the local tire store gives me a deal on a set of Hakkapelitas in expectation that I'll plug the tire store on the air...that is Plugola. CTT recieves production samples from manufacturers. CTT authors are then free to review, pick, pan, or not review the item. They are not paid by the manufacturer to give a good review. By the same token, radio stations recieve new CD's from the record companies all the time. The station then chooses to play or not play the songs. If there seems to be more MTH/K-LINE/ATLAS reviews than LIONEL reviews, then perhaps you should contact LIONEL. Jon [8D] Now broadcasting world-wide at http://www.wkol.com Weekdays 5:00 AM-10:00AM! Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 7, 2006 9:30 PM Hi guys, We get locomotives and other train products to review in three ways. First, a manufacturer sends us something to review. We evaluate the product and afterward it goes back to the manufacturer, unless the manufacturer tells us to keep it (about 90 to 95 percent of the locomotives are sent back). Some manufacturers send us lots of trains, others send a few, and some don't send any, even though we ask. Second, if we sense there's a "hole" in our review lineup for an upcoming issue we go out and buy a train to fill the hole. We buy locally and through the mail. By "hole," I mean situations where the reviews for a particular issue are unbalanced (all steamers and no diesels; all expensive engines and no inexpensive engines; or all the same brand). Sometimes we can't fill the "hole" and have to publish what we have. Manufacturers don't release new locomotives just for our benefit, so we are at the mercy of their production and delivery schedules. The third way we get trains for review is if a staff member happens to buy a newly released locomotive from a local hobby shop or by mail for his personal use (of course he keeps it after the review). For example, the Lionel Canadian Pacific grain train reviewed a few months ago belongs to one of our editors. Lastly, if something is "hot," we go out and buy one. Recent examples are the Ready-Made Toys Beep, and the Lionel 0-6-0T, LionelMaster SD70MAC, and Lionel milk reefer. Please note that ads in CTT are priced by size and use of color. A half-page manufacturer's color ad costs the same as a half-page color ad for Joe's Hobby Shop. So those who suggest that CTT is in a manufacturer's pocket are wrong. The big retailers, like TrainWorld/TrainLand, Charles Ro, Joe Grzyboski, year in and year out are the biggest advertisers in CTT. Sincerely, Neil Besougloff editor Reply Edit msacco Member sinceNovember 2003 From: Saint James, Long Island, NY 666 posts Posted by msacco on Saturday, January 7, 2006 10:09 PM My how this thread has grown. Glad this member has been barred for a bit. HIs assumptions are ridiculous. Kudos to Bob and Neil for putting up with this garbage and keep up the good work. I love the magazine and have always appreciated Bob's honest and upfront reviews. Mike S. Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 7, 2006 10:28 PM QUOTE: Originally posted by LS1Heli Could careless about them not mentioning crap from MTH or K-line Does the brand loyalty schtick not get old to you?[zzz] I'm not trying to be a jerk, but give it a rest already! Reply Edit 12 Join our Community! Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account. Login » Register » Search the Community FREE EMAIL NEWSLETTER Get the Classic Toy Trains newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month SIGN UP More great sites from Kalmbach Media Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Copyright Policy
QUOTE: What and pay CTT to publish something that I wrote? I thought it was supposed to be the other way around. Then, I have heard that the pay is pretty low if you get paid at all.
It would be of benefit to all of us in the hobby for the major publications to speak up in their reviews and take the manufacturers to task about some of the latest glaring flaws that have shown up models lately. Flaws that could have been easily avoided by manufacturers that cared about their product! OH, I forgot, the magazines didn't receive any of those for testing. How convienient.
QUOTE: Richard, The way the cover reads, it makes absolutely no distinction about eras. Only certain manufacturers are noted. As presented in the body of the magazine, the authors text is miniscule compared to the space provided the authors choices. I would suspect that most of you simply scan through your magazine before sitting down to absorb every word, thus reading the smileys and frowns before reading the text.
QUOTE: Regarding payment and rates: Sorry BigJim, we pay probably the highest rates around and pay for articles on acceptance (payment for photos for Photo Album are on publication).
QUOTE: Oh, and most of the manufacturers have discovered the simple truth: Send a locomotive in for a review. It will get reviewed. Don't send it in and it probably won't.
QUOTE: Originally posted by BigJim QUOTE: Regarding payment and rates: Sorry BigJim, we pay probably the highest rates around and pay for articles on acceptance (payment for photos for Photo Album are on publication). Actually Bob, If you go back and look, the pay reference was meant for Dennis B., but thanks for the information.
QUOTE: What and pay CTT to publish something that I wrote? I thought it was supposed to be the other way around. Then, I have heard that the pay is pretty low if you get paid at all..
QUOTE: Originally posted by LS1Heli Could careless about them not mentioning crap from MTH or K-line
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