QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul3 What's far worse, IMHO, is the ardent European railfans I've come into contact with, especially on misc.transport.rail.americas (the newsgroup). They (and others like them) have permanently turned me off to European modeling with their attitude that everything in American railroading is second class compared to outside North America. Of course, you start talking about freight tonnage and they ignore you, but on every other subject, Europeans (according to them) have done it faster, cheaper, more efficient, more on time, and on a wider scale, than anything ever accomplished in North America (or so it seems). Maybe they're right, maybe not. But their smug attitude about it all drives me nuts... [:D]
QUOTE: Originally posted by aluesch QUOTE: Originally posted by tajsbb Yes. I'm currently building a Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) layout with a very scaled down Zurich HB (main station) at one end. My wife and I lived in Zurich for two years some time ago, and loved the rail system there. Modeling it keeps us close to one of our favorite parts of the world. Tim Johnson, Tucson, AZ Hey Tim. SBB all the way, well along with some BLS, BT etc. There are some that claim European railroads are boring. I think the challenges of managing heavy mixed passenger and goods traffic alone makes for a more interesting railroad. Boring electric locos, some said? To me, looking at a model of a heavy Swiss electric loco that in the early seventies was already capable of generating more than 10'000 horsepower gives me goose bumps. To be able to pull some heavy trains up the famous Gotthard line you could see 2 or 3 enignes on one train, talk about raw horsepower! I'm also interested in a scaled down (very, very scaled down) version of the Zurich HB. Do you have a track plan you could send me? Regards, Art http://www.mrsonline.net/
QUOTE: Originally posted by tajsbb Yes. I'm currently building a Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) layout with a very scaled down Zurich HB (main station) at one end. My wife and I lived in Zurich for two years some time ago, and loved the rail system there. Modeling it keeps us close to one of our favorite parts of the world. Tim Johnson, Tucson, AZ
QUOTE: Originally posted by yankeejwb Actually, I would be interested in modeling a RR from Vietnam, ca., late 50's to early 60's. Never seen anything about RR operations there, but I know they exist. My guess is the equipment would have been Chinese. The interest comes from the fact that I plan on someday working there, teaching English. I'm curious if there are any VN vets in this forum that could pass along some info about Vietnamese RR's. Did anyone see any locos/stations/equipment while over there? It would definitely be different, but I'd love to try it if I can get some prototype info to start with.
I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
Bill Carl (modeling Chessie and predecessors from 1973-1983) Member of Four County Society of Model Engineers NCE DCC Master Visit the FCSME at www.FCSME.org Modular railroading at its best! If it has an X in it, it sucks! And yes, I just had my modeler's license renewed last week!
QUOTE: Originally posted by METRO Most of the pikes I have seen in MR and in person have been United States, Canadian or Mexican lines. However, a recient trip to the LHS got me looking at Kato's N-scale lineup and how many Japanese models they offer, not just in rolling stock but in structures, figures and vehicles as well. This got me thinking and I looked around a bit: There have been, as long as I can remember, tons of German and British-line imports but with recient releases from Bachman and Kato, Asian raliroads are starting to be avalible too. I am thinking about using Kato N-scale equipment to build a small shelf layout set in Japan, and I was wondering if anyone else has thought about setting their layouts outside of the Americas?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Reichsbahn Yes, I model a "foreign" RR, the German Reichsbahn in the mid-1930s. Great steam engines with "Wagner" smoke deflectors, black locos with red running gear, lots of quite interesting passenger coaches, and very interesting (and different) freight cars. Lots of quality stuff available from Roco, Trix, Fleischmann, Piko, Liliput, etc. Operation includes a fair amount of passenger traffic. Of course, even the Reichsbahn had a diversity of "regional" and distinctive locos (Prussian, Bavarian, Saxon, etc.) So my Bavarian trains come in from the south and the Prussian & Saxon trains from the north. Trackwork is Peco & signals are Veissmann. Only "reservation" is that we who model the Reichsbahn need to keep the livery pre-1940 to avoid the Nazi stuff. Even though the stuff is available, I personally do not own and would not run Reichsbahn trains with the swastika for the same reason that US prototype modelers would not have a 1940s train station in the South with "colored" and "white" waiting rooms. So, expand your horizons - it's a big and interesting world-wide hobby.
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
QUOTE: Originally posted by bigboy4015 True in former times but today ? Neee!! The RR market is a worldwide business! Alsthom and Bombardier have plants in Europe and USA / Canada. EMD sells a lot of Engines to Europe in the last years (Germany, Netherlands and UK) (...)
QUOTE: Originally posted by mathieuholland QUOTE: Originally posted by METRO On the subject of why there are so few US trains on overseas lines, I would think that weight would have much to do with it.(...) Well, I think that there are other reasons: * There are enough European train building companies like Alstom, Siemens, Vossloh, Talgo etc. Why should you buy a train on an other continent? * National pride? * American engines are large. Many European railroads are electrified: there is hardly any room for such a large locomotive under the catenary. * European railroads are more focused on passenger traffic than freight. Strong eninges like American ones are not nessecary: passenger trains are not so heavy and require different type of traction. And European builders have a lot of experience in this. And the freight trains are not as long as in de US, thus less heavy.
QUOTE: Originally posted by METRO On the subject of why there are so few US trains on overseas lines, I would think that weight would have much to do with it.(...)