Jon
So many roads, so little time.
lionelsuperotrack wrote:The Wheaton commuter station also has a plastic roof. I bought a Wheaton a while back and a friend bought me a present, which he found at a toy show. It was the roof! Marx, always fun to collect. Very best, Mike Spanier "Super O" + Marx Guides Which are GREAT!!( http://search.reviews.ebay.com/members/lionelsuperotrack_W0QQuqtZg )
The Wheaton commuter station also has a plastic roof. I bought a Wheaton a while back and a friend bought me a present, which he found at a toy show. It was the roof! Marx, always fun to collect.
Very best, Mike Spanier
"Super O" + Marx Guides Which are GREAT!!( http://search.reviews.ebay.com/members/lionelsuperotrack_W0QQuqtZg )
The only Marx piece of equipment that I have is an old transformer that went to a model race car set from the 60's. I am using it to power lights on my layout, the miniture lights that I have are incandescent bulbs so either A.C. or D.C. will work fine.
Lee F.
Lionel collector, stuck in an N scaler's modelling space.
My very first train set was a Marx wind-up tinplate set with two-rail track, circa 1961. In 1965 I received a Marx Allstate set (from Sears by way of Santa Claus ). By the beginning of the 70's I was heavily into HO and the old Marx stuff was sold in yard sales. Recently, I have begun collecting Marx, primarily pre and postwar tin and diecast. I am in the planning stages of a small (4x8 or smaller) layout to run my Marx trains and use my Marx tin stations (Girard, Oak Park, Wheaton and Glendale) and accesories. I still love my Lionel postwar and modern stuff, but once the Marx bug bites, there is no cure! Here's a few items from my Marx collection: A custom painted 1666 with brass trim: A Girard station: An Oak Park station (somewhat harder to find): and a Wheaton commuter station (pretty hard to find!):
My very first train set was a Marx wind-up tinplate set with two-rail track, circa 1961. In 1965 I received a Marx Allstate set (from Sears by way of Santa Claus ). By the beginning of the 70's I was heavily into HO and the old Marx stuff was sold in yard sales.
Recently, I have begun collecting Marx, primarily pre and postwar tin and diecast. I am in the planning stages of a small (4x8 or smaller) layout to run my Marx trains and use my Marx tin stations (Girard, Oak Park, Wheaton and Glendale) and accesories. I still love my Lionel postwar and modern stuff, but once the Marx bug bites, there is no cure!
Here's a few items from my Marx collection:
A custom painted 1666 with brass trim:
A Girard station:
An Oak Park station (somewhat harder to find):
and a Wheaton commuter station (pretty hard to find!):
QUOTE: Originally posted by lionelsuperotrack QUOTE: Originally posted by tintrax Did you know that Marx motors were used in other brands? Well, one other brand at least. A little education please. What other brand used Marx motors? Thanks, Mike
QUOTE: Originally posted by tintrax Did you know that Marx motors were used in other brands? Well, one other brand at least.
TCA#09-63805
QUOTE: Originally posted by tintrax There are Marx trains running in New Zealand too! Both prewar & postwar. I will be running some at a public exhibition here in three months`s time. Did you know that Marx motors were used in other brands? Well, one other brand at least.
QUOTE: Originally posted by cnw1995 Marx accessories sure are neat too - wonderfully tinplated and simple - I have their crane that sits over the tracks and the Girard station - did you see the issue of CTT with the article by Roger Carp about the all-Marx layout. It sure was impressive.
QUOTE: Originally posted by dwiemer Mike, Do you happen to have a diagram of the Marx 2002 handcar? mine is in pieces and I want to restore it. I can probably figure it out, but don't want to hurt anything. Thanks, Dennis
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks he needs more of it than he already has.
Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
QUOTE: Originally posted by qqqman My 1st set was a freight set with the SP 666 loco,Erie flat, Santa Fe stock car, Cities Service tank and an SP caboose. It was an over under figure 8 with cool trestles. I added on an Allstate tank, white PFE reefer and a NYC crane. It all came fron Sears & Roebuck. All I have left is the 666 and tender, stock car, crane and trestles. I had a gate and crossing light and what I liked best was the copper strip that went over the rail to activate the accessory. A recent article in CTT describes how to do this which I'm goin to do when it's time for accessories.(After Scenery) I guess it's my little tribute to Marx.
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