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APRIL FOOL-MR

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APRIL FOOL-MR
Posted by Weighmaster on Saturday, March 2, 2013 3:10 AM

Willing to wager all the loose change in my pocket that it's the letter about using Lionel uncouplers to hold unused cars on the wall.  BTW, my pockets are empty...Gary

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Saturday, March 2, 2013 8:11 AM

I think it is the fact that the April issue comes in February.

Dave

Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow

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Posted by MerrilyWeRollAlong on Saturday, March 2, 2013 8:35 AM

I quickly scanned  the magazine three times before I found it. It wasn't as obvious as it has been in recent years. In the past, a photo usually gave it away.

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Posted by tstage on Saturday, March 2, 2013 9:26 AM

Thanks for ruining the surprise, Gary. SadNo

https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling

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Posted by chutton01 on Saturday, March 2, 2013 10:03 AM

Yeah, this one was kind of boring looking so I skipped it. Upon reading it...it's actually rather silly - they have done better.  The hook was the guy's wife's name, April.
I didn't even remember this was the April issue till this thread.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, March 2, 2013 10:10 AM

Having long since past the age of 12, April Fools jokes are more than a bit foolish in my view - not one of MR's better traditions.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, March 2, 2013 10:15 AM

Phoebe Vet

I think it is the fact that the April issue comes in February.

Yes, that fact is joke enough for the whole year.

    

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Saturday, March 2, 2013 1:03 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL

Having long since past the age of 12, April Fools jokes are more than a bit foolish in my view - not one of MR's better traditions.

Sheldon

I'm with Sheldon on that.

Dave

Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow

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Posted by wp8thsub on Saturday, March 2, 2013 1:16 PM

BrianinBuffalo

I thought it was the Security Gate article. Laugh

I like that article, and was aware of Lance having those for some time since I follow his blog and other progress on his site.  I'm planning to add some gates similar to that to my layout.

Rob Spangler

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Posted by BroadwayLion on Saturday, March 2, 2013 1:34 PM

LION has several high powered magnets that came from hard disk drives. Him uses them to hold tools and even a hot soldering iron. Him thinks they could hold a freight car without any problem. Him had to page through the issue several times before he found the joke.

ROAR

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Here there be cats.                                LIONS with CAMERAS

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Posted by Burlington Northern #24 on Saturday, March 2, 2013 3:59 PM

I knew I should've done the article about using pocket change as a way to weight my N scale cars. 

SP&S modeler, 1960's give or take a decade or two for some equipment.

 http://www.youtube.com/user/SGTDUPREY?feature=guide 

Gary DuPrey

N scale model railroader 

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Posted by rrinker on Saturday, March 2, 2013 4:13 PM

 Dunno about N scale, but I use pennies glued in my HO cars for weights all the time. About the cheapest weight material there is.

             --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

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Posted by Burlington Northern #24 on Saturday, March 2, 2013 4:18 PM

dimes set upright. Laugh they'd make a good looking coil load for gondolas. 

SP&S modeler, 1960's give or take a decade or two for some equipment.

 http://www.youtube.com/user/SGTDUPREY?feature=guide 

Gary DuPrey

N scale model railroader 

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Posted by RMax1 on Saturday, March 2, 2013 4:50 PM

I started reading the article because the one just in front of it interested me.  The further I got into it I said to myself hhhmmmmm.   What months issue is this?  Yep it was April.  Funny Funny stuff....   Brought to you from the warped minds once a year at MR.

Thanks guys for the laugh!

RMax

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Posted by jmbjmb on Saturday, March 2, 2013 4:56 PM

Hey, we used pennies to weight my son's pinewood derby car a couple year's ago.  Cheap and easy to measure out.

One the subject of April Fools jokes, I guess I don't get most of the jokes anymore.  Perhaps it comes from working in Dilbert Land, but we have many things that have got to be a joke, yet are dead serious, I can no longer tell humor from an operating policy. 

 

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Posted by Mark R. on Sunday, March 3, 2013 12:33 AM

Canada just recently banned the penny, so I have a huge container of freight car weights !

Haven't seen the April issue of MR myself yet, but it sounds like the joke is on us with a $2.00 price hike !

 

Mark.

¡ uʍop ǝpısdn sı ǝɹnʇɐuƃıs ʎɯ 'dlǝɥ

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Posted by hon30critter on Sunday, March 3, 2013 1:18 AM

Sheldon:

I respectfully disagree about the appropriateness of MR's April Fools annual joke! In this day and age we need all the humour we can get, hokey or not, because most of what is going on in the world right now is not very funny.

Dave

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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Posted by CTValleyRR on Sunday, March 3, 2013 6:23 AM
I'm between a couple of you on this one. I have no issue with the concept of the April Fool's joke itself -- a lot of folks need to lighten up a little, and, to quote George Bernard Shaw, "We don't stop playing becuase we grow old, we grow old because we stop playing," That said, though, it's always bothered me that lots of magazines do it, even though we're reading the April issue in Feb / Mar. That's just as annoying as seeing Christmas stuff right after Halloween.

Connecticut Valley Railroad A Branch of the New York, New Haven, and Hartford

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Posted by rdgk1se3019 on Sunday, March 3, 2013 10:30 AM

And here I thought the joke was the new Athearn releases......the center pull out ad for Broadway Ltd................the Walthers "upgraded" RDC-3

Dennis Blank Jr.

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Posted by rrinker on Sunday, March 3, 2013 11:03 AM

 I think it's more the quality of the joke - I don't think anything has topped the classic MR one on the pressurized basement. Several good followups came from readers who claimed to have tried it, too.

 One of the better ones in more recent years was probably the No-Trak modular spec. Totally plausible, really, making modules or places where the tracks have been removed and turned to trails.

  Can;t do away with humor, life doesn't have to be dead serious all the time. We are only as old as we think we are. Deny if you want, but even if you operate via strictly prototypical rules and methods, you're still playing with trains.

             --Randy

 


Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

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Posted by ChadLRyan on Sunday, March 3, 2013 12:54 PM

I think we should do an automatic Hump Classification Yard, in a Rube Goldberg fasion!

Here's how it works;
A long HUMP line on a very slight grade, with a hard wired MTH Electric Coupler in the end....
String/stage some cars (order matters, read on)....
An uncopuler magnet & a track embedded bristle brush 3" ahead of that, near the crown of the Hump..
A small streetcar style set of switching points in the bottom of the hump, electronically switched...
A sensor system that has a counter built in, & tied to the yard switches....

To Operate, with one touch start;
Hit the drop switch on the (retaining) MTH coupler..
Cars slowy roll forward...
The leade car hits the embedded track brush & retards the speed...
The uncoupler magnet trips the couplers...
They get bumped by the slack slam...
Lead car goes over the hump, ramps up the race...
The sensor & the counter flips the points & sends it down track 1...
Resets for next car, then Track 2, & so on (Cuz we set the order of the cars in staging)...

Now, to me, that would be really cool, but I am not Rube Goldberg.....

Chad L Ryan
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Posted by dknelson on Sunday, March 3, 2013 4:30 PM

The only April Fool's joke that works is one that brings irritated comment from those who did not realize it was a joke.  if everyone figures it out, it is a "fail."  Actually I read further into this particular one before its joke nature was made plain (at least to me), so in that sense it was one of their more effective ones.

I think a tremendous April Fool's joke would be to run a few pages of ads from the late 1950s, early 1960s -- with prices intact -- but delete the contact information so that nobody is sending money through the mail.    It would be cruel, but fun.

Dave Nelson

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Posted by Medina1128 on Sunday, March 3, 2013 9:22 PM

jmbjmb

Hey, we used pennies to weight my son's pinewood derby car a couple year's ago.  Cheap and easy to measure out.

One the subject of April Fools jokes, I guess I don't get most of the jokes anymore.  Perhaps it comes from working in Dilbert Land, but we have many things that have got to be a joke, yet are dead serious, I can no longer tell humor from an operating policy. 

 

We used pennies to weigh down the arm my sister's Barbie record player to keep it from skipping. I think they used a 10 penny nail for a needle.

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Tuesday, March 5, 2013 9:28 PM

Personally, I enjoyed it even though it took me in until almost the end.  That made it funnier.

Enjoy

Paul

If you're having fun, you're doing it the right way.
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Posted by Burlington Northern #24 on Tuesday, March 5, 2013 9:51 PM

I haven't found it yet.

SP&S modeler, 1960's give or take a decade or two for some equipment.

 http://www.youtube.com/user/SGTDUPREY?feature=guide 

Gary DuPrey

N scale model railroader 

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Posted by dexterdog on Tuesday, March 5, 2013 10:59 PM

rrinker

 I think it's more the quality of the joke - I don't think anything has topped the classic MR one on the pressurized basement. Several good followups came from readers who claimed to have tried it, too.

 One of the better ones in more recent years was probably the No-Trak modular spec. Totally plausible, really, making modules or places where the tracks have been removed and turned to trails.

  Can;t do away with humor, life doesn't have to be dead serious all the time. We are only as old as we think we are. Deny if you want, but even if you operate via strictly prototypical rules and methods, you're still playing with trains.

             --Randy

 

I remember reading the story about the model railroader who pressurized his basement just so he could remove the columns holding up his main floor and not have to build curved track around them. And oh yeah, the dude had to wear a deep sea diver's suit to work on the layout! I was just a kid back then but they got me. Took me a few years to realize the article was an April Fools gag... Haven't thought about that piece forever! Thanks for reminding me.

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Wednesday, March 6, 2013 5:30 AM

rrinker

  Can;t do away with humor, life doesn't have to be dead serious all the time. We are only as old as we think we are. Deny if you want, but even if you operate via strictly prototypical rules and methods, you're still playing with trains.

             --Randy

I like humor as much as anyone however practical jokes and April Fools jokes where you try to see if you can get one or more people to believe something that is not true haven't fit my definition of humor since the fourth grade.

Dave

Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow

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Posted by cold steal on Wednesday, March 6, 2013 6:48 AM

How could it not be? A padlock under the table? Seriously? No. April fools.

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Posted by NP2626 on Wednesday, March 6, 2013 6:54 AM

Wow, it sure appears many of you are unhappy people!  Does the magazine do anything you like?  I held off on reading this post about the April Fools Joke as it spoils the fun.  Now it appears the biggest enjoyment people get from the joke, is from being the first to spoil it for everyone else.  However, it does give an opportunity for those of you with crappy attitudes, to show them to the rest of us! 

NP 2626 "Northern Pacific, really terrific"

Northern Pacific Railway Historical Association:  http://www.nprha.org/

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Wednesday, March 6, 2013 7:15 AM

NP2626

Wow, it sure appears many of you are unhappy people!  Does the magazine do anything you like?  I held off on reading this post about the April Fools Joke as it spoils the fun.  Now it appears the biggest enjoyment people get from the joke, is from being the first to spoil it for everyone else.  However, it does give an opportunity for those of you with crappy attitudes, to show them to the rest of us! 

Only SERIOUS humor is allowed in this hobby.

Clown Clown Clown Clown

Now WHO let all the clowns in?

Paul

If you're having fun, you're doing it the right way.

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