I no longer model in HO but they were my favorite kit in the 50's and when in the hobby shop I still always looked at the blue box kits.
I am sad!
It is sad in the sense that there is nothing that exactly fills the simplicity level of the Athearn blue box kit for the entry level modeler who would like to "build" something, but some Walthers and Bowser and Accurail kits are similar in challenge.
So sad, yes, but on the other hand, I have not been seeing many blue box kits actually being shelved at hobby shops. I didn't sense any great conviction by Athearn in keeping them available or actively pushing the product.
As to prices, old, discontinued, custom (Kar Line and Bev Bel and historical society) painted Athearns sell for just about the same prices they always have, so I would not expect a huge bump in price due to this announcement. But the mind of the collector can be unpredictable territory. We'll see if my notion holds up at the upcoming trains shows in Milwaukee and Madison WI.
Dave Nelson
I am amending my post to add one additional factor. When the Blue Box kits were Athearn's real line of business, they also sold, and many hobby shops stocked, the various spare parts to the kits. For many of, these parts were our introduction to kit bashing, cross-kit kit mingling, and partial scratchbuilding. Other makes may offer the parts separately but the hobby shops actually stocked Athearn parts. That actually stopped being the case before Horizon bought up Athearn.
DN
The E-mail Athearn news arrived this morning. Sorry to see the "Blue Box" line reach the end of track. There is around 700 freight cars in my collection and about 60% of them are Athearn Blue Box kits.
The RTR stuff just dosen't measure up. I recently purchaced several Athearn RTR 50' mechanical reefers in five car sets. I had to disassemble the cars to add weight and change out the rubber couplers. The trucks were chanfed out with Kadee as were the couplers.
Athearn has lost my business.
I had a slightly different take on the Athearn BB kits when they first started appearing. I'd been building the older Athearn metal kits with six gazillion parts (that somehow ALWAYS went where they were supposed to) and I was frankly a little disappointed with the more 'toylike' look of the plastic replacement kits.
Of course, I got over that and began collecting a fair amount of the BB, especially the reefers. Now, I've found that if I need a good, quick flatcar, about the only thing left ARE the BB kits.
I think now, in retrospect, that the Athearn BB kits were the reason a lot of model railroaders got started back in the 'sixties and 'seventies--they were well made, fairly nice in detail and above all, economical. I've still got quite a few of them running on my MR, and they can hold their own against most of the other more detailed freight cars I've got. I'll be sorry to see them go. Even though I was initially disappointed that Athearn had gone to 'shake the box', I eventually grew to like them quite a bit.
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!
Rich,
Struggle is mandatory, always has been always will be.
This is what I posted on another forum:
OK, here is a suggestion.If you, like me, think that Athearn's dropping the Blue Box kits is not acceptable then use this contact link:http://www.athearn.com/About/Contact.aspxPolitely, I say again Politely, point out Athearn's error and strongly suggest that they reconsider.I believe they will listen, especially if they get enough feedback.Mark Gosdin
Resistance is never futile.
Mark Gosdin
time marches on. not always a bad thing, though. i used to sit at my work desk and assemble 5 or 6 cars in an evening and then a problem reared it's ugly head. i needed more yard track and staging just to accomodate all that extra equipment.
next stage was moving up to red caboose, bowser, p2k and the like. these made nicer looking cars in my opinion and took quite a bit longer so the "play value" was still there and the need for more layout capacity was less critical.
i still have shelves full of unbuilt car kits and anyone who has been in this hobby for very long probably has a bunch of them on hand too. so, now as the inventory drops i will have a place for all those magazines i can't seem to ever throw away.
now, a discovery. styrene and strip wood are still around and i have found that i still enjoy something i used to do. i've started scratch building freight cars again and i had forgotten how much i enjoyed it way back when.
maybe the passing of the athearn kits will open up a new era for those who are just beginning to enjoy this great hobby and while scratch building is not for everyone i think a lot of guys are going to start doing it with pleasure and satisfaction.
i for one delight in seeing a few cars in a train that were created by my own efforts and not the result of child or prison labor.
grizlump
Maybe some of us should try running a model railroad business.
Actually, it is the hobby evolving. Some people do not like change. Again, change is inevitable, struggle is an option if you so choose. Adapt.
Rich
If you ever fall over in public, pick yourself up and say “sorry it’s been a while since I inhabited a body.” And just walk away.
I didn't get the e-mail (at least, not yet) but someone had said in an earlier string that it only affected decorated kits, that the undec kits would still be available?? That wouldn't be so bad, I sure wish the MDC cars were still available as undec kits instead of RTR only.
~G4
19 Years old, modeling the Cowlitz, Chehalis, and Cascade Railroad of Western Washington in 1927 in 6X6 feet.
I too remember them fondly from my early days in the hobby. Not much of a challenge in building, which a kid with five thumbs was greatful for, and I learned to hate that metal clip on the coupler box, but they were great as I was doing freelance railroad then and needed to repaint and decal them.
I took a look last night on the computer at my list of freight cars, which includes date purchased, brand, type, and other notes (Excel is wonderful) and realized that out of a roster of around 1500 cars, there are no blue box Athearn left. I suppose as I "advanced" in the hobby, they were left behind for the "finer things of life".
Bob
I too, remember when I was a kid and relished the idea of getting a BB kit or Locomotive, since they were upgrades over the Tyco, AHM, rolling stock I owned. My first "real" locomotive was a UP F7A supergeared which ran great compared to the other four locomotives I owned. I still have it and it runs great.
However, the price of the BB kits and locos have begun to creep up. The cars are $7.50, even higher if they have metal wheels and knuckle couplers. The locomotives are somewhere around $40, with out any real superdetaining parts included. Cost benefit analysis would have me buying Atlas Trainman products or even Bachmann, for basic-non superdetailed equipment.
Also, it has to be said, the internet has brought the ability of more and more people to dispose of, or "auction", their unwanted cars and locos. Whereas before, a buyer would have to buy brand new. Being able to find a 15 year-old BB boxcar or loco over the 'Net or at a train show for about the same price as new, or even less, has had to cut into the new BB market. Not much difference in product between the new one and the used one. And, yes, being able to find an ample supply of used product that really isn't much different than a brand new one is a good thing, not a bad thing.
I will miss the BB line, but I think I'll always be able to find one if I really want to.
- Douglas
I got the same email from Athearn this morning. It's too bad. The BB kits were economical, fun to build, good running, and good looking. I will miss them. I still have a bunch of unbuilt kits waiting to get built. I think I shall make the pilgrimage to a real hobby shop and stock up before they are all gone.
Probably the new owners think there is more margin in RTR than in kits. The RTR sells for twice the kit price but is little more costly to manufacture. Why not assemble the kit, double the sell price and press on? Assembly in China can't cost more than 50 cents a unit.
David Starr www.newsnorthwoods.blogspot.com
This whole thing has me kind of wondering about how the modelling aspect of this hobby will go. As it becomes more "marginalized" will we see more of the divisive argumentation going on, or, a quiet kind of splitting off into a completely seperate 'fine scale' RR hobby?
Myself, I'd be more into the woodshedding aspect. Build up that sector by learning a whole bunch of new skills and get into the mfg kits thing deeper-----Hey, I have an Aunt in my family who just got her Ph'D in Geophysics --and she's 94 yr old---never too old to learn new skills---
Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry
I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...
http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/
The last freight car I bought was an Athearn BB. I regularly go by those couple of shelves at my LHS. Most of the small remaining inventory is 50-foot box cars, which I'm not interested in. To my surprise, though, I found a plain 40-foot flat car, the perfect car for an "idler" on my planned car float. For a few dollars and a set of Kadees from my coupler box, I had a new addition.
Yes, I'll miss these kits too.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Sometimes we think things will go on forever and never change. After I got the email, I looked in my drawers of unbuilt kits, probably 25 or 30, and realized that maybe half are Athearn BB. I pondered if their secondary market value just went up, but quickly realized how unimportant that queston was. Some of them are pretty rare special road liveries by Bev-Bel, but I bought them because they looked neat and fit perfectly on my model railroad. Also dawned on me that the other unbuilt kits such as a series of Intermountain reffers or Cotton Belt covered hoppers were much finer detail, but also much more complicated builds.
Glad I still have a few to work on in my remaining years of MRRing. It'll be even more special to spend an evening putting one together. I'm not a likely candidate to be buying more kits of any kind given the number I still have to build. Time marches on.
With the event of digital control systems, Marklin slowly phased out the old tin-plate track. For some years, you could get it really cheap, but, as the nostalgia freaks have discovered that building layouts in the style of the 1950´s is the thing t to do, that track is a collector´s items with prices up to
I guess that those kits you still have, mobilman, will also be worth their weight in gold, one fine day...
blownout cylinderAn odd suggestion that I fell over is that with a vacuum developing in the more 'affordable' model realms that this lack of affordability allows ever higher prices to develop over the broad spectrum of the hobby. Not so sure that this will happen but one never really knows what'll happen
Sadly, I think this might be an accurate prediction. the other thing about it is that if there are no more inexpensive cars, it's going to be more difficult to get new people into the hobby. I know that I probably wouldn't have gotten heavily into it when I was a teenager if I had to pay $30/car to build up a train.
Robert Beaty
The Laughing Hippie
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The CF-7...a waste of a perfectly good F-unit!
Then it comes to be that the soothing light at the
end of your tunnel, Was just a freight train coming
your way. -Metallica, No Leaf Clover
mononguy63 So does this mean that Blue Boxes will go from el cheapo kits that you can pick up for a few bucks to collectibles that cost more than RTR's?
So does this mean that Blue Boxes will go from el cheapo kits that you can pick up for a few bucks to collectibles that cost more than RTR's?
There are a few people who now suggest that the trainshows will see a pick up in attendance just due to this alone---if the market no longer supports the modellers--those who at one time did comprise a fair chunk of it --- then the modellers will find their treasures elsewhere. Train shows being one avenue. As for the higher prices--could be if the dealer is catering more to the collector to begin with.
An odd suggestion that I fell over is that with a vacuum developing in the more 'affordable' model realms that this lack of affordability allows ever higher prices to develop over the broad spectrum of the hobby. Not so sure that this will happen but one never really knows what'll happen
"I am lapidary but not eristic when I use big words." - William F. Buckley
I haven't been sleeping. I'm afraid I'll dream I'm in a coma and then wake up unconscious. -Stephen Wright
There is not much I can add to Mobilman44's sentiments. I too was energized to stay in the hobby becuase of Athearn. My first "non Tyco" loco was a U28C in Penn Central that I had to add the handrails and IIRC numberboards/headlight and horns. I ended up painting the handrails and adding numbers to the numberboard and I had my first "superdetailed" engine, the likes of which I'd seen the MR and RMC. I still have ti today even though I've switched to a different road. And the boxcars, separate roofwalks and doors that open! I could use my lawnmowing money, money left over from lunch *(that is, meals I skipped to get that extra cash!), coke bottle returns and whatever my dad would sneak me and buy a kit or two.
The memories are as great as the cars themselves.
Ricky
What can I say other then:
And as taps plays softly in the back ground.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVxbqUyLRQ4
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
Hi!
I just got the Athearn email confirming the phase out of their "blue box" kits.
I'm not ashamed to say that it really saddened me, for I cut my HO teeth on Athearn car and loco kits back in the early 1960s. For literally decades, I regularly got BB kits for Christmas, birthdays, and Fathers Day gifts from the wife and kids - and no presents were better enjoyed or appreciated.
Frankly, if it wasn't for Athearn, I seriously doubt I would have gotten into the Hobby - and I suspect a lot of you "war babies" and "baby boomers" out there might agree.
For the money, they were the best runners available, and with the addition of KD couplers and some mild weathering, those easy to build cars would fit nicely on most layouts. And, the quality was always there, and even at a young age I marveled at how Irv Athearn could put out such kits for so little money. And they sure have passed the test of time, for I still have about 200 of them (some still in kit form) on my roster.
Obviously, the age of "ready to roll" is upon us, and that is "progress". However, a lot of folks may be missing the fun and sense of accomplishment that went with the building of those relatively simple kits.
Before I go grieve in my cornflakes, may I pass along a story............
I model the ATSF in the late '40s - '50s. Over the years I collected a number of the Athearn BB standard passenger cars. They were all I could afford, but in recent years I picked up the Walthers Santa Fe cars that of course are scale length and well detailed, and made a really nice consist.
But, one day I decided to detail the old Athearn cars, for if I messed them up, it was no big deal. So, I added American Limited diagphrams, KD couplers, tinted the windows, and Intermountain wheelsets, and airbrushed the cars that needed help, and added the appropriate decals. The end result was not bad at all, especially when being pulled by a BLI Northern. And you know what??? Well, over the last few years I have found that the Athearn consist has been used and enjoyed significantly more than those Walthers cars! Go Figure!!!
Hey, have a good day!
Mobilman44
ENJOY !
Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central