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Cheap-Cheap! Chicken Little asks, "How much $$ do we really need?"

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Cheap-Cheap! Chicken Little asks, "How much $$ do we really need?"
Posted by SpaceMouse on Thursday, March 29, 2007 11:44 AM

Joe Fugate once told me that you can get model railroad equipment with 3 qualities.

Cheap

Fast

Good

But you can only pick two.

So I pick cheap and good. Let's talk about ways we can do this hobby cheap and good.

Personally, I watch for construction sites and at the end of the day, I go to the construction trailer find the boss and ask for the 2" foam scraps on the ground. I can usually fill my Explorer.

I've yet to buy a tree. I've found several different species of plants that when dried make good frames for trees.

For sale signs are an excellent source of styrene for scratching--and as some of you know. I use a lot of popsicle sticks. I must have used 200 out of the 1000 I paid $2 for.

What do you do to cut costs?

Chip

Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.

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Posted by cacole on Thursday, March 29, 2007 11:48 AM

Nearly all of the desert scenery on my home layout is real dirt from my back yard mixed with assorted shredded paper or aspen pet bedding, plaster, water-based paints, mortar, finely-ground tree bark, potting soil, or whatever I have left over from other projects.

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Posted by selector on Thursday, March 29, 2007 12:03 PM

I gather armature material from fields and roadsides as I see it, and I gather stuff that falls from trees if it looks like flocking or fine ground foam.  I let it it sit and dry for a full year, then use it with sprays or whatever seems indicated for either fixing or colouring.

I used sifted garden soil and plaster for my yard surface.  Other than that, I have had to purchase everything.  Maybe I'll start looking for materials for scratch building this coming ...nope, we're not even into spring yet, so I won't use the W word.

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Posted by WCfan on Thursday, March 29, 2007 12:22 PM

For super detailing I find junk laying around. I use phone wire for radio entenias, and the gray insulation for air tanks. I also use thread for model electrical wires and some times air hoses.

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Posted by Cox 47 on Thursday, March 29, 2007 12:27 PM
I use a lot of $ Store rattle cans for painting..Redish brown primers mach great brick for DPM buildings,Flat grey for concrete. Cheap craft paint from Wally World and Hobby lobby I have picked up some as cheap as .25 cents..I also look for "basket case" engines,Rolling stock,and Buildings then rehab them...One of the better running engines I have I got for paying the postage on Guy said it wouldn't run at all took the shell off someone had way over oiled it cleaned it and it runs great...never throw anything away I have a box of 10 to 15 engines that don't run for one reason or another that I can get parts from same for rolling stock and buildings..Cox 47
ILLinois and Southern...Serving the Coal belt of southern Illinois with a Smile...
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Posted by CSX_road_slug on Thursday, March 29, 2007 12:48 PM
I used various diameters of PVC pipe from Home Despot to scratchbuild my blast furnace.  Much cheeper than the equivalent sizes sold by Plastruct!

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

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Thursday, March 29, 2007 1:22 PM
I download graphics from the Web, and print them on cardstock for signs, or on decal paper for signs that would be "painted" on a brick or wood wall.  I use coffee stirrers liberated from the coffee area at work.  I bought one tunnel portal and made a latex mold from it, and then cast more portals from that.  I did the same for a couple of sheets of "textured" styrene that I use for subway walls and platforms.  (The hydrocal takes paint and weathering better than styrene, too, and I could even bend it around a sharp corner if I waited until the hydrocal had almost, but not quite, hardend up.)

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by easyaces on Thursday, March 29, 2007 1:50 PM
Spacemouse has the right idea, but ya gotta be careful doing dumpster dives for usable stuff! About the only hard cash I usually spend is on glues or other things needed for projects I can't find for free.  
MR&L(Muncie,Rochester&Lafayette)"Serving the Hoosier Triangle" "If you lost it in the Hoosier Triangle, We probably shipped it " !!
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Posted by on30francisco on Thursday, March 29, 2007 1:54 PM
 SpaceMouse wrote:

Joe Fugate once told me that you can get model railroad equipment with 3 qualities.

Cheap

Fast

Good

But you can only pick two.

So I pick cheap and good. Let's talk about ways we can do this hobby cheap and good.

Personally, I watch for construction sites and at the end of the day, I go to the construction trailer find the boss and ask for the 2" foam scraps on the ground. I can usually fill my Explorer.

I've yet to buy a tree. I've found several different species of plants that when dried make good frames for trees.

For sale signs are an excellent source of styrene for scratching--and as some of you know. I use a lot of popsicle sticks. I must have used 200 out of the 1000 I paid $2 for.

What do you do to cut costs?

Cheap and great. I use those "for sale" signs for styrene which are sometimes free and much cheaper that the styrene at the LHS. I also buy a lot of my supplies at arts and craft shops such as artists acrylic paints (MUCH cheaper than dedicated model paints), brass, stripwood, glues, tools etc -  at a fraction of the cost the LHSs charge. Some of these stores are even starting to carry a few model railroading supplies - at a discount. I scavenge thrift and dollar stores, second-hand shops, flee markets, Wal-Mart, construction sites, and am always on the lookout for usable items. I usually shop online for the best prices as I'm allergic to MSRPs. I also scratch build and buy detail parts from either the online discount hobby suppliers or proprietary firms. I avoid purchasing from Walthers or any other place that charges MSRP.  

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 29, 2007 1:57 PM
Sprues make pipes, chimneys, some flat ones cut down make decent feed sacks, cardstock makes siding, cut and glued in piles, it looks like plywood. paper clips work as downspouts, conduit, toilet paper for tar paper, small tubing cut up are good for piles of used tires, newspaper as newspaper.
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Posted by tomikawaTT on Thursday, March 29, 2007 2:46 PM

Shifting to the mechanical side:

  • Under-layout switch machine linkage - paper clip, and a length of brass tube (originally used ball pen cartridges, now purchased.)
  • Linkage from the above to the fascia-mounted manual throw - just about anything, including straightened coat hanger wire.
  • Fascia-mounted manual throw - the cheapest larger-size DPDT slide switches I can find.

And the electrical:

  • Wire for just about everything - salvaged communications cable, and odd lengths from contractor waste after wiring tract houses (acquired by asking.)
  • Terminal strips and blocks - scrap pieces of plywood or Masonite, #8 machine screws, #8 nuts and appropriate washers.

Specialwork built from raw rail is so obvious I hesitate to mention it.  One sheet of hard balsa will produce enough ties to build a major terminal throat, with some left over for the coach yard ladder.  Believe it or not, the spikes used are almost as expensive as the rest of the turnout!

Ebenezer Scrooge, eat your heart out.

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by fwright on Thursday, March 29, 2007 2:53 PM

Being on a strictly limited hobby budget ($25/month in the '70s, $50/month now), I made the decision from the beginning to minimize $$/hour of model railroading rather than just trying to limit $$.

But I also promised myself I would not let lack of funds be a cause of frustration.  If I was learning a new skill or trying something I had never done before, I would not cut corners on tools or materials.  Once I understood a particular aspect of the hobby and had established my own way of doing things, then I would see where cutting costs was feasible.

From the beginning (late '70s), I traded time for money by doing the following:

  • handlaid track
  • hand thrown turnouts
  • built my own DC throttles
  • built cars and locomotives from kits
  • favor buying craftsman kits.  Although higher-priced, cost/hour was often lower due to many extra hours to assemble and paint and letter.

Other actions simply reduced costs without increasing time:

  • modest size layouts - this was enforced by having to move often courtesy Uncle Sam
  • very limited locomotive roster
  • common rail wiring
  • power routing turnouts
  • buying used rolling stock or bargains and specials

When practical, I would also gently turn down rolling stock, structure, and track gifts that did not fit with my period and era.  I would always suggest somebody that might have a better use for it than I.  But I'm not too stupid to accept a gift of a Rivarossi Heisler (too big and too new) and run it when it comes from my wife - and it's the most expensive locomotive I've ever owned.  I learned my lesson when I converted another gift - a Roundhouse box cab diesel to a Climax (using the Roundhouse kit).  Didn't think she notice - boy, was I wrong!

just my thoughts and experiences

Fred W

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Posted by wm3798 on Thursday, March 29, 2007 4:04 PM

At the risk of offending our gracious host, this is the kind of information that used to be in Model Railroader.  How to make something out of nothing.  Now every article seems to espouse patronizing one or more of the magazine's advertisers, usually at considerable expense.

My favorite target is Woodland Scenics, which has made an industry out of taking things that are generally available at a hardware store pretty cheap, re-packaging it into tiny boxes with clever names, then re-selling it for a relatively high price.  Guess what?  You can buy a 50lb bag of plaster of paris for a little more than what W.S. charges for their half-gallon carton, and Scenic Cement is really...white glue!Wink [;)]

And instead of providing articles about scratch-building things and including scale drawings, they advise you on how to kitbash three kits from Walthers (retailing at $39.99 each) into something more useful.

Really, W.S. is guilty of nothing more than brilliant point-of-purchase marketing, and without Walthers ads, MR would probably still be printed in black and white...  so it's really no surprise.

My favorite cost saving techniques have already been listed, from dumpster diving to looking for those diamonds in the rough at swap meets.

I also do a lot of salvaging from my parts box, too.  Here's a recent project using light boards salvaged from a DCC conversion...

The parts were all from the junque box, the cost was about 1 hour of my life...  and an hour well-spent!

Lee 

Route of the Alpha Jets  www.wmrywesternlines.net

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Posted by tangerine-jack on Thursday, March 29, 2007 4:16 PM

I have a garden railway, most people think that it is a hyper expensive type of model railroading, but as with everything else, its all about what your budget is. 

I garden swap for my "scenery".  That is to say, I know people in my area that garden, I'll trade them plant for plant to get what I want.  Feed and seed stores are a mucho dirt cheap place to buy garden accessories, and my local feed store will give me potting containers for free.   Dirt cost nothing, it's laying around in my yard already.   Anthing else I scavenge from the neighbors or buy when it's an end of season sale.

My roadbed is brick and PVC, scavenged from my own home improvement project and cost nothing but time.

My track I buy prefab from Ridge Road in NY.  They are 1/3 the cost of anywhere else and usually they will have a buy 3 get one free sale in the spring.  My rolling stock is sometimes evilbay'd, but mostly it too is bought on sale or from flea markets.  Hartland Locomotive Works is made right here in the USA and is very high quality and very affordable, so many of my 4 wheel tankers and flats are Hartland kits ($6 a piece).

Home Depot and Lowe's are my scratch building friends.  Many things in there can be used for structures and other projects.  As was mentioned before, PVC is pennies on the dollar compared to plastistruct. 

Wal-Mart is an excellent source of G scale cars and trucks, and many figure too!  The "homies" line is very G scale for all practical purposes.   Birdhouses can be used for buildings with only door or window mods and some paint. 

Asphalt shingles make excellent asphalt roads and parking lots.  Many, many things can be adapted to a garden railroad.

I'm not "cheap", I'm "thrifty"  Wink [;)]

The Dixie D Short Line "Lux Lucet In Tenebris Nihil Igitur Mors Est Ad Nos 2001"

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Posted by cbq9911a on Thursday, March 29, 2007 4:22 PM

I bought a sheet of Walthers brick, painted it, and scanned it onto my PC.  Voila!  Got an image that can be cut and resized in Microsoft Word to get nice looking brick paper.  Just resize the image to go from bricks to concrete blocks.

And to print it I use the "good" rag paper I use for letters; it gives the right texture to the bricks.

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Posted by BDT in Minnesota on Thursday, March 29, 2007 4:51 PM
After eating a cluster of grapes, I save the Stem,  (If that is what you would call it) and use it for a dead tree or bush...Some rollers from a roller bearing also look like small oil barrels...any size of army man or other figure can be used as a statue in a city park.....concrete roads can be made out of concrete, railroad and highway bridges can also be built this way...
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Posted by Midnight Railroader on Thursday, March 29, 2007 5:44 PM
 wm3798 wrote:

At the risk of offending our gracious host, this is the kind of information that used to be in Model Railroader.  How to make something out of nothing.  Now every article seems to espouse patronizing one or more of the magazine's advertisers, usually at considerable expense.

I am thoroughly enjoying collecting old back issues of MR and following the "Dollar Model" series. There were a lot of do-it-cheap-but-well concept articles back then. True, much of the technology has become obsolete, but I am getting a real kick out of doing and making things myself instead of buying the equivalent. Not only does it save money, it gives me a sense of satisfaction that I never get when I plop down an RTR-whatever on the layout.

Today's "What Do You Mean, I Have to Make It? I Don't Have Time for That!" modelers will never have this feeling.

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Posted by on30francisco on Thursday, March 29, 2007 7:09 PM
 wm3798 wrote:

At the risk of offending our gracious host, this is the kind of information that used to be in Model Railroader.  How to make something out of nothing.  Now every article seems to espouse patronizing one or more of the magazine's advertisers, usually at considerable expense.

My favorite target is Woodland Scenics, which has made an industry out of taking things that are generally available at a hardware store pretty cheap, re-packaging it into tiny boxes with clever names, then re-selling it for a relatively high price.  Guess what?  You can buy a 50lb bag of plaster of paris for a little more than what W.S. charges for their half-gallon carton, and Scenic Cement is really...white glue!Wink [;)]

And instead of providing articles about scratch-building things and including scale drawings, they advise you on how to kitbash three kits from Walthers (retailing at $39.99 each) into something more useful.

Really, W.S. is guilty of nothing more than brilliant point-of-purchase marketing, and without Walthers ads, MR would probably still be printed in black and white...  so it's really no surprise.

My favorite cost saving techniques have already been listed, from dumpster diving to looking for those diamonds in the rough at swap meets.

I also do a lot of salvaging from my parts box, too.  Here's a recent project using light boards salvaged from a DCC conversion...

The parts were all from the junque box, the cost was about 1 hour of my life...  and an hour well-spent!

Lee 

 I agree that the newer issues of Model Railroader push products from their advertisers in their kit-bashing and construction articles instead of suggesting using commonly available materials and publishing scale drawings. I realize that the advertisers help pay for the magazine and it's  caveat emptor when it comes to the articles that push certain products. I've noticed that many dedicated modeling products are repackaged common materials that are priced many times over the same product that is available at hardware stores, DIY stores, and Wal-Marts.

I came up in the era when MR emphasized scratch building and using common products to build models and layouts. I find the older issues of MR that I have from the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s to be very useful as there are a lot of good modeling articles that use common materials.

Narrow Gauge and Shortline Gazette has many construction articles and plans that use many commonly available materials as well as dedicated model railroading products. Although its main emphasis is narrow gauge modeling, these articles are useful in any scale.

If I had to rely only on dedicated modeling products, I could not afford this hobby. 

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Posted by perisher on Thursday, March 29, 2007 8:14 PM
 SpaceMouse wrote:

Joe Fugate once told me that you can get model railroad equipment with 3 qualities.

Cheap

Fast

Good

But you can only pick two.

So I pick cheap and good. Let's talk about ways we can do this hobby cheap and good.

Personally, I watch for construction sites and at the end of the day, I go to the construction trailer find the boss and ask for the 2" foam scraps on the ground. I can usually fill my Explorer.

I've yet to buy a tree. I've found several different species of plants that when dried make good frames for trees.

For sale signs are an excellent source of styrene for scratching--and as some of you know. I use a lot of popsicle sticks. I must have used 200 out of the 1000 I paid $2 for.

What do you do to cut costs?

I was just wondering what you use popsicles sticks mainly for?
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Posted by galaxy on Thursday, March 29, 2007 8:19 PM

I am on a strick income, so "cheap" is my middle name....

Ok, ok,ok I admit.......

While I pondered weak and weary over many curious and quaint volumes of forgotten lore, while I nodded, nearly napping as I changed one roll for another, I began to fondle...oopss...I mean to THINK fondly of the toilet paper roll tube. A good one (nicely round-not squashed) may have a life as a temporary (or permanent) grain silo, storage tower, or for of course tanks, like sideways fuel tanks. They may even make culverts for waterways.

Painted nicely so humidity does not bother them, they may last very well. And are cheaper yet than the pvc pipe!Now, just think what I could do with a paper towel tube!

I think this is an old trick, but those little canisters of silicone found in pill bottles will serve as canisters somewhere....just unscrew the top, some unscrew...remove the silicone for those of you who have lit'l 'uns.

Speaking of pill bottles, I have one script that comes in a larger bottle....if I cut off the necks.....they would be nicer towers that the TP tube! Just an idea....

 

-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 SpaceMouse on Thursday, March 29, 2007 8:20 PM

 perisher wrote:
  I was just wondering what you use popsicles sticks mainly for?

Platforms, catwalks, hitching posts, and handrails

 

Chip

Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.

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Posted by perisher on Thursday, March 29, 2007 8:28 PM
 Thanks for that spacemouse,some more inspirations.They do make some nice scratchbuilt models
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Posted by WilmJunc on Thursday, March 29, 2007 8:39 PM
I haven't tried it yet, but I'm going to try use dryer sheets dipped in a plaster slurry as a substitute for plaster cloth.  After exhausting an $8.50 roll of plaster cloth in no time,  I will experiment with some alternates.

Modeling the B&M Railroad during the transition era in Lowell, MA

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Posted by inch53 on Thursday, March 29, 2007 9:45 PM

All of my bench work is scrap or used lumber from building project round here or from my FIL. I did have to buy some foam, I ran out.

Since I'm modeling here in the Midwest I don't have any mountains to worry bout, but we do have some small sandstone cliffs, so I'm using sandstone I've found in creek beds and that.

I've always got PVC of bout any size I need, if I don't my local hardware store will sell 6" or a foot for little of nothing. They also carry a good selection of small screws.

Small wood scraps from projects around the house are saved and when I need some scale 2 by's. The table and scroll saws get used and the sawdust gets dyed for ground cover.

Most the rolling stock and engines came from yard sales, flea markets, and swap meets. Though I do buy some of those new, when the price is right.

Paint and all that I too get at Wally World or craft shops.

So I get by kind a cheap most the time

http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/4309

DISCLAIMER-- This post does not clam anything posted here as fact or truth, but it may be just plain funny
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Posted by orsonroy on Thursday, March 29, 2007 10:58 PM

Cheap & good? That's easy: scratchbuild everything. I crank out section houses for $2, depots for around $10, and ToC boxcars for about $8 excluding trucks and metal wheelsets (which add $3). For motive power (steam, of course!) look for aggressive sales: buy NOTHING for MSRP, and buy as little as possible for 3/4 MSRP. ($65 Bachmann 2-8-0s anyone?)

Finally, FOCUS. Pick A time, A place, A prototype. Yo

Ray Breyer

Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943

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Posted by orsonroy on Thursday, March 29, 2007 10:59 PM

Cheap & good? That's easy: scratchbuild everything. I crank out section houses for $2, depots for around $10, and ToC boxcars for about $8 excluding trucks and metal wheelsets (which add $3). For motive power (steam, of course!) look for aggressive sales: buy NOTHING for MSRP, and buy as little as possible for 3/4 MSRP. ($65 Bachmann 2-8-0s anyone?)

Finally, FOCUS. Pick A time, A place, A prototype. The more obscure the better. You'll spend a lot of time LOOKING at new releases, but you won't spend a dime taking any home!

Ray Breyer

Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943

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Posted by wm3798 on Thursday, March 29, 2007 11:02 PM

Years ago I took one of those plastic bubbles you get from a gumball machine, spray painted it silver, made some legs out of plastruct, and painted the town's name on it.  Perfectly functional as a water tower...

Lee 

Route of the Alpha Jets  www.wmrywesternlines.net

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Posted by Tracklayer on Friday, March 30, 2007 4:20 AM

Well, let's see here. I've probably got about as much tied up in my layout as I would one good quality loco... The table itself is built of plywood and 2X4s that were on sale at the local lumber yard. The foam sheet that's under everything had a corner broken off of it so they let me have it for half price, and after cutting it to fit the table I still had enough scrap left over as a frame for my mountain. I used plaster that was on sale at Lowe's along with old news paper to cover everything, and Walmart flat earth tones to spray the landscape with. The brush, trees and track were all bought at Hobby Lobby around Christmas time when they were having a half off sale on all train items. I already had most of the structures and buildings that had been in storage from years past, and just fixed them up a little. The streets are made of spray painted poster board. I also use coffee stir sticks painted and glued together as pipe loads for flat cars and things like that in order to save a buck here and there. A friend of mine suggested that I make and sale load items for flat cars on eBay, but I have enough trouble making them just for myself...

Now. What's so dumb is that I cut every corner I can on my layout and detail items, but will spend $20.00 to $25.00 each on rolling stock. Go figure...

Tracklayer 

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Posted by Pruitt on Friday, March 30, 2007 5:49 AM
I saved a TON of money on cork roadbed by buying a giant roll of cork floor underlayment and cutting it into strips. It's only a few pennies per four foot strip that way.
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Posted by 484fan on Friday, March 30, 2007 6:00 AM

after an absence of some 35 years from the hobby (no room) I've re-entered only to find a very changed world.  Hydrocal? huh? I had only known and used plaster of paris.  so, I bought everything. I bought a roll of screening for the base o9f my scenery. Cardboard strips? Now why didn't I think of that !

  Well, after lurking about these fora, and thanks to all you great creative folks out there, I've been vastly enlightened. i've learned tricks and hints I never imagined before. I only wish I had done a bit of studying here before I plunked down all the4 bux. Thanks to you all.

Freelancing the Runn & Namuck shortline

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