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What Got You, and Kept You, in the Hobby?

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Posted by russ_q4b on Tuesday, February 25, 2014 8:10 PM

What got me into the hobby.

     As a child in the 1970s I remembered going to Woolco's department store and drooling over their merchandise consisting of AHM trains and accessories.   When I got my first AHM train set I would find ways to earn extra money to expand that train set into a small railroad empire.

 

What keeps me into the hobby.

      The selection of products available is un-fricken-believable.   What excites me the most is FSM and SRMW craftsman kits; Westerfield freight cars; Scenics Express products and Fast Tracks turnout jigs.

 

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Posted by cjcrescent on Tuesday, February 25, 2014 9:20 PM

wjstix

I've long suspected there are generally two types of model railroaders, as far as how they got into the hobby. One group got a toy train set as a kid, and because of that, became interested in real trains too. The other group grew up near a rail line, or had a relative who worked for a railroad or was a railfan, and through exposure to the real trains became interested in model railroads. It would be interesting to research the two groups, see how their early years affected their layouts etc.

 

I'm a mixture of the two as I grew up in a small railroad town and the tracks were less than 400ft from my house and a wind up train set that my Dad got me when I was 4.

That was over 50 years ago, and as to what keeps me in the hobby, the same thing that started me in it-fascination!

Carey

Keep it between the Rails

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Posted by kbkchooch on Tuesday, February 25, 2014 10:30 PM

The official story: My maternal Grandfather used to set up a large Lionel layout in his basement every year. He and my Dad would set it up every Thanksgiving, and leave it up til the beginning of February. When I was 5 my Dad made me my own, smaller HO layout which grew with each larger house. My 1st apartment had a 4x8 layout in the dining room, because bachelor me didn't have a Dining set!! Wife #1 made all that go way, til years later when sons 1&2 came along. With a new house and 2 boys, it was time to get started again! Big Smile Its "for the boys" right?? Wink

Fast forward more years..2nd wife, 3 more kids, ..Model and 1:1 railroading  are still a facination for me. Facination in gears and wheels and electric. It's a retreat. A world apart from daily strife, where I am King, and the world is as my eye sees it. It is also art, 3 dimensional art. Its also magic. Magic in the way it apears to you and maybe others.  It's also magic in a childs eye, and your inner childs eye.  Maybe that is what keeps most of us in the hobby. As my friend Howard is so fond of saying" Its never too late to have a happy childhood."  However, if we want our hobby to grow, we must "grow our own" next generation. So I did that on Christmas of 2012, when I gave the grandsons their own layout to pass the torch! Kept me involved on a more basic layout, and formed a bond between me, the grandsons and their Dad that we did not have before. Big Smile

Thats the long version

Short version:  If I go to the bar one more time, SWMBO is gonna kick my butt!! So I might as well play with the trains!! Wink

Karl

NCE über alles! Thumbs Up

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Posted by CSX_road_slug on Tuesday, February 25, 2014 11:03 PM

richhotrain
What influenced you to get into the hobby, and what has kept you there?

In a nutshell:

1) Lionel train set for Christmas at age 5;

2) August 1966 issue of RMC at age 12;

3) Clubs, excellent LHS, fellow train lovers, and railfanning;

4) Forums like this one;

5) DCC and scratchbuilding;

6) Hosting op sessions;

7) ...and a gazillion other things that I don't have time to list here!

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

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Posted by galaxy on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 2:32 AM

Weeeelll,

Thios kinda sounds like one of my "philospy" Topics! Good one!

It goes like this:

when I was 3 I had a windup Marx O-27 on two rail track. Then at about age 7 or 8, the neighbors had a garage sale { and I found a box{es} of Lionel trains underneath the tables.} OH, how I wanted those trains, BUT, My father said "maybe for Christmas".

Fast forward to Xmas: there it was! Besided the tree!  A MARX NEW O-27 Steamer! That lasted well into oh, about age 19, that fizzled out, but did include a small {pardon the pun} foray into some N scale stuff, two. {cars, work, Life experiences got in the way}.

Fast forward to 2006, nad the local Auction house down the street has a train auction. Lots of Lionel, A few Lionel HO products, a lame 4x8 layout, but nothing really caught my eye, so we went away.

MOH {My Other Half} was getting into the train Idea with me! How Lucky can I be? MOH is a train nut too! {Makes it easy on vacations we always go to a Steam tourist line or RR museum}. ONLY MOH wnted N scale,and i always wnated HO so I got into HO. MOH got into N.

I built me a small HO layout 3.5x5.1 feet. I recently tore it back down with the idea of making it larger, but that idea has fizzled as unless there is MORE ROOM!

WHat keeps me here? {or rather what keeps me COMING BACK?} the creativity that goes in "creating your own world"! And the likeness you can {hopefully} achieve. ANd I LOVE trains!

Now, I guess I be a "armchair modeler" though i do have the realistic "in it" mentality and experience!

MY next foray {when ther is a financial support} is to TRY Z scale, I can build a whole layout in an under-the bed box!

Oh, the POSSIBILITIES!!!

Oh, The RAPTURE!!!

Oh, the insanity!!!

{Whew I had a moment there}

Geeked

-G .

Just my thoughts, ideas, opinions and experiences. Others may vary.

 HO and N Scale.

After long and careful thought, they have convinced me. I have come to the conclusion that they are right. The aliens did it.

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Posted by "JaBear" on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 3:26 AM
Good grief Rich a non whinging and whiney thread, and on page two as well, what on earth are you up to!!! You keep up this sort of nonsense and next you’ll be deluded into thinking that those great wads of Fuji War Bonds are actually worth more than the rice paper they’re printed on!!!!Smile, Wink & Grin
Always enjoyed making models, 1/72 aeroplanes mainly, as a young fellow,  but once made they were static,( not entirely true as a had a lot suspended from the ceiling, a pain to be dusted) and after a while working on the 1:1, I felt I needed something different to do, so started drawing, which i still do If I get the time.
I had a clockwork Hornby Dublo train set when very young and it had kept me entertained for hours, so model trains was on my radar, so to speak, but what really got me interested was an RMC article by W. Allen McClelland,  when I realised there was a lot more to the hobby than trains just going roundy-roundy, (my apologies to all those who find it quite relaxing to watch their trains going round and round.) Not long after that, as a result of a change in employer,  I moved to a town which had a model railway club which I joined and through the few active members  started learning the craft. Unfortunately with members moving away, or sadly passing on, the club has degenerated into non modelling rail fan club, I will say no more.Angry So what keeps me in the hobby is my wife who encourages me to have a hobby ( she doesn’t call them toy trains any more), and the Good ffolkeson the forum. Thank you. Bow
Cheers, the Bear.Smile

"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."

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Posted by richhotrain on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 4:32 AM

Good grief Rich a non whinging and whiney thread, and on page two as well, what on earth are you up to!!! You keep up this sort of nonsense and next you’ll be deluded into thinking that those great wads of Fuji War Bonds are actually worth more than the rice paper they’re printed on!!!!Smile, Wink & Grin
 
 

And the news gets even better, JaBear!

Rich

Alton Junction

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 4:35 AM

LaughLaughLaugh

Rich - you´ve made my day!

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Posted by zstripe on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 4:40 AM

Good One, Richie!  Bow Laugh

Frankie

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Posted by ripvanwnkl on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 6:40 AM

At age 3, in the Panama Canal Zone, Dad, a career soldier, got me a Lionel set for Christmas which he really wanted to play with.  I promptly dropped the steam loco out a second story window onto concrete.  He never bought me any more model trains. 

From ages 14 to 16, I frequently traveled on French passenger trains while Dad was stationed in Paris.  But model planes were my passion throughout my preteen and teen years.

From ages 18 to 22, I traveled on Union Pacific, Wabash, and Norfolk & Western passenger trains from college in Manhattan, KS to Moberly, MO, St Louis, MO, and Chicago, IL to visit my grandparents and parents during school vacations.    

From ages 23 to 44, I traveled on trains in Korea, Denmark, and Norway while in the Air Force for four years and Air National Guard part-time for 18 years.   

My full-time career with the Veterans Health Administration for 31 years had plenty of air travel but no trains. 

At age 60, when I started collecting my military pension, my oldest grandson convinced me to buy some HO and DCC model trains for  both of us.  My wife encouraged me in the hobby because she liked seeing the bond forged between my grandson and me.  She also liked trains because her grandfather had worked for Southern Railroad.  We also frequently railfanned with our grandson.

At age 64 my wife and I toured Europe entirely by train for our 40th anniversary.  At age 65 I fully retired and my model train "empire" grew exponentially with the extra free time I had.   

Now, near age 70, I have very nearly acquired all the model railroad equipment I could ever want and my grandson and I still enjoy our modeling and railfanning time together.   It has been and continues to be a great experience. 

 

Dave

USAF (Retired)

 

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Posted by cacole on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 10:09 AM

Growing up within 100 feet of an Illinois Central main line through World War 2 and until 1960, in a small town with two steam era roundhouse complexes; one Illinois Central and one Missouri Pacific.

 

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Posted by mlehman on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 12:42 PM

There were some early influences. Several railroaders in the family, I always like seeing trains, and I inherited a Lionel Santa Fe set when a relative went off to college and got interested in women.Wink

But what really got me started was that a crashed model train never gets lost, unlike my model rockets. I gave up on the Space Age and reverted to modeling earlier technology.

What's kept me in was a focused interest in Colorado narrowgauge, a good long-range layout plan, and the fact that there's always something interesting to do -- I can get back to boring stuff later or not at all.Headphones

Mike Lehman

Urbana, IL

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Posted by mlehman on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 12:50 PM

ripvanwnkl
At age 3, in the Panama Canal Zone, Dad, a career soldier, got me a Lionel set for Christmas which he really wanted to play with. I promptly dropped the steam loco out a second story window onto concrete. He never bought me any more model trains.

Neat! I was also a dependent in the CZ, 58-60. Dad was in the Air Force. I loved the mules, both the ones that tugged ships through the locks and the last Army unit that had them. Seeing the barns one Sunday on a cruise in the family car, I absconded while outside playing one day. Mom was frantic, the jungle was at the end of the street, and she called the MPs. They found me outside the wire, headed up the road to see the mule barns. Clown

I remember riding the CZ RR a little, I wasn't yet in kindergarten, so memories are hazy. My wife's dad's family is from the CZ, some still live there, but granpa was apparently a dredge operater for the Corps of Engineers before moving back stateside to run the rivers up here.

Mike Lehman

Urbana, IL

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Posted by dale8chevyss on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 6:41 PM

Dad has had a Lionel "layout" since he was a kid (he's 60 now.)  We used to beg him to run it when we were kids, my brother and I.  Dad would always take us to modeling clubs and actual live train events to see trains.  My parents got my brother a HO train set when I was about 12 and I dabbled with it but he had more fun with it than I did.  Years down the road I found a HO set, this was about 1999/98, and my parents got me that for christmas.  I dug out all my brothers old HO stuff because he gave up on the hobby, and started my own layout.  I've been building on it ever since.  He's since given up and gotten into model airplanes.  My modeling has evolved in recent years to improving trackwork, buying better cars/trucks/couplers and locomotives, and making it era/road name specific vs buying anything HO that I thought was cool around the late 90s.  A big part of continuing to persue the hobby has been atlas flex track.  It solves so many problems that sectional track caused. 

Modeling the N&W freelanced at the height of their steam era in HO.

 Daniel G.

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Posted by Rastafarr on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 8:47 PM

Three years old: Dad builds a 4x8 (or something close to it) for the older brother. Brother says 'meh', little Stu runs it in circles until bits start falling off the locomotives.

Five years old: Oma T. takes little Stu on the Royal Hudson to Squamish. I still remember being fascinated by the coal smoke swirling in the tunnels.

Eleven years old: Dad takes Stu (less little now) to the Forest Discovery Centre in Duncan BC and greases a palm so Stu can ride in the cab of Mayo Lumber Co. Shay no. 3. Still my only footplate ride to date.

Thirteen years old: Dad takes Stu to a family friend's house and shows him the eleborate (and completely scenery free, for some reason) layout of Dad's friend Tony.

It goes on, but it all boils down to the same theme: Dad's fault. The current project involves delivering food from the outdoor kitchen to the picnic table via Fn3 motive power. And Dad's the first name on the guest list.

Stu

Streamlined steam, oh, what a dream!!

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Posted by shayfan84325 on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 11:28 PM

When I was a kid I was into model cars, and I was good at building them. I had the tools and techniques.  After a while it felt like a job - every couple of weeks I'd bang out another 1/25 scale hot rod.  

Then one afternoon when I was 12, I was in the library and I started browsing through a Model Railroader magazine.  I think it was the variety that hooked me.  In model railroading you get to build models of everything -  not just cars; you use a vast variety of materials and techniques, and the results are more than just models, they tell a story.  It's challenging and rewarding and never boring.  So, here I am, 45 years later, still loving the hobby.

Phil,
I'm not a rocket scientist; they are my students.

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Posted by "JaBear" on Wednesday, February 26, 2014 11:33 PM

richhotrain
And the news gets even better, JaBear!

LaughLaughLaughLaughLaughLaughCryingLaughLaughLaughLaughBow

"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."

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Posted by zstripe on Thursday, February 27, 2014 7:56 AM

WOW!   A number 5 iron, on top of it...Laugh Laugh Laugh

Gotta, hand it to yah! Bear.

Great comeback!

Frank

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Posted by kelleywpns on Thursday, February 27, 2014 4:11 PM

Dad introduced me to trains (TYCO set) when I was a kid (late 70s).  In later teen years and early 20s, I migrated to aircraft modeling (son of Air Force member).  Still always found trains facinating, got back into trains in early 20s after seeing a new issue of MR (early 90s).

Even though I work for the USAF myself, I dropped the aircraft modeing and got back into trains.  I think it's the full-sepctrum of the hobby beyond just model-building.  Trains and planes are both pretty cool, but I needed something beyond just model building.

Mike

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Posted by n2mopac on Sunday, March 2, 2014 5:21 PM

I grew up in a railroad town and loved trains since I can remember. I had a few train toys, but didn't learn about scale model railroading until I was in my mid 20's when I ran a cross a model railroad shop with some nice operating modules and a layout in a permanent "flea market" in Kissimee, FL. I was hooked. Started buying MR and a couple other mags and books and started collecting HO equipment. Three years later, and still no layout started, I decided to try an N scale starter layout with the intention of coming back to HO later. nearly 20 years later I am still modeling in N scale and loving it. What kept me in the hobby is the multi-facted nature of the hobby--wood working, electroics, kit and scratch building, scenery, operations, etc. How could one ever get bored with so many different hobbies all rolled into one?

Ron

Owner and superintendant of the N scale Texas Colorado & Western Railway, a protolanced representaion of the BNSF from Fort Worth, TX through Wichita Falls TX and into Colorado. 

Check out the TC&WRy on at https://www.facebook.com/TCWRy

Check out my MRR How-To YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/c/RonsTrainsNThings

 

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Posted by FRRYKid on Sunday, March 2, 2014 10:10 PM

wjstix

I've long suspected there are generally two types of model railroaders, as far as how they got into the hobby. One group got a toy train set as a kid, and because of that, became interested in real trains too. The other group grew up near a rail line, or had a relative who worked for a railroad or was a railfan, and through exposure to the real trains became interested in model railroads. It would be interesting to research the two groups, see how their early years affected their layouts etc.

 

I'm probably a little bit of both myself as well. Growing up in a town with a long history of railroads partially influenced it. (My town wasn't founded by the railroad as some were, but the railroads greatly influenced its development. [NP & CMStP&P]) Being able to hear trains running on an overpass also helped as well. (My Mom has told me that in my younger days that I would want her to stop under the underpass so I could hear the trains!) 

It was also helped that my late maternal grandfather worked for the NP and an uncle also had a small model railroad as well. My late maternal grandparents also lived within a block of the old Milwaukee yards (the Milwaukee was long gone by the time I remember the yard and so was my grandfather). I even remember seeing the transfer table operate once between the shops buildings (at that time a railcar maintance company was using the yards).

"The only stupid question is the unasked question."
Brain waves can power an electric train. RealFact #832 from Snapple.

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