Laidlaym wrote: We might have to go back to basics and build a lot more ourselves due to the collapse of the Global Economy when oil and coal run out and/or their use becomes unacceptable due to environmental damage. Mark in Melbourne
We might have to go back to basics and build a lot more ourselves due to the collapse of the Global Economy when oil and coal run out and/or their use becomes unacceptable due to environmental damage.
Mark in Melbourne
Yeah.
Like we'll all be alive when that happens. There are more known oil reserves on this planet nowadays than at any other time in the past.
The only oil shortage is the one created by the oil industry. Ditto for coal. There's still millions of tons of the stuff under the UK that's not being mined since Maggy Thatcher busted the unions. The UK now imports coal, if you can believe that. :-(.
Cheers
Roger T.
Home of the late Great Eastern Railway see: - http://www.greateasternrailway.com
For more photos of the late GER see: - http://s94.photobucket.com/albums/l99/rogertra/Great_Eastern/
Future model railroading must be easy to do, it must fit in smaler spaces (N will grow), and Digitalsystems may devolpe.
Manufacturers may pay atention to new costumers and how to conect to younger people.
I see two technology advances that will significantly advance model railroading:
1. Ready-to-run (RTR) type track (to include curved turnouts, double-slip switches)--all the goodies needed to make a "custom" but bullet-proof layout but without the need to tweak every rail joint. Look at what the RTR engines, cars, and scenery have done for that market.
2. An easy way to operate your trains wire-lessly. I see DCC as an interim (currently user-surly) way to do that today. Already you're seeing some higher end engines that have a wireless controller packaged with them that operates on DC. If the DCC guys can't agree to agree than they're going to be left in the dust when this upstart blows past them. Most model railroaders that I know (and I belong to a Club with 50+ members) only use DCC because the Club went that direction and wireless is very desired feature. 90% of them can only program a new engine number in a decoder (what percentage of new decoders sold are the basic, few featured ones?)
Thoughts that come to my mind include: no more hobby stores (all online) and a lack of people caring about modeling and trains unless they can do a layout on a computer. My generation of kids (i'm 22) are, which many probably have observed, obessed with computers. My dad's generation was all Lionel and hobby stores everywhere; my generation is GameStop and GameCrazy. I'd rather have something I can use in my own hands that I can work on if the power goes out.
Modeling the N&W freelanced at the height of their steam era in HO.
Daniel G.
1 Better on-board speakers and sound decoders, including a diesel Tsunami
2 An option for pre-weathered locos and freight cars on all new releases
3 A steam engine in HO from Atlas
Jon
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The future...the future... Thats a wrestled discussion in the club I was in, They went DCC. I was working on computer generated switchlists, but since we modeled the 50's as a basic, there werent computers then. So to keep with a theme, car cards. I think the biggest problem with car cards and operating is they always get messed up, so as the operations manager, I was scanning the cards and cars before a run session and making sure everything was set.
Then we had cards for cars that were not on the layout, and cars with no cards...argh
No matter if you go high tech in this area or not, you will still have these problems.
I think as modelers we have demanded quality locos and the manufacturers have responded, those like have made the cheapie toy sets now have high quality engines. You know who you are Life Like and Bachmann.... I always avoided those makers, but today, mean street coolness.
In the future, how about a little fewer "Big Boys"...
really I think the Big Boy is the most romantically connected lokie, why so many were made.
Technology can do nothing but help improve the hobby, so 3 cheers for the hobby!!
In Soviet Russia... trains model you!
...for those who remember Yakov Smirnov.
Modeling the Rio Grande Southern First District circa 1938-1946 in HOn3.
"Billy, remind to tell of a train that doesn't run on tracks"..."No fooling, Mr. Carpenter??"
Exchange between Billy and Klaatu....
Marlon
See pictures of the Clinton-Golden Valley RR