Like many here I for some reason save the boxes my stuff comes in. It is now to the point I am stuffing them in a garbage bag under the bench.
For the engines like my BLI's Proto's 1's and 2's and PCM I under stand. If repairs are needed you have a way to send them back. But I have been saving the athearn BB boxes for rolling stock and other's none high end rolling stock.
Being a E-bayer I don't care if the orginal box is there, would you folks bid higher if it had the orginal box? Main reason I ask one day my stuff will be listed on E-bay when I am no longer running my stuff but watching from the great round house in the sky. I want my beloved Sue to get the max for what I have. There is a list on the computer of what I have and APX worth of resale that my daughter will find.
I don't want her to fall pary to the Tomb Raiders. Beside zoning codes will not let me bulid a Pyrimid, I have checked!
I will add I will be happy to be dead when Sue finds out what I spent on the BLI's and PCM's!
Thinking a head before I am Dead, Cuda Ken
I hate Rust
I keep locomotive boxes and boxes for highly detailed models such as my Kadee PS-2 hoppers. Other than that, I don't keep them.
Tom
Life is simple - eat, drink, play with trains!
Go Big Red!
PA&ERR "If you think you are doing something stupid, you're probably right!"
All of my engines stay in thier boxes that they were bought in.
I pile up boxes from the Blue Box stuff, and they slowly get consumed. One box served as a paint stand until it got too "Icky" to continue such service. One would be holding extra parts, wheels etc. Another is serving as a sort of a project box where the complete kit is held while being assembled or waiting parts. One is actually used as a weathering tool.
I go through boxes this way. It might take me 2 years to actually consume and throw away that box but I always hae about 10 boxes stacked neatly and ready to go under the workbench that are empty.
Once every two years or so, I swipe some computer keyboard covers from the college dumpster and they hold 12 nicely wrapped peices of rolling stock. I slowly accumulate these boxes. Beats paying 20 dollars per box. That is probably the only time dumpster diving is very profitable and saves ALOT of money. Sorry Hobby Shop! LOL.
Once in a while I will spend 16 dollars or so for 2 foot by 2 foot by two foot boxes and shipping tape. Those get filled with long term storage and stacked. I think I have about 12 of these boxes stored in the corner safe until the railroad is ready for those items. I opened one of those boxes and dug out the coal cars to be rebuilt and painted this week.
I keep track of boxes by letter, date packed and a notebook (Hard cover) that lists the contents of each box. So if I wanted to take my Heavy weight passenger cars to a club I grab B box and toss it into the back of the car along with the engine.
Oh yea, the passenger cars and rolling stock stay in the boxes they come from the store in. They are just too expensive to be breaking stuff off them. Kinda reminds me of russian dolls. Big box, smaller box and finally the really small box containing the car.
We are keeping the boxes for everything.
Sue
Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.
I suggest that if you have the room, save them. I do. Like you, I too am an ebayer (therealtedmarshall) and save mine for that reason, buyers want original boxes and pay top dollar for freight cars with their original boxes, especially those Athearn blue boxes.
It seems that die-hard collectors love them and consider them most coveted. When I started out in this hobby about five years ago, I posed this question to the LHS owner from whom I purchased my very first Athearn/Bev-Bel freight cars. He told me that they (the cars) would never be worth as much as they are new and that saving the boxes would amount to nothing less than wasted storage space. Rubbish! He couldn't have been further from correct.
To this day, I regret sacrificing those blue boxes to the recycle bin and wish that I had followed my gut and kept them.
Ted M.
got trains?™
See my photos at: http://tedmarshall.rrpicturearchives.net/
I've nixed dozens of Athearn and MDC boxes over the years. Only the ones in prestine condition i keep cause they store some of my rolling stock thats not in use.
"Being misunderstood is the fate of all true geniuses"
EXPERIMENTATION TO BRING INNOVATION
http://community.webshots.com/album/288541251nntnEK?start=588
"Rust, whats not to love?"
Bdewoody wrote:Save the boxes, especially the locomotives a highly detailed rolling stock. I'm in the middle of moving now and although I had some of the boxes it was not enough. I'll spend the next three months repairing what got broken.
Save the boxes, especially the locomotives a highly detailed rolling stock. I'm in the middle of moving now and although I had some of the boxes it was not enough. I'll spend the next three months repairing what got broken.
I do "G", and save all the boxes, need to rent a storage room Too. So where you at "Bdewoody"
I too is here in the ol' "Hurricane Alley".......Kissimmee....
Byron
davidmbedard wrote:Yup, keep them for all those Big Boys and large steamers that you need to send back for reasons unknown....and for BLI units, they are a must. Also, anything with a MRC decoder might need to be shipped back.David B
Yup, keep them for all those Big Boys and large steamers that you need to send back for reasons unknown....and for BLI units, they are a must. Also, anything with a MRC decoder might need to be shipped back.
David B
Ahhhh, refreshing words of encouragement once again...
I keep both my locomotive and kit boxes - whether that be rolling stock or structures. In the event that we do move from our house, I have something to place the rolling stock in. Also, I like to keep sprue material for those unexpected filler jobs.
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
The few locomotives I own that came ready to run in their own little cocoon of foam rubber with a box around it, I've saved the cocoon and the box. Same for a few really high end pieces of passenger rolling stock.
The far more numerous things that I bought as kits are stored in other containers - notably some plastic file folder holders, layered and separated by pieces of thin extruded foam. Only unassembled kits are still in their original boxes. Boxes for other things, including locomotives I've kitbashed, get used for whatever and/or join the trash stream.
I have an example of "whatever" immediately at hand, the top of the box an Athearn BB hopper came in, sitting on my desk filled with varicolored pens and pencils. (The hopper itself has been kitbashed into something Athearn and the AAR would disown on sight.)
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
most people have no clue how to grade a model box but some shelfware is not as bad as you may think. even ripped and torn there is value in the boxes
Ken
If you have all the boxes, you can sell your trains in them or throw them away whenever you choose.
If you don't have the boxes, you have zero options.
Never burn a bridge till you have to.
Good Grief, NO! If I saved every box, it would require a separate garage or basement to store them. Over 200 diesels, over 1300 freight cars, no thank you.
Bob
I save them all. They are handy when you have to move.
Enjoy
Paul
You can correct me if I'm wrong, David, but I noted a jab at Ken for his recent locomotive misfortunes...
When I sold off my HO to change to G scale I had all my boxes for cars and engines. I would like to believe it helped me get more for my stuff. BB 50ft cars with Kadees do no not fit into the boxes. I had to remove the couplers and place them into a bag in the box.
In G scale I have all my boxes and have them stored under my layout in the basement. I have 12 engines and 75 cars. So there are a lot of boxes. When I decide to sell them it will help keep them damage free for the next owner.
I will not buy anything without the original box either at e bay or a train show.
I save everything.....all boxes, bags, etc. It helps me identify and remember everything that I have. I keep schematics, parts lists, warranties, etc., in each box.
Stacked neatly on shelves in the basement (train room) they really don't take up that much space. And when moving or selling they are great to have. When we moved I placed each car in its box wrapped and stuffed with toilet paper. Nothing got damaged!
Jerry
Rio Grande vs. Santa Fe.....the battle is over but the glory remains!
davidmbedard wrote:Not a jab. Not a jab at all. With his history of locomotive mis-fortunes, he should absolutely keep the boxes for every loco he buys.But your comment was absolutely a jab...as per usual toward me.David B
Not a jab. Not a jab at all. With his history of locomotive mis-fortunes, he should absolutely keep the boxes for every loco he buys.
But your comment was absolutely a jab...as per usual toward me.
Okeydokey, then...Thanks for the correction.
Regarding E-Bay, an original box in good condition will almost always increase the price received - only modestly for most rolling stock, but significantly for brass and other high-end locomotives.
However, I personally keep the boxes only for my locomotives, a few pieces of high-end rolling stock, and my handful of FSM buildings. I've kept a handful of my rolling stock boxes for use as storage for detail parts, etc.
I used to throw them out. Now I'm sorry I did. I don't care about value, they're just handy sizes to have. I use them to store detail parts and such in.
At least keep em till your warranties are up.
I keep all my boxes. I never throw any of them away.
Stan.
THE SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH.
Boy Tom thanks for the jab! Have a problem with a few big boys I am marked for life!
Should I save the brown paper bags the parts come in? I will hang on to the boxes till I get to the point I need a bigger room.
Box saving Ken Posting again
I have a friend that's mad at himself right now because he can't get as much for his used train items as he would like because he didn't save the original boxes and containers the stuff came in. Oh well. I tried to tell him way back when he first got into the hobby but he was hard headed and wouldn't listen...
Tracklayer
Hi Ken,
I posted a similar question a few months back. After careful consideration and evaluation of my situation (going from two bedrooms to a single bedroom apartment) the decision was made to get rid of all the boxes. Instead two wooden boxes were made from high quality 5/8 inch plywood lined with thick foam. The foam is the yellow material found in car seats and similar applications which holds the locomotives side by each gently even while in transit and the wood is both glued and screwed together. This saved a lot of space and is also practical for in this instance none of my engines will ever be sold.
The freight cars are of the BB type for the most part so they are currently stored in cardboard boxes lined with bubble wrap.
This seems to work quite well for me.
Frank
"If you need a helping hand, you'll find one at the end of your arm."