QUOTE: The only pieces that are immune are locomotives.
I'm back!
Follow the progress:
http://ogrforum.ogaugerr.com/displayForumTopic/content/12129987972340381/page/1
Have fun with your trains
QUOTE: Originally posted by CoertSmit How about coal gondola's, like coalporters, are these likely to be tagged? Sorry about the many questions, but it isn't easy for me to go to the nearest North American Coalhauler and see how their coalporters look. I decided to locate a piesce of my layout in the suburbs of a city so crimerates could be quite high in this area [:)]
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
QUOTE: Originally posted by easyaces When I was a kid growing up in Chicago during the late 50' early 60's there was little or none in the way of graffitti anywhere, and if you got caught in any of the rail yards you usually got a load of rocksalt in the backside from some railroad cop, and then a trip to the local police station. Its come to this through the years that things had gone lax, and the railroads just don't have the manpower to police the yards like they used to , hence the taggers have a field day & more graffitti shows up on the cars. Now wether its going to look "prototypical" with graffitti on your rolling stock is up to the individual. I'm sure the debate will go on here with some ferver.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CBQ_Guy QUOTE: Originally posted by easyaces When I was a kid growing up in Chicago during the late 50' early 60's there was little or none in the way of graffitti anywhere, and if you got caught in any of the rail yards you usually got a load of rocksalt in the backside from some railroad cop, and then a trip to the local police station. Its come to this through the years that things had gone lax, and the railroads just don't have the manpower to police the yards like they used to , hence the taggers have a field day & more graffitti shows up on the cars. Now wether its going to look "prototypical" with graffitti on your rolling stock is up to the individual. I'm sure the debate will go on here with some ferver. I grew up there in the same period but there definitely was some grafitti. It was more written than pictures, though. Most of it I remember seeing was spray painted on the walls under a RR "viaduct", as they're called in Chi-town. Fairly harmless stuff, like "Kilroy Was Here", "Bob Loves Betty" (usually in a heart with an arrow through it), "Go Cougars". Walther's used to sell decals like this, maybe they still do. And then some of the gang stuff like "Spanish Cobras", "Latin Kings" and many times you would see "c/s" sprayed under those gang ones. I asked a guy in high school once what the "c/s" stood for and he said "can't score", as in if anyone sprayed something else in response to the gang thing, it didn't count, if I understood him correctly.
QUOTE: Good one CBQ, I forgot about all of that old fashioned relatively innocent stuff. Most of that kind of thing wasn't on the trains, but rather on stationary objects near the tracks. So it is prototypical regardless of era to a limited extent. In those days it was done with a brush, when was the spray paint can invented???? It was nice to see that this topic took a rest, but I see that it is awake again, so here we go.[swg]
Chip
Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.
QUOTE: Originally posted by 4884bigboy True, CoertSmit. You never see an intermodel car with graffiti on it, do you?
Go here for my rail shots! http://www.railpictures.net/showphotos.php?userid=9296
Building the CPR Kootenay division in N scale, blog here: http://kootenaymodelrailway.wordpress.com/