rrebell KB5JCX Alas, I have big problem. I don't get much of a stipend for retirement. I lost two of my favorite engines, but neither is DCC. I cannot afford to switch to DCC. Do I just let my heart break? Live with it? Get over it? Is there a place I can get a 44T or DS-1? Can I scratch build these? Where and how do I choose the right can engine? Do I just trash it all and find another hobby? Has the hobby evolved into a hobby only for the rich? I appreciate any advice. Perhaps my quote is appropriate. Thanks. Anything you want can be gotten on the cheap but sometimes it takes time. E-bay is your best freind here. Just saw a couple 44 Ton go for a little over $20 each Just saw a 45 Ton DCC instaled one for around $60, ending soon. You can also trade skills for items, done that before too.
KB5JCX Alas, I have big problem. I don't get much of a stipend for retirement. I lost two of my favorite engines, but neither is DCC. I cannot afford to switch to DCC. Do I just let my heart break? Live with it? Get over it? Is there a place I can get a 44T or DS-1? Can I scratch build these? Where and how do I choose the right can engine? Do I just trash it all and find another hobby? Has the hobby evolved into a hobby only for the rich? I appreciate any advice. Perhaps my quote is appropriate. Thanks.
Alas, I have big problem. I don't get much of a stipend for retirement. I lost two of my favorite engines, but neither is DCC. I cannot afford to switch to DCC. Do I just let my heart break? Live with it? Get over it? Is there a place I can get a 44T or DS-1? Can I scratch build these? Where and how do I choose the right can engine? Do I just trash it all and find another hobby? Has the hobby evolved into a hobby only for the rich? I appreciate any advice. Perhaps my quote is appropriate. Thanks.
Anything you want can be gotten on the cheap but sometimes it takes time. E-bay is your best freind here. Just saw a couple 44 Ton go for a little over $20 each Just saw a 45 Ton DCC instaled one for around $60, ending soon. You can also trade skills for items, done that before too.
Welcome back, love the avatar
Seconded on Ebay, just watch your desires vs fighting spirit. I'd been watching a Pennsy A5s switcher from Bowser, ended up going more than a bit over my 'max allowance'. Oops. Got my yard goat though.
The hobby is throwing me for a loop with DCC and the leap ahead in scenery materials (I'm also a returnee after idling off in '91), having to transition either back to DC, or forge ahead converting my Keller Onboard gear to newer DCC. Again, watch the For Sales here and on other rail forums, you could pick up a small layout rig like the NCE Power Cab Starter Set. As long as you stay away from onboard sound, the DCC mobile decoders are reasonable in price.
Why all the doom and gloom?
KB5JCXI lost two of my favorite engines, but neither is DCC. I cannot afford to switch to DCC. Do I just let my heart break?
DCC is NOT a necessity. DC is just fine, with tons of options, and can be built to make the switch to DCC easy, if the opertunity arrises.
And as mentioned, Ebay is a good place to start. Start with what you have, what you can pick up cheap, and make it work.
There's a lot of satisfaction in building and rebuilding what you can't currently afford, and making it go.
There are some hobby shops that resell locomotives, rolling stock, and structures from estate sales. That was a big source for me.
You can do this, KB5, if you want to.
Mike.
My You Tube
I love your thread KB5JCX. I am a retiree that just got back into active model railroading last year after being away 30+ years. I have no layout and my stuff is DC. So, I have similar thoughts as you. My stuff goes back to my HO start-up in 1962 while in college, so some of it is 50+ years old. I just finished upgrading my four kit built Mantuas (Pacifics and Mikados). My upgrades included can motors, details, LEDs, and tender oil bunkers. I have one more Mantua and three Rivarossi steamers awaiting some kind of rework. Any additional locos and rolling stock will be used from train shows - that retiree fixed income thing. I'm lucky in that the Dallas Fort Worth area where I live had five train shows between last October thru February. I came home from each with old bargains needing TLC. Good luck on your activities KB5JCX. I look forward to how you tackle your comeback as I too want to learn.
You can take refuge in the "This Hobby is too expensive" thread.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley
Don’t despair. Many of us are still running DC mode. Most (all?) new locos can be configured to run on DC. I can’t justify the cost and labor to convert.
Genesee Terminal, freelanced HO in Upstate NY ...hosting Loon Bay Transit Authority and CSX Intermodal. Interchange with CSX (CR)(NYC).
CP/D&H, N scale, somewhere on the Canadian Shield
KB5JCX Trains, Trains, Trains (retail store) in Denton, Texas
.
Denton Denton Rah Rah Rah
Don't Dream It... Be IT!
Denton is now the home of Reaper Miniatures. I went there in 2012 and stopped ant the Denton sign and did the above chant. Everyone who knows me was amazed I went to Reaper Minatures instead of the Peterbilt factory.
Oh well.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
I'll join with the others in welcoming you to the forum!
Bachmann makes a nice 44 tonner. Ebay might be a good source for you to see whats out there. Just about all of the major on line train stores sell Bachmann.
If I'm right, that DS-1 is a locomotive from South Africa? I'm sure that one you'll have to scratch build.
OK - I am using Easy Model Railroad Inventory to help organize stock, structures, and other materials as well as a few ideas. Not too much in concrete, yet. I had to rebuild an RS-1 (purchased in 1987) by manufacturing a part and using a small zip tie. It was destroyed by my daughter's H.S. lab partner - long story for discussion much later! (lol) The other engine (0-6-0) was a kit that had to be rebuilt, having been jostled in a loose box, using some wood chips, glue, and screws as well as some plastic "weld" cement. Both run on a test strip ok - I cannot wait to try them on the layout to be built this spring. Meanwhile, I removed all the weights from my cars and repaired as many as I could before finding "upgrade" parts in another box. All are ready to run and weight can be added to them later as well as the "upgrades." When I changed careers again in 1992, I had to store the structures flat. The walls were disconnected best I could. Thank goodness for "weld" cements, but structures are not in tip-top shape, but then, people weather things anyway. The "new" kits I bought back then and not built yet will be put together with "weld" cement since only a speck less than a drop can be used which prevent a lot of handling problems. It may be slower; but, in the long run, better I think.
The track plans, using templates I bought back before storage, various HO gauge tools (NMRA), metal architech and engineering rulers, and gauge ruler, have been completed and approved by the "boss," (wife). At the end of march, I start gathering wood for the bench work and start my search for homasote. Homasote is expensive, but worth it, since this will probably be my last layout (I will be 70 this summer). I figure it will take about two to three years to complete the layout. Definitely a combination of many "works-in-progress." So much for now.
The late Rev. Paul Raymond, Ltc. US Army, Ret., owned and operated Trains, Trains, Trains (retail store) in Denton, Texas and was my first mentor. He showed me in detail how to clean and oil loco engines with the appropriate lubricants without harm to the gears and wheels. I also purchased most of my stock, engines, and nickel-steel track, and other items. I use a set of brushes sold by Athern that hooks up to a railroad transformer with an extra ground. The brass brushes clean the wheels as they turn from the connections going through the brushes while the lubricants are spread even throughout the gearbox, worm gears, bearings and other moving parts. I am not to liberal with the application and do it often (about once every one or two months). But thanks for the heads up. He also taught me how to make plastic wheels work from older stock (old Bachmann train kits). Like all makes of plastic and metal trucks, the wheels must spin freely and trucks cannot rock too much nor bind on turns. They CAN be adjusted. As a retired school teacher, I can no longer afford putting metal trucks and wheels on all cars. Lots of options are out of the question for my low income. But, I do know a few tricks. I do have a few cars I can run on some older tracks. I know there is a lot of static dirt to be picked up and put on the rails including ballast, so I am carefull about that. You guys are really great helping me remember, though. Thanks!
Sorry - I had to sell the ships when I left the U.S. Air Force. Too much for shipping. I did put the money I got to good use to paying off bills and had to let go of my bowling ball, glove, shoes, etc. as well as my cross-country ski equipment. Not much use for it where I live in Texas now.
Hi KB5JCX!
Welcome back to the hobby!
Please don't hesitate to share your ideas and your other modelling interests.
Just a bit of advice - your old locomotives would probably benefit from a bit of maintenance before you try to run them, i.e. replacing the grease in the truck gear towers and cleaning the wheels. You will need to clean the track too.
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
ROBERT PETRICKEven though this is a model railroad forum, we try to maintain outside interests as well.
Please come back here often. Your first few posts are "moderated", but that ends soon enough, and you can be posting regalrly very quickly.
What Robert said is true. Please post pictures of the ships sometime. I have posted some kind of strange pictures from time to time, and so far, no one has complained.
Welcome! It is indeed a good idea to throw your ideas into this ring as a LOT of modeling products, techniques and ideas have changed significantly in the last 25 years! While there is nothing wrong with most of the old-school ways, you may be amazed at some of the more recent developments. For instance: the miriad uses for extruded foam insulation board! If you were putting everything away 25 years ago, I would also assume you'd be new to DCC.
A band director, eh! I'm the trumpet player from your nightmares!!!
Hornblower
Welcome to the forum. I, speaking only for myself, welcome opportunities to be disabused of my wrongness. I also like to learn new methods, materials, and other concepts, and if you'd like to share yours with me, please feel free.
JoeinPA A big welcome to this forum and back into the hobby. Please share with us your ideas and work as you start in this new adventure. Joe
A big welcome to this forum and back into the hobby. Please share with us your ideas and work as you start in this new adventure.
Joe
Yes, and feel free to post photos of the tall ships as well. Even though this is a model railroad forum, we try to maintain outside interests as well.
Robert
LINK to SNSR Blog
Looks like you've built up a backlog of model railroading ideas. Go ahead and lay them on us. Always room for new ideas. There's usually not a specific way, method or product that is always best. The trick is determining what works best for your specifc application, which means it's a good thing to consider multiple options.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
As a teacher (band director), I had little time for the hobby I had when I worked for the "city." All went into the box for the next 25 years or so and now I finally opened the box. I am not THAT new to RR modeling, and I have built 17 wooden sailing ships (laying the keel from plans), rebuilt amateur radios and associated equipment, built dollhouses and furniture from scratch (six of them), and repaired musical instruments. If there is a tool, there is a way - laughs. I would like to share some of my adventures of returning to this hobby with a few ideas that may be compatable (or not) that may resolve some arguments that could get overheated I have seen on this web site.