HEdward wrote:In several public layouts that I've seen(even the motion display at the camera shop that I was manager of)they've had dinosaurs on the layout. I've had a plastic dino since I was a kid and put it on all my layouts as well. Does anyone know why so many hobby shops, public displays and us not so finicky modelers have them? It's kinda weird that these long gone creatures have found homes on essentially technology displays.
I suppose the majority of us still see the funnier side of the hobby and and I dare say the kid in us comes through and we place funny things on our layout...My claim to fame at one club is 4" Godzilla railfanning complete with camera made from ABS plastic!
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
loathar wrote: It's definitely a tradition of some sort. There's a Children's Hospital some where that has a very large layout. They have about a dozen dinosaurs they hide in different places around the layout for the kids to find.(Where's Perry at? This is right up his alley!)
It's definitely a tradition of some sort. There's a Children's Hospital some where that has a very large layout. They have about a dozen dinosaurs they hide in different places around the layout for the kids to find.
(Where's Perry at? This is right up his alley!)
Dallas. It's on one of the DPB videos.
Hmmm...maybe my next subway video will have something hiding in the tunnels...
I recall a layout at a show a few years back that had a pre-teenage-boy's dream module - dinosaurs and military vehicles, complete with explosions and wrecked aircraft.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Dinosaurs are so pre-historic...
We get visited on occasion by alien robots!
Lee
Route of the Alpha Jets www.wmrywesternlines.net
I've had dinosaurs, lizards and what ever else the kids [and now grandkids] wanted at different times on past layouts. They set up one scene in the stock pens with giant frogs waiting to be loaded into stock cars.
http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/4309
Dallas Model Works wrote: Hmmmmmn.My kids have toy dinosaur skeleton. Maybe next time I'm doing rock casting, I'll use it to create a fossil.Now that would be cool -- anybody heard of anything like that before?
Hmmmmmn.
My kids have toy dinosaur skeleton. Maybe next time I'm doing rock casting, I'll use it to create a fossil.
Now that would be cool -- anybody heard of anything like that before?
Walthers had a seen from some mfg. I can't remember at one time you could get of a dinosaur dig. They also had a crashed saucer craft. Some times, at public displays, a club member or two will put an out of place item on the layout to see if anyone notices it. Sometimes it is a dinosaur or it might be a M113 APC parked by a mountain cabin.
There's a prototype for everything! Rapid City, SD, has Dinosaur Park, on the ridge that separates the two sides of the city, with 1:1 scale models of a variety of dino-critters scattered around. The piece de resistance is the brontosaur on the top of the ridge, visible for miles.
There's a smaller dino-critter next to I-90 at Wall, SD, home of the world-famous Wall Drug Store.
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
Craig
DMW
HEdward--
Many years ago, John Allen on his classic Gorre and Daphetid model railroad in Monterey, CA, as a joke, had a Stegosaurus named Emma that he used as a yard switcher. I believe her RR number was #05. She appeared in Model Railroader several times, especially in the old Varney ads that used Allen's railroad as a setting for their products. Allen had a very quirky sense of humor, and Emma even had her own 'ash-pit' in the yard for when she had to--er--'clean her flues', so to speak.
Ever since then, dinosaurs have been kind of favorites with certain model railroaders--at one time I had a Triceratops named Malcolm that I used in pusher service on my old MR to help get passenger trains over a very ill-planned sudden 4% grade. Malcolm has since been retired--his horns kept spearing the observaton car platorm. In fact, my grandson has probably the only Triceratops that I know of with a tri-color "RIO GRANDE-SCENIC LINE OF THE WORLD" decal on his flanks, LOL! His loco class was D-27.
They're fun--and REAL attention-getters
Tom
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!
I can be a Grumpasaurus when my trains don't run right.
(note-Grumpasaurus was actually in the spell check dictionary...)
From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam