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Things that irritate modelers.

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Posted by NittanyLion on Tuesday, March 22, 2016 5:55 PM

angelob6660

Not enough Amfleet cars for your Amtrak trains in Phase III and IV. Including Viewliner Sleepers.

I would like to have Superliner II's in Phase IV and IVb. 

 

More prototypical Conrail coalporters and gondolas with correct rib panels.

 

There's plenty of Superliner IIs out there in those phases.  Less luck when it comes to a Phase IVB baggage car, though.  

But the Viewliner is a myth.  I'm not sure it ever happened.

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Monday, March 21, 2016 10:16 PM

Paul3

What is currently annoying is when you see a thread appear on a forum that sounds interesting, but when you click on it to read it, you find that you've already replied to it months ago.  Sometimes, it's years ago.  On other forums, when this is done it's called "Thread Necromancy":

I actually like people calling up the old threads instead of incessantly creating new ones with exactly the same topic.  Repeat repeat reapeat same stuff over and over - How many threads do we need on "What is the best DCC system?".

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Posted by SouthPenn on Sunday, March 20, 2016 9:18 PM

Don't know how it happened. Mice? It wouldn't be the first time mice have given me head aches. 

South Penn
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Posted by SETH CRAWFORD on Sunday, March 20, 2016 8:04 PM

SouthPenn

While cleaning your layout, finding a set of wheels inside a tunnel. Not a truck, but a brand new set of wheels. Huh?

 

 

 

How in the world did that happen? 

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Posted by angelob6660 on Saturday, March 19, 2016 11:58 AM

Not enough Amfleet cars for your Amtrak trains in Phase III and IV. Including Viewliner Sleepers.

I would like to have Superliner II's in Phase IV and IVb. 

 

More prototypical Conrail coalporters and gondolas with correct rib panels.

Modeling the G.N.O. Railway, The Diamond Route.

Amtrak America, 1971-Present.

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Posted by SouthPenn on Saturday, March 19, 2016 11:42 AM

While cleaning your layout, finding a set of wheels inside a tunnel. Not a truck, but a brand new set of wheels. Huh?

South Penn
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Posted by ricktrains4824 on Friday, March 18, 2016 10:34 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL

 

 
Sir Madog

 

 
BRAKIE
I finish my coffee..Guess what I found in the bottom of my cup? Yup a set of wheels. What irk me is the wheel face had been painted yesterday morning. Thank goodness for quick drying Acrylic paint.

 

So it didn´t spoil your coffee!

What still eats me up that I have to install a dozen of tiny detail parts, made out of cheap and brittle plastic, on my $ 400 loco!

 

 

 

I don't have any $400 locos - at least not any that I paid $400 for. 

And I don't mind the plastic detail parts, applied by myself or the factory.

But what do I know......Nothing about the hobby bothers me much - it's all fun

Sheldon

 

I dislike breaking said detail parts while having to perform maintainance work on certain manufactured units when the cheap light bulbs they use burn out.... Never heard of LED's evidently....

Brakie: Can't say I have ever had anything land in my coffee,  as I don't care much for it. (Although, I will drink it when my asthma is really acting up, as the steam and caffeine both help relieve asthma symptoms.) Other beverages however....... 

Ricky W.

HO scale Proto-freelancer.

My Railroad rules:

1: It's my railroad, my rules.

2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.

3: Any objections, consult above rules.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Friday, March 18, 2016 9:48 PM

Sir Madog

 

 
BRAKIE
I finish my coffee..Guess what I found in the bottom of my cup? Yup a set of wheels. What irk me is the wheel face had been painted yesterday morning. Thank goodness for quick drying Acrylic paint.

 

So it didn´t spoil your coffee!

What still eats me up that I have to install a dozen of tiny detail parts, made out of cheap and brittle plastic, on my $ 400 loco!

 

I don't have any $400 locos - at least not any that I paid $400 for. 

And I don't mind the plastic detail parts, applied by myself or the factory.

But what do I know......Nothing about the hobby bothers me much - it's all fun

Sheldon

    

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 17, 2016 9:13 AM

BRAKIE
I finish my coffee..Guess what I found in the bottom of my cup? Yup a set of wheels. What irk me is the wheel face had been painted yesterday morning. Thank goodness for quick drying Acrylic paint.

So it didn´t spoil your coffee!

What still eats me up that I have to install a dozen of tiny detail parts, made out of cheap and brittle plastic, on my $ 400 loco!

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Thursday, March 17, 2016 8:28 AM

Soo Line fan
 
gunkhead

 

 
Soo Line fan

 

 
gunkhead
Walthers' track-cleaner reefer. The only car I have bought and actually regretted.

 

Whats the issue with it?

 

 

 

It's disappointingly crude - the only cleaning mechanism it has is an abrasive block. No pad, no reservoir for cleaning fluid, just an abrasive block glued to a metal plate suspended from the chassis. And speaking of the chassis, that thing's metal chassis is stupidly heavy. I think it weighs more than my Mantua Pacific. I have elected to scrap mine - the shell will become a storage shed or somesuch, the trucks will be used to help get some cars that I bought as shells-only onto the rails, and the roof walk can be cut up to make grilles for things like steam chests.

 

 

 

I have been using one for many years and went through several cleaning blocks. I love mine, would not trade it for anything else on the market.

I love mine, too.

Dave

Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow

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Posted by BRAKIE on Thursday, March 17, 2016 8:28 AM

Well another another one and a first for me.

Yesterday evening a wheelset flew out of my hand and I could not find them anywhere after looking high and low and around and about..

I finish my coffee..Guess what I found in the bottom of my cup? Yup a set of wheels.

What irk me is the wheel face had been painted yesterday morning. Thank goodness for quick drying Acrylic paint.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt  Safety First!"

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Thursday, March 17, 2016 7:12 AM

SETH CRAWFORD

- A lack of models for an entire region (Southeastern US) while favoring another region (Pacific coast needs to be watered down, seriously the market is oversaturated with them)

I'm stuck on the east coast and not seeing much of this Paciifc coast stuff.  Pray tell, I was raised in northern California and don't see much of it around here but would like to; mail order FTW. 

a lack of good research photos in case you want to re-number or repaint something to look a certain way

Once you learn how to do effective searches on rr-fallenflags and railcarphoto's, it's pretty amazing what you can turn up in terms of photo's.

Rivet counters

If riviet counters annoy you, maybe time to change hobby's?  They will always be with us in the train hobby cause they are really really into trains!

overpriced models (I'm looking at you Bachmann regarding your passenger cars) 

Hasn't the overpriced models shtick been beaten totally to death a few years ago already?  Bang Head  instead of dead horse emoticon.

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Posted by Soo Line fan on Thursday, March 17, 2016 7:09 AM

gunkhead

 

 
Soo Line fan

 

 
gunkhead
Walthers' track-cleaner reefer. The only car I have bought and actually regretted.

 

Whats the issue with it?

 

 

 

It's disappointingly crude - the only cleaning mechanism it has is an abrasive block. No pad, no reservoir for cleaning fluid, just an abrasive block glued to a metal plate suspended from the chassis. And speaking of the chassis, that thing's metal chassis is stupidly heavy. I think it weighs more than my Mantua Pacific. I have elected to scrap mine - the shell will become a storage shed or somesuch, the trucks will be used to help get some cars that I bought as shells-only onto the rails, and the roof walk can be cut up to make grilles for things like steam chests.

 

I have been using one for many years and went through several cleaning blocks. I love mine, would not trade it for anything else on the market.

 

Jim

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Posted by FRRYKid on Thursday, March 17, 2016 1:10 AM

blownout cylinder

My favorite. UPS or DHL both cannot find my address. But yet I get the sticker saying where I can pick them up?!?!?? Bang Head SoapBox

 

In that vein, FedEx never being able to get packages to the right door in your apartment building the first time that a particular type delivers to the building. Bang Head (The latest was a 2-day package being put by my landlady's door. She wasn't home and I was able to find it, but still it is annoying.) I called the local Ground hub and explained exactly how to do it. But I hadn't had a 2-day package before, so the problem happened again.

"The only stupid question is the unasked question."
Brain waves can power an electric train. RealFact #832 from Snapple.
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Posted by SETH CRAWFORD on Wednesday, March 9, 2016 12:48 PM
  • That moment when you find out that the turntable you want is a completely different rail code than yours (my layout is code 100 but the turntable is code 83 T-T) 
  • A complete lack of research by a certain modeling company (BLI) on a certain trio of steam engines (SOU 4501, 630, and 722) 
  • A lack of models for an entire region (Southeastern US) while favoring another region (Pacific coast needs to be watered down, seriously the market is oversaturated with them) 
  • a lack of good research photos in case you want to re-number or repaint something to look a certain way
  • Rivet counters
  • a lack of paint codes and formulas to get the paint close to right
  • overpriced models (I'm looking at you Bachmann regarding your passenger cars) 
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Posted by riogrande5761 on Thursday, January 21, 2016 10:59 PM

ricktrains4824

 

 
Paul3

Oh, and I had a new annoyance last night: I dropped a part, and not only did it hit the floor, it hit two different floors.  I'm in an old house, and there's a floor vent under my workbench on the second floor.  The part I dropped fell onto the vent (I heard it hit), then it dropped through it all the way to the first floor.

So not only did I have to get on my hands and knees to look for a dropped part, I had to descend a flight of stairs to do so!

Paul A. Cutler III

 

 

 

Ouch.... I hate things hitting one floor.

How about this one: Having to reverse engineer a sound system in a locomotive because the manufacturer used a part with a extremely high failure rate.

If I am paying $250 and more for a single locomotive, the parts present better be good, and not a "high failure" item....

MRC sound decoder formerly used in Athearn Genesis loco's?

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by ricktrains4824 on Thursday, January 21, 2016 10:05 PM

Paul3

Oh, and I had a new annoyance last night: I dropped a part, and not only did it hit the floor, it hit two different floors.  I'm in an old house, and there's a floor vent under my workbench on the second floor.  The part I dropped fell onto the vent (I heard it hit), then it dropped through it all the way to the first floor.

So not only did I have to get on my hands and knees to look for a dropped part, I had to descend a flight of stairs to do so!

Paul A. Cutler III

 

Ouch.... I hate things hitting one floor.

How about this one: Having to reverse engineer a sound system in a locomotive because the manufacturer used a part with a extremely high failure rate.

If I am paying $250 and more for a single locomotive, the parts present better be good, and not a "high failure" item....

Ricky W.

HO scale Proto-freelancer.

My Railroad rules:

1: It's my railroad, my rules.

2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.

3: Any objections, consult above rules.

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Posted by Paul3 on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 5:22 PM

Oh, and I had a new annoyance last night: I dropped a part, and not only did it hit the floor, it hit two different floors.  I'm in an old house, and there's a floor vent under my workbench on the second floor.  The part I dropped fell onto the vent (I heard it hit), then it dropped through it all the way to the first floor.

So not only did I have to get on my hands and knees to look for a dropped part, I had to descend a flight of stairs to do so!

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by Paul3 on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 5:16 PM

FWIW, my club owns half a dozen of the Walthers track cleaning cars.  We've found them to work great for us.

Before we got them, we'd clean the track before an Open House with the CMX Clean Machine (brass tank car) dripping mineral spirts, laquer thinner, or alcohol (we tried all three) on the pad.  However, half way through the 7 hour Open House, the track would get so dirty that we'd have to send out the Clean Machine again during the show.  And, the lead loco of every train needed cleaning at some point in the day or else.

Now, we try to put one Walthers track cleaning car in each freight train and drag it around for the show.  As a result, we no longer have to clean the layout during the show with the Clean Machine, and trains can run all 7 hours without the need for cleaning wheels in the middle of the day.

Our club's dirty track problem is caused by dust, with forced air HVAC, ceiling fans, dehumidifiers and hundreds of people walking through the doors.  So a simple pad as on the Walthers car works well for us after the track has already been cleaned with the Clean Machine.

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 2:15 PM

My favorite. UPS or DHL both cannot find my address. But yet I get the sticker saying where I can pick them up?!?!?? Bang Head SoapBox

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

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 12:16 PM

angelob6660

when its hits you a holiday Bang Head

Or worse, the items you've been waiting for over a year came in stock at your favorite online vendor while you are flying overseas (items that typically sell out in a matter of hours!)  I had been tracking those on Athearns site and sure enough they came in stock the day I was flying overseas to England and was at the airport in Paris France when they showed up in stock.  (I knew this was going to happen!)

Thankfully, by some quirk, I was able to wait until I could borrow a laptop when I got to England and order the engines.  (they happened to be the Athearn Genesis D&RGW GP40-2's).  By early January they were pretty much sold out everywhere, but thankfully I managed to get all 4 numbers.  I guess D&RGW is VERY popular, but what a fiasco getting them.

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by fieryturbo on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 12:04 PM

Mosquito bites.

Julian

Modeling Pre-WP merger UP (1974-81)

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Posted by angelob6660 on Tuesday, January 19, 2016 12:51 AM

Buying things over the internet and realizing the item well be here Monday; when its hits you a holiday Bang Head and have to wait another day.

Modeling the G.N.O. Railway, The Diamond Route.

Amtrak America, 1971-Present.

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Monday, January 18, 2016 11:33 PM

Why does my space always shrink? Whistling

Kiboshing my noggin upon getting out from under my benchwork....oooo...that smarts...Black EyeDead

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/

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Posted by gunkhead on Monday, January 18, 2016 11:20 PM

Soo Line fan

 

 
gunkhead
Walthers' track-cleaner reefer. The only car I have bought and actually regretted.

 

Whats the issue with it?

 

It's disappointingly crude - the only cleaning mechanism it has is an abrasive block. No pad, no reservoir for cleaning fluid, just an abrasive block glued to a metal plate suspended from the chassis. And speaking of the chassis, that thing's metal chassis is stupidly heavy. I think it weighs more than my Mantua Pacific. I have elected to scrap mine - the shell will become a storage shed or somesuch, the trucks will be used to help get some cars that I bought as shells-only onto the rails, and the roof walk can be cut up to make grilles for things like steam chests.

Interiors and people figures make such a difference. Especially the people.

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Posted by Soo Line fan on Monday, January 18, 2016 8:46 PM

gunkhead
Walthers' track-cleaner reefer. The only car I have bought and actually regretted.

Whats the issue with it?

Jim

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Posted by middleman on Monday, January 18, 2016 8:12 PM

never mind.....

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Posted by jecorbett on Monday, January 18, 2016 6:28 PM

What irritates me about this hobby? Lots of things. Probably the #1 would be the general poor quality of products even high end. There is way to much junk sold at premium prices.

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Posted by Southgate on Monday, January 18, 2016 3:33 AM

Mr Positive; You say they (Kadee) are just around the corner... Does that mean you live in the Medford area?  I gotta get over there and see the place. I'm in central Oregon.

OK, to stay on topic; There's nothing that irritates me about the hobby enough to make me wanna leave it. Even the worst problem (to me) as I mentioned earlier, the track/wheel electrial barrier can be dealt with. Dan

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Posted by gunkhead on Monday, January 18, 2016 2:55 AM

Being told "Oh don't bother making something/customizing/etc, buy the expensive already-made thing". Not everyone in this hobby has a checkbook the size of a real locomotive.

On that note, I despise that the market of new stuff is full of these models that cost a fortune because of being pre-weathered and having some (often fragile) superdetail parts (I think the worst offenders are Intermountain's $80 autoracks and their door hinges that make saltine crackers seem durable by comparison)... and only such models. The manufacturers anymore seem to take the attitude of "Oh, are you someone who's into model trains but has a small budget? Ha ha! Screw you! People without deep pockets aren't real people!" If not for the secondary market and old stock still on hobby shop shelves...

Snobs who sneer at and bash people for freelancing or for era-mixing or for not buying the aforementioned high-price models, etc.

The extent to which Model Railroader magazine's staff tend to be outright shills in their articles.

Paint drying rough

Parts and tools playing hide-and-seek

Discovering that the previous owner of a model has unnecessarily cemented a snap-together passenger car kit with excessive amounts of glue without having so much as fit a rudimentary interior or lights, and the glue joints being obnoxiously hard to separate without breakage even when using a fine, sharp blade.

The ability of shoes to suddenly make your feet clumsy near models that had to be set on (or slipped down to) the floor

The fact that the presence of track on the floor somehow gives normally-not-clumsy parents the foot coordination of someone who's been drinking strong liquor all day.

The fact that O.K. Models decided that their 60' shorty streamlined passenger cars didn't need doors

Krazy Glue drying up in the bottle

The propensity of red and yellow paint to either dry up or turn gummy in the bottle

Steel-alloy-rail track. It's rubbish that takes far too much cleaning and isn't that great a conductor even when fully clean (and of course, DO NOT abrasively clean it because then some of the conductive coating is going to come off).

Walthers' track-cleaner reefer. The only car I have bought and actually regretted.

Interiors and people figures make such a difference. Especially the people.

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Posted by bearman on Friday, January 15, 2016 4:43 PM

Made in China

Bear "It's all about having fun."

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Posted by jecorbett on Friday, January 15, 2016 10:24 AM

CajonTim

No matter how many clamps I have, I always need one more!

Tim

 

Ditto. I have lots of clamps. Never the right sized one. Always too big or too small for what I need at the time.

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Posted by steemtrayn on Friday, January 15, 2016 3:47 AM

steam locomotive models that have the valve gear in neutral. The radius rod doesn't move.

LED headlights. They just don't look right, and they don't brighten when the dynamo starts up.

Sound units without doppler.

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Posted by cats think well of me on Thursday, January 14, 2016 10:16 PM

Wanting lots of Red Caboose PRR REA X29 boxcars and seeing none turn up. Same goes for Intermountain Pfaudler 40' steel milk cars lettered for Sheffield.

Manufacturers/importers announcing a model and then the delivery date gets pushed back months and sometimes years.

Also that manufacturers/importers of certain steam engine models do not offer their models without sound decoders.

 

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Thursday, January 14, 2016 8:35 PM

Mosquitos, of course.

Why should modelers be any different than anyone else?

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Thursday, January 14, 2016 8:30 AM

measure twice, cut once.

Not here ...it is measure 4 times, cut.....too short/long. SoapBox

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

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Posted by Metro Red Line on Thursday, January 14, 2016 4:41 AM

Trying to strip some 30awg wire under your layout when your wire stripper will only go as small as 26awg, and using the wire-cutting part of your wire stripper, only shortening your wires with every attempt. AAAAAAARGGGGH!!!

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Posted by stuckinthe50s on Wednesday, January 13, 2016 7:57 PM

People that must touch things. I do appreciate their interest and curiosity. My water feature that they must touch to see if it is real water. But my wife's brother putting a finger through the roof of a station is too much and Super Trees are way too fragile to be felt up.

Cheers, Don
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Posted by steamage on Sunday, January 10, 2016 1:17 PM
Why does a model co. come out with the same model type of diesel as as another Co.? This seems to happen a lot.

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Posted by Jimmy_Braum on Saturday, January 9, 2016 8:52 AM

people who say "Oh, that's not right" when you do a freelanced locomotive for a prototypical company....so what if I want to do a SD70ace in Wheeling and Lake Erie.

(My Model Railroad, My Rules) 

These are the opinions of an under 35 , from the east end of, and modeling, the same section of the Wheeling and Lake Erie railway.  As well as a freelanced road (Austinville and Dynamite City railroad).  

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Posted by Bernd on Saturday, January 9, 2016 8:51 AM

Out of focus over size pictures.

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Posted by ricktrains4824 on Friday, January 8, 2016 5:19 PM

I look at it this way: model trains (toys to some) are cheaper than skidoo's, ATV's, and snowmobiles (toys) are.

I will take my "toy" trains over your "toy" vehicles.

Ricky W.

HO scale Proto-freelancer.

My Railroad rules:

1: It's my railroad, my rules.

2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.

3: Any objections, consult above rules.

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Friday, January 8, 2016 5:17 PM

Big Smilere: Hobby called toys. I think it bothered me years ago. Now I recognize my trains ARE toys. What's the old saying - the main difference between men and boys is the price of there toys. It's true! :-P

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Posted by cats think well of me on Friday, January 8, 2016 4:53 PM

AntonioFP45

Blownout Cylinder,

I concur! Sigh

I'm embarassed to say how many #80 drill bits I've broken in both, the pin vise and Dremel rotary tool! I want to install handrails and grabs on my metalilzed Walthers units and, for me, it's a challenge. 

I tip my hat off to modelers that drill holes with #80 bits and install those hand rails on their varnish without breaking a sweat.

I'm switching over to #79 bits and see if that works out.

 

 
blownout cylinder

#80 bits... that is all I'll say about them.

 

 

 

 

I concur with using #79 bits instead of #80s. I also found them to be a bit sharper and did the job a little quicker. I just made one bit last through doing three different models. I just got a set that are titanium coated, and look forward to seeing how they do when my current #79 breaks. I only use a pin vise myself. 

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Posted by fieryturbo on Thursday, January 7, 2016 1:47 PM

I want to throw these in:

Roadname being so popular it's never on sale, or goes out of stock before you can get it (Union Pacific)

Roadname not being popular enough (I hear this all the time on the boards, I feel for you folks)

Roadname being popular but the proto roadname in question wants so much money for licensing, no one can afford to manufacture it (Chicago Metra)

 

Julian

Modeling Pre-WP merger UP (1974-81)

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Posted by 5150WS6 on Thursday, January 7, 2016 12:34 PM

I get irritated when I drop my bacon and my dog grabs it before I can get it.

It's also irritating when people call my hobbies "toys"

I used to get irritated with the Kaddee springs but since they are just around the corner they are always more than willing to give me extras.  Awesome people.

 

And since negativity sucks I'm going to end on the top three things I love about the hobby that don't irritate me.

1. Give me huge quality time with my dad that I would never be able to get in any other way.  It's something we both love and I'm revelling in the memories we are making every weekend.

2. DCC and all the features are amazing.  I am so happy with a 7 loco consist!  It brings me nothing but giggling like a little girl when I can get all 7 locos to work in combo at the exact same speed.......

3. Finally.  This hobby knows no age.  I have friends that come over that are 14 and 80.  They all have the same interest and even though there are different knowledge levels, the "old dogs" are always more than welcome to school the youngsters.  It's cool to have a hobby that no matter what your deal in life, if you like trains you're in.  Simple as that.  Not too many things like that in this world that I've found.

CoolBeer

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Posted by ricktrains4824 on Thursday, January 7, 2016 12:21 PM

SouthPenn

Mice that chew your scenery, drag it into a tunnel and build a nest.

 

Mice and other pest's period...... Four legged or more......

Ricky W.

HO scale Proto-freelancer.

My Railroad rules:

1: It's my railroad, my rules.

2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.

3: Any objections, consult above rules.

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Posted by SouthPenn on Thursday, January 7, 2016 12:14 PM

Mice that chew your scenery, drag it into a tunnel and build a nest.

South Penn
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Posted by SouthPenn on Thursday, January 7, 2016 12:10 PM

hobo9941

Well, this has certainly been an eye opening thread. I thought I was the only one that keeps dropping things. 

I thought I was the only one who could make tools disappear like a magician in seconds.

I thought I was the only one whose trains came out of tunnels with the loco covered in spider webs.

I thought I was the only one who had a chipmunk trapped in the garage, running all over my layout, knocking stuff over and leaving a couple chipmunk nuggets in my scenery.

I thought I was the only one switching from reg glasses, to reading glasses, to no glasses for various distances. 

But I have mastered the Kadee coupler springs pretty well, if I do say so myself. I use a round toothpick to pick up a spring, push it on the tiny pin, and another toothpick to guide the other end on to the other pin. Getting pretty good at it.Whistling

 

Same here. But I have not mastered the coupler spring.

South Penn
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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Wednesday, January 6, 2016 7:14 PM

Blownout Cylinder,

I concur! Sigh

I'm embarassed to say how many #80 drill bits I've broken in both, the pin vise and Dremel rotary tool! I want to install handrails and grabs on my metalilzed Walthers units and, for me, it's a challenge. 

I tip my hat off to modelers that drill holes with #80 bits and install those hand rails on their varnish without breaking a sweat.

I'm switching over to #79 bits and see if that works out.

blownout cylinder

#80 bits... that is all I'll say about them.

 

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by CajonTim on Wednesday, January 6, 2016 4:37 PM

No matter how many clamps I have, I always need one more!

Tim

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Wednesday, January 6, 2016 3:30 PM

#80 bits... that is all I'll say about them.

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/

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Posted by DSchmitt on Wednesday, January 6, 2016 2:21 PM

Recently, I find myself becoming irritated by long posts, usually by newbys, describing the layout they would like to build and asking for suggestions.  I mean the ones that do not include at least a sketch of their proposal.  I might like to help, but usually can not figure out what they want to do.   

 

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.

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Posted by Steven Otte on Wednesday, January 6, 2016 8:47 AM

Okay, folks, I don't want to see any more thinly veiled posts that boil down to "I'm irritated by certain people on this Forum who I won't name but we all know who I'm talking about." Keep it civil or I'll shut it down.

--
Steven Otte, Model Railroader senior associate editor
sotte@kalmbach.com

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Posted by Daywhitemtns on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 11:21 PM

Locomotive sound effects in the layout room drive me up the wall - particularly when I have more than one engine operating. I run DCC but no sound decoders or speakers. Additionally, it saves a lot of money. Sound-equipped models are much more expensive than DCC-ready versions. The normal sounds my trains make running on the layout are fine for me.

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Posted by hobo9941 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 7:53 PM

What does this mean... on freight cars?

Leased from Equitable Life Assurance

Insurance companies invest your premiums in various things like locomotives, freight cars, ships, etc, for additional income. Then they raise your premiums to pay claims!

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Posted by hobo9941 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 7:47 PM

Well, this has certainly been an eye opening thread. I thought I was the only one that keeps dropping things. 

I thought I was the only one who could make tools disappear like a magician in seconds.

I thought I was the only one whose trains came out of tunnels with the loco covered in spider webs.

I thought I was the only one who had a chipmunk trapped in the garage, running all over my layout, knocking stuff over and leaving a couple chipmunk nuggets in my scenery.

I thought I was the only one switching from reg glasses, to reading glasses, to no glasses for various distances. 

But I have mastered the Kadee coupler springs pretty well, if I do say so myself. I use a round toothpick to pick up a spring, push it on the tiny pin, and another toothpick to guide the other end on to the other pin. Getting pretty good at it.Whistling

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Posted by angelob6660 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 7:43 PM

What does this mean... on freight cars?

Leased from Equitable Life Assurance 

Modeling the G.N.O. Railway, The Diamond Route.

Amtrak America, 1971-Present.

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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 7:01 PM

What?  Where?

 

dehusman

............... but there are forums that allow posts and threads that are downright racist).

 

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by csxns on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 7:00 PM

riogrande5761
Really?

Same here.

Russell

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Posted by angelob6660 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 6:52 PM

When people say that model railroading isn't a hobby.

My favorite railroad historical society is now a member's only website. I liked looking at pictures of locomotives, freight cars, and information.

Modeling the G.N.O. Railway, The Diamond Route.

Amtrak America, 1971-Present.

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 6:20 PM

dehusman

 there are forums that allow posts and threads that are downright racist).

Really?

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by ACY Tom on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 6:15 PM

I don't mind "We don't have that but we can order it for you."

What I mind is "We don't have that and don't care to order it for you or help you find it. You're on your own, Sucker." They don't usually end the statement with "Sucker", but it sometimes feels like they did.

Tom

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Posted by GP-9_Man11786 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 2:47 PM

The following sentence  when uttered by an LHS employee: "We don't have that but we can order it four you." 

Modeling the Pennsylvania Railroad in N Scale.

www.prr-nscale.blogspot.com 

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Posted by yougottawanta on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 12:29 PM

Not having the time to expend on model railroading like I wish I had !

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Posted by ho modern modeler on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 12:21 PM

-Websites that don't ever really tell you that they don't have anything in stock when you place an order.

-Oddballs Decals still has my $36 from 2009

 

Mine doesn't move.......it's at the station!!!

 

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Posted by dehusman on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 8:58 AM

I work for a real railroad, modelers that get so wrapped in things that they make rude remarks concerning various prototypes.  Over the years there have been several occaisions where I've seen how rude, ignorant and abusive model railroaders can be. People that in one post are challenged to operate a loop of track on 4x8 sheet of plywood and in the next post know everything there is about operating a real railroad and cursing those that do.

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by dehusman on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 8:45 AM

People that post political rants on model railroad forums (fortunately this doesn't apply to the MR forum, but there are forums that allow posts and threads that are downright racist).

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by dehusman on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 8:42 AM

People who push new technology without understanding the old technology and then refuse to accept that there are legitimate barriers to nacent technology that may cause people to not want to adopt it until those barrier are overcome. 

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 8:29 AM

AntonioFP45

Well, since Athearn was mentioned...........

Current, beautiful Athearn HO RTR hood diesels with smooth decks instead of with treads or "diamond plating".

Considering what you get for $99, you get a darn nice diesel with lots of prototypical details.  You can add the diamond tread plate on easily enough if Athearn doesn't re-tool those diesels into their Genesis line - at accordingly higher prices I might add.

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Tuesday, January 5, 2016 6:09 AM

mmmm....my so-called benchwork...that is immediately put in question when confronted with the plywood cut so perfectly. [headbang] SoapBox

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...

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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Monday, January 4, 2016 8:51 PM

Well, since Athearn was mentioned...........

Current, beautiful Athearn HO RTR hood diesels with smooth decks instead of with treads or "diamond plating".

 

SouthPenn

What irritates you in model railroading?

I'll start with the metal clip that Athearn uses to hold couplers on. They don't pop off very often, but when then they do, they can cause a mess

South Penn

 

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by riogrande5761 on Monday, January 4, 2016 2:42 PM

+1000

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by CGW121 on Monday, January 4, 2016 12:08 PM

Knock off Kadee Couplers made of plastic. The things do not work well.

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Posted by DAVID FORTNEY on Monday, January 4, 2016 11:21 AM

jalajoie

 

 
DAVID FORTNEY

Who wants wifi? The younger generation does, they want to be able to run their trains via their smart phone or tablet. If you don't , stay away from the discussion 

Want to bring the younger generation into the hobby, read my comment above.

End of rant.

 

 

Some of us elderly also like new technologie. I am 76 and i brought to the club computors, JMRI and WiFi. I will also install bluetooth in one of my locos when and if Bluerail put a workable chip on the market.

 

hi Jack,

I am also 70 and the younger guys are pushing us old guys into the 21st century when it comes to our trains. I have a smart phone and a tablet and I use them at the club. I will be adding them to my home layout in the near future. We also have a couple of guys who are putting batteries in their Ho scale locomolives and running them. They are dead rail guys and what they have done so far is pretty impressive.

 

 

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Posted by ricktrains4824 on Monday, January 4, 2016 11:19 AM

Those who will claim to know something, then ignore your proof that they are incorrect. (Especially when they are claiming that you are the one who is wrong..)

Those who insist that this product is the best, if you don't agree you are wrong.

Those who can't be bothered to use correct, proper "spelin an gramma". (Whistling)

Lack of space, time, and/or funds to devote to modeling. (And when all three happen, the trifecta....)

Dust. (It's everywhere, and refuses to be "in correct scale".)

Having allergies/asthma. (No indoor painting with an airbrush when using anything with any kind of smell. No indoor brush painting with said paint either...)

Small parts that fly into "never-never land". (Because they can never-never be found when they land!)

Having a $30 locomotive include an engine crew, but the $300 one not.

Spending the next 2 hours trying to install said engine crew.

Athearn Genesis models still coming with miniature bulbs instead of LED's.

Having said bulbs blow.

Think that's enough.

Ricky W.

HO scale Proto-freelancer.

My Railroad rules:

1: It's my railroad, my rules.

2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.

3: Any objections, consult above rules.

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Posted by jalajoie on Monday, January 4, 2016 10:29 AM

DAVID FORTNEY

Who wants wifi? The younger generation does, they want to be able to run their trains via their smart phone or tablet. If you don't , stay away from the discussion 

Want to bring the younger generation into the hobby, read my comment above.

End of rant.

Some of us elderly also like new technologie. I am 76 and i brought to the club computors, JMRI and WiFi. I will also install bluetooth in one of my locos when and if Bluerail put a workable chip on the market.

Jack W.

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Posted by Soo Line fan on Monday, January 4, 2016 10:13 AM

Slow ebay shippers. Sleep

Jim

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Posted by BRAKIE on Monday, January 4, 2016 5:05 AM

DAVID FORTNEY
Want to bring the younger generation into the hobby, read my comment above.

Younger generation is in the hobby and they like the high tech stuff like DCC/Sound,correct cars and locomotives and yes wifi and smart phone control. The majority of their shopping is done on line by using a smart phone.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt  Safety First!"

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Posted by DAVID FORTNEY on Monday, January 4, 2016 12:10 AM

When you start a thread only to have it go off on a tangent and not having anything to do with what the OP posted.

Too many so called experts who think their way is the only way.

Condescending replys to your questions or opinion. 

Taboo topics nobody wants to discus, i.e. Different command systems like dead rail, dcs ( believe me nobody here knows anything about it ), blue tooth. If you bring anything up like the above be ready for all the naysayers and why can't we just run DC or DCC And be satisfied. 

Who wants wifi? The younger generation does, they want to be able to run their trains via their smart phone or tablet. If you don't , stay away from the discussion 

Want to bring the younger generation into the hobby, read my comment above.

End of rant.

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Posted by Paul3 on Sunday, January 3, 2016 11:35 PM

What is currently annoying is when you see a thread appear on a forum that sounds interesting, but when you click on it to read it, you find that you've already replied to it months ago.  Sometimes, it's years ago.  On other forums, when this is done it's called "Thread Necromancy":

"Oh forgotten thread,
Lost to the ages,
Arise and return,
To the frontmost pages."

Paul A. Cutler III - Pirate

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Posted by DRfan on Sunday, January 3, 2016 4:48 PM


What irritates me is having a locomotive (or rolling stock) that has been on order for months arrive damaged.  When returning the item, you end up waiting six more months only to receive another damaged replacement item.

 

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Posted by SouthPenn on Sunday, January 3, 2016 3:34 PM

davidmurray
 
blownout cylinder

Missing coupler springs!! Bang Head

Smacking the back of my head getting out from under the layout bench. 

 

 

 

Inability to install new coupler springs||||

Dave

 

 

Yes and Yes!

South Penn
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Posted by davidmurray on Sunday, January 3, 2016 3:13 PM

blownout cylinder

Missing coupler springs!! Bang Head

Smacking the back of my head getting out from under the layout bench. 

 

Inability to install new coupler springs||||

Dave

David Murray from Oshawa, Ontario Canada
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Posted by blownout cylinder on Sunday, January 3, 2016 2:21 PM

Missing coupler springs!! Bang Head

Smacking the back of my head getting out from under the layout bench. 

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/

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Posted by gator63 on Sunday, January 3, 2016 1:15 PM

For me it  is perfectionist. There is nothing wrong if you are one but for me I try my best to get it right but if I like some thing I do it. My pockets are not as deep as some so I make do with what I can. So in my world if something is a little wrong too bad. In my HO world everyone is happy. A fellow railroader once told me in his world he is God so he doe's what he likes and the rest can____ well you can fill in the blank. Have fun life to too short.  

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Posted by SouthPenn on Saturday, January 2, 2016 10:41 PM

Why can't Kadee put a larger hole in their trucks? I always worry that I won't get the pad level and straight. Maybe that's why a few pieces of my rolling stock look like they are leaning to one side.

South Penn
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Posted by Ho train lover on Saturday, September 19, 2015 6:57 PM
With me it's dirty track, constant derailment, and people who have a train collection and never run them. I understand brass locomotives, but regular models have to run free and in the wild, not sitting on a shelf for all of there lives. I'm not against people who do that but at least run them every once in awhile. At least in my opinion.

Favorite scales: HO and G 

Favorite gauges: anything in HO and G scale

Favorite era: anytime trains roamed the tracks, but I prefer steam

Favorite railroads: any railroad, but the Alaskan RR is on top

Favorite layout configuration: any layout that makes a continuous circle

Freelance vs prototype: freelance, kinda obvious from above

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Posted by herrinchoker on Saturday, September 19, 2015 1:07 AM

Having two Chessies that think of n-scale rolling stock as really neat dog crunchies. 

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Posted by SouthPenn on Friday, September 18, 2015 8:15 AM

Having the vacuum cleaner suck up details and parts from layout.

South Penn

South Penn
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Posted by oltmannd on Tuesday, September 15, 2015 11:25 AM

Presbyopia and general lack of finesse.

 

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Posted by chutton01 on Tuesday, September 15, 2015 9:28 AM

bing&kathy
   Knocking over paint bottles when doing brush work. Twice last night, Grrr!


Come now, you haven't drilled several large holes using a spade bit, in a sanded piece of, say 2" x 4" wood, to a depth such that Testors, Model Master, Floquil if you have some, et. al. sized bottles sit 50% or more of their height in the hole to prevent knock-over-ness?  So far I have not needed to secure the wood piece to the workbench, the mass of the wood (5" long) seems enough to prevent knock-over.
For that true "Micromark" touch (I'm sure Micromark offered something like this at one time or another - they've done everything else), I routed a small slot across the lenght of the board to hold brushes, paint stirrers (small metal rods cut from coat hangers), and so on.

An irritation that occurred to me after reading a different thread:
I print my home brew decals on clean, correct media (ink-jet specific, not laser printer specific) Micromark decal paper, as specified by the MM instructions (similar effects for Testors). Top coat with the recommended acrylic clear coat spray (it's nice when MM recommends branded items, as you can then get them 50% cheaper elsewhere like Michaels or even a LHS.  MM exclusives OTOH, well...), and let dry for the recommended period. Attempt to apply the decals to the (gloss-coated) model...and as soon as they hit the water the ink starts bleeding like anything, smearing into uselessness; then I have to fartz around removing them without messing up the underlying paint.

So, three irritations really:
1. Why no bleed-free decal paper/ink combinations as of this late date (yes, I know about Alps, few people have seen those printers in person, but ink jets...).
2. Why, even when you follow the instructions pretty much as exactly as humanly possible, are some processes still so darn hit or miss...
3. Why, when you search on-line for hints on how to prevent this, do you find 20,000 posters with 50,000 different opinions among them...

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Posted by angelob6660 on Monday, September 14, 2015 11:04 PM

When you're favorite railroad website won't connect, even though you know that its not down.

To make a good kitbash or stretch build structure, and not having supplies to make it until three months later and you totally forget what you're building because you forgot to draw out the plans in the first place. 

Modeling the G.N.O. Railway, The Diamond Route.

Amtrak America, 1971-Present.

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Posted by bing&kathy on Monday, September 14, 2015 8:19 PM

   Knocking over paint bottles when doing brush work. Twice last night, Grrr!

God's Best & Happy Rails to You!

Bing  (RIPRR The Route of the Buzzards)

The future: Dead Rail Society

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Posted by 12444 on Sunday, September 13, 2015 9:33 PM

I also hate shopping. Shopping is terrible.

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Posted by 12444 on Sunday, September 13, 2015 8:20 PM

davidmbedard
Tamyia glue bottle seal ring coming out. Running out of flex. Running out of cork. Friends who enjoy and process beans then come over to model. Shipping costs to Canada. Ebay sellers who refuse to ship to Canada. The C word. Atta-boys. People who expect an Atta-boy. A falling exacto knife hitting my foot. Detail parts that get lost in the carpet. Plastic couplers. Dull blades. Bad lighting. Not having a toilet in the basement. Dried paint in the bottle. Paint bottles that refuse to open. Being told not to bother because mfg X has announced the particular model. Mfg X producing said model and passing off a foobie as the waited for model. CA cement on your fingers. CA cement on the model where it should not be. Engineering plastic and it's inability to be bonded. Haters. Posers. Know-it-alls. Having to source out NOS to build a kit. People who buy brass and pass it off as their "work". MRC decoders. Tsunamis with no CV5. Factory light boards. Athearns use of bulbs. People who start a thread with a question and leave it unresolved. Trolls. Thin-skinners. Over weathering. Graffiti on RTR taking up room on LHS shelves. Loud furnace fan. Time flying by. Posters who finish part way through a wo
 

Those are prety much all the things I hate, and I have a few more. I hate running out of CA glue, especially in the middel of a project. There's also a hobby shop near us that overprices stuff way high (ugh).

 

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Saturday, September 12, 2015 1:09 PM

Autonerd
I just got back into the hobby after a 25 year absence, and it feels like the modeling has gone out of model railroading. Used to be you bought a good-running model and detailed it to your hearts content. Now you bay 3-4x as much for a model superdetailed with fragile plastic parts. I bought a couple of used P2K Geeps, but I'm almost afraid to put them on the club layout. We *run* our trains, and the ones that are out there on the pike look terrible from rough handling.

[rant] I'm so sick of people complaining about how the hobby has gone to poop because there are no "real" modelers left.[/rant]

I've been in the hobby long before RTR stuff, since the early 1970's, and I got news for you, not every one "enjoys" building and detailing kit stuff - we did it because we had to.  I still build a few kits here and there but love the nice prototypical RTR cars on the market - big time saver and they look better than many of the kits I've built.

If you want old school trains, I see TONS of blue box and other kit trains at trainshows on the secondary market.  Folks like you can be happy by going and getting that stuff which is plentiful.  If you live far away from a big city with a big train show, do yourself a favor and go visit one and stock up.  There, everyones happy - no need to rant!  (where is my Staples Button "that was easy")

There are some tables at the train show I go to that are full of parts such as Details West or Details Associates - not everything there but a lot to look through.  Join HOSwap or HOInterchange yahoo groups email lists and ask for parts - some may have some they want to sell.  I sold some parts such as Farr Air grills, 36-inch EMD roof fans, Cooling coils etc that I no longer needed.

One more rant: For all the money we're paying for locomotives these days, are the drives any better? Not really -- the 30-year-old Kato drive seems to be the pinnacle of performance.

Sigh.

Now I can tell you've been out of the hobby for 25 years.  There are definitely drives out there that are very smooth in HO - my Stewart Drives (ok, made by KATO).  My Athearn RTR SD45's run like KATO's, and many of my Athearn nicely.  Oh, how about Atlas drives - top notch and among the best.  Athearn Genesis run nice.  Intermountain SD40-2's, nice.  

 

 

 

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by FRRYKid on Friday, September 11, 2015 11:13 PM

Going back to what people have said about running out of supplies, how about running out of supplies when you don't have an LHS and everything hobby-related has to be ordered?

Another one for you (and this happened to me): Finding a certain paint that you loved working with, is a main color for your railroad, etc. and the company discontinues it and are unable to find anything to replace it. (A certain color of Polly Scale paint and no other line has it where it can be brush painted. I don't own an airbrush. Additionally, Montana's weather doesn't permit painting outside a good part of the traditional modeling season.)

Getting distracted while working on one project by finding other ones that need to be worked on.

[edit]

Also somewhat going back to what was already mentioned, how about having a shopping list but realizing you're finding things that weren't on the list, but you need anyway?

"The only stupid question is the unasked question."
Brain waves can power an electric train. RealFact #832 from Snapple.
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Posted by steemtrayn on Friday, September 11, 2015 4:30 PM

theodorefisk

3 - people who criticize someone else's layout that do not have a layout of their own OR boast that something you built is not prototypical, at which point you politely inform them that what they are looking at is a model and by the way it is my ^&%$$^&*(*&$# railroad and I will do as I  %&%#%*(( please. 

 

I can criticize your modelling all i want, because my layout is so much better than yours. I'd like to share pics, but I can't because it's still in my head.

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Posted by BRAKIE on Friday, September 11, 2015 6:23 AM

 
BRAKIE
I had one chap to tell me I was a disgrace to the hobby..

 

I hope you felt suitably chastised Larry.Whistling
 

Yes,I got all teary eyed and choked up over it.Couldn't sleep for several days.  Crying Surprise Smile, Wink & Grin

Larry

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Posted by theodorefisk on Thursday, September 10, 2015 6:33 PM

this is a great topic. 

1 - model companies that put paint schemes on locomotive for railroads that never had that type of locomotive

2 - lack of a tractor trailers such as grain hoppers, cement hoppers, etc for N

3 - people who criticize someone else's layout that do not have a layout of their own OR boast that something you built is not prototypical, at which point you politely inform them that what they are looking at is a model and by the way it is my ^&%$$^&*(*&$# railroad and I will do as I  %&%#%*(( please. 

I feel better now. Thank you. 

Ted

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Posted by Autonerd on Thursday, September 10, 2015 12:35 PM

I just got back into the hobby after a 25 year absence, and it feels like the modeling has gone out of model railroading. Used to be you bought a good-running model and detailed it to your hearts content. Now you bay 3-4x as much for a model superdetailed with fragile plastic parts. I bought a couple of used P2K Geeps, but I'm almost afraid to put them on the club layout. We *run* our trains, and the ones that are out there on the pike look terrible from rough handling.

And if you do still want to detail, good luck finding parts at the LHS. My local doesn't seem to have ordered DA or DW parts in decades, and what there is, is relegated to a few small boxes. Still at original prices 9half of today's), but how many Alco cab armrests do I need?

And I suppose I don't blame them. Why devote a bug chunk of space to $150 worth of bits and pieces when you can put $5,000 worth of locomotives in the same display area? Problem is, those of us who still want to detail have to buy retail or hunt at shows for what we *might* need.

I suppose there is *some* upside... I just bought Athearn handrails for an old RPP CF7 shell (on an OMI drive with sprung trucks!).

And if ever finish said CF7, instead of the answer I'd get 20 years ago ("Cool model!") I'll get "How much did that cost you? Why didn't you just buy an Athearn?"

One more rant: For all the money we're paying for locomotives these days, are the drives any better? Not really -- the 30-year-old Kato drive seems to be the pinnacle of performance.

Sigh.

[/rant]

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Posted by Autonerd on Thursday, September 10, 2015 12:23 PM

richg1998

I have read many model railroad magazines since the late 1940's and never saw anything like all the Rants I see in forums now.

And is that a bad thing? The mags are still great, but they are a one-way communication. Go back to th e1980s and try to find a bad review. "The starting speed was 20 SMPH, the handrails are a scale three feet to thick, and the molded-on grilles look like they were cast in the wrong scale. Overall, this is a fine model that will look great on any layout."

For modeling how-tos, layout reviews, etc, I still love the mags,  but if I want to know if a product is any good, I'll ask in the forums. :)

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Posted by richhotrain on Thursday, September 10, 2015 5:40 AM

JaBear

  

BRAKIE
I had one chap to tell me I was a disgrace to the hobby..
 

Haven't we all been telling exactly that to Larry for awhile now?   Laugh

Alton Junction

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Posted by "JaBear" on Thursday, September 10, 2015 5:23 AM

BRAKIE
I had one chap to tell me I was a disgrace to the hobby..

I hope you felt suitably chastised Larry.Whistling

"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."

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Posted by BRAKIE on Thursday, September 10, 2015 4:09 AM

arbe1948

Hobby Police!!  And their pronouncements on how one should properly enjoy ones hobby.

Bob Bochenek

 

 

I have had several of those to pm me over the past 14 months  and advise me that my Slate Creek Rail or Summerset Ry could not exist .

Well so much for  prototype switching roads like Progressive Rail.

I had one chap to tell me I was a disgrace to the hobby.. Oh well..I guess I wasted (at that time) the 52 years I spent in the hobby. 

Larry

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Posted by arbe1948 on Wednesday, September 9, 2015 10:40 PM

Hobby Police!!  And their pronouncements on how one should properly enjoy ones hobby.

Bob Bochenek

Bob Bochenek
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Posted by E-L man tom on Wednesday, September 9, 2015 2:45 PM

BMMECNYC

That tool that you just had in your hand 5 seconds ago, that you spend half an hour finding.

 

Yeah, well that's me too. And all this time I thought I was losing my mind! Could it be just a cluttered work bench?

Tom Modeling the free-lanced Toledo Erie Central switching layout.
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Posted by riogrande5761 on Wednesday, September 9, 2015 8:56 AM

Geared Steam

Forumites that begin a post with "I've been modeling for xx number of years" and 

thinking that anyone with less should never question anything they say.

Or owned and ran a hobby shop x number of years.  *ad nauseum*

+1000!!!

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by Hobbez on Wednesday, September 9, 2015 8:50 AM

richg1998

Irritated modelers. Never had this before the Internet forums.

I have read many model railroad magazines since the late 1940's and never saw anything like all the Rants I see in forums now.

Rich

 

I think you forgot to read the Railway Post Office that used to grace Model Railroader's pages.  That whole section was usually a complain fest.  Heck, you only have to look at this latest issue to see a reader rant against a certain advertisment....

My layout blog,
The creation, death, and rebirth of the Bangor & Aroostook

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Posted by Uncle_Bob on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 5:54 PM

Medical and car repair bills that come out of nowhere to obliterate my carefully-hoarded spending money.  This always seems to happen just as long-awaited items are due to arrive, so that, thanks to ¥€&*¡¢ limited runs, I'll miss these and therefore be forced to wait 4-5 years till they *might* be run again.

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Posted by richg1998 on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 5:46 PM

Irritated modelers. Never had this before the Internet forums.

I have read many model railroad magazines since the late 1940's and never saw anything like all the Rants I see in forums now.

Rich

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Posted by maxman on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 4:06 PM

Showing off your latest whatever and receiving the response:

"Oh, isn't that cute."

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Posted by Paul3 on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 12:35 PM

About Digitrax throttles: For one thing, you can't compare hobby products to mass produced ones (like cheap cordless phones).  Those cheap cordless phones are cheap to you, but they are very expensive to tool up.  The reason why they are cheap to you is that they sell millions of them, so the tooling cost can be spread out.  Meanwhile, in a hobby like ours (with perhaps 250,000 of us in the USA in all scales), tooling up custom throttles can't be spread out over too many units.  That's why Digitrax buys their throttle bodies from SERPAC (they have their own website).  Also, to modify the throttle would actually require an all-new application to the FCC, which is both time consuming and expensive.

To solve the battery issue, why not install a toggle switch at the top of the throttle?  I've done dozens of them at my club, including three of my own.  A simple sub-mini SPST toggle is all you need.

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by Phoebe Vet on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 9:26 AM

Receiving a birthday present gift certificate for your local hobby shop a week after it closes suddenly and without notice.

Dave

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Posted by Water Level Route on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 9:22 AM

davidmbedard
Tamyia glue bottle seal ring coming out. Running out of flex. Running out of cork. Friends who enjoy and process beans then come over to model. Shipping costs to Canada. Ebay sellers who refuse to ship to Canada. The C word. Atta-boys. People who expect an Atta-boy. A falling exacto knife hitting my foot. Detail parts that get lost in the carpet. Plastic couplers. Dull blades. Bad lighting. Not having a toilet in the basement. Dried paint in the bottle. Paint bottles that refuse to open. Being told not to bother because mfg X has announced the particular model. Mfg X producing said model and passing off a foobie as the waited for model. CA cement on your fingers. CA cement on the model where it should not be. Engineering plastic and it's inability to be bonded. Haters. Posers. Know-it-alls. Having to source out NOS to build a kit. People who buy brass and pass it off as their "work". MRC decoders. Tsunamis with no CV5. Factory light boards. Athearns use of bulbs. People who start a thread with a question and leave it unresolved. Trolls. Thin-skinners. Over weathering. Graffiti on RTR taking up room on LHS shelves. Loud furnace fan. Time flying by. Posters who finish part way through a wo
 

Ditto.  Also add limited runs of products.

Mike

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Posted by ONR FAN on Tuesday, September 8, 2015 9:12 AM

Buying enough supplies to start and finish a scene only to realize you miss calculated and your local hobby shop is out of what you need to finish the project.

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Posted by NorthWest on Monday, September 7, 2015 10:39 PM

Dust on the layout. Cleaning dust off the layout. Even covers in a finished room fail to eliminate the insideous menace.

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Posted by Southgate on Monday, September 7, 2015 10:24 PM

Dave, your videos most definately got my attention!  I wasn't exactly bluffing when I said I'd switch, but the part about tomorrow, well I don't have the bucks today. Embarrassed But I have built some critters too, and want them to work like yours there. Bigger engines too. I am now willing to give DCC a very serious look.

The only problem this could create, I'll be at the workbench working on locomotives, running them, running them, running them...I'll never get my scenery done! 

Thanks for the enlightenment. I will look into it. Dan

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, September 7, 2015 8:31 PM

When the little spring pops off the coupler.

Bounces around when it lands, and if you manage to find it, its hard to back in. Many times has one flung itself into oblivion while I am tring to slip it back in place.

 

-S. Connor

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Posted by BPoi on Monday, September 7, 2015 6:12 PM

SouthPenn
What irritates you in model railroading?

 

Seeing an otherwise great looking picture in Trackside Photos, then seeing an unsightly rail joiner.  As good looking as track can be--"it's a model itself" etc.--something needs to be done about rail joiners that are a scale 4' long and 1' thick.

 

 

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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Monday, September 7, 2015 4:04 PM

I consider myself friendly and cool headed, yet, one thing that really annoys me is whenever a visitor comes over..............sees a colorful piece of rolling stock or locomotive on my shelf...........and just HAS TO PICK IT UP! HmmBang Head  On two occasions detail pieces have fallen off. 

I'm much more alert to the "gotta-grab-gotta-see!" syndrome, and immediately caution the visitor the split second I see a hand reaching towards the shelf.

In the old days when my fleet was 90% Athearn Blue Box it was no big deal since, both, rolling stock and the "wide boy" locomotives were virtually indestructable.  But this is the day and age of $100-$200 priced rtr locomotives, $300 "high end" locomotives, $25-$80 priced freight and passenger rolling stock, and LOTS of thin, fragile parts. Strange wandering hands can quickly create a stress inducing disaster in just a few seconds. 

 

 

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by Geared Steam on Monday, September 7, 2015 3:42 PM

Forumites that begin a post with "I've been modeling for xx number of years" and 

thinking that anyone with less should never question anything they say.

 

 

 

"The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination."-Albert Einstein

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Posted by chutton01 on Monday, September 7, 2015 2:16 PM

BRAKIE
 
steemtrayn

Those Model Power "removable tanks" that keep showing up on ebay.

Don't write those off so fast..You an make a decent looking septic tank cleaning truck with those tanks or if you model a farming area you can make a decent looking non-potable  water truck.

Well, you could cut off the domes, repaint a bit, and start hauling Soy Sauce
Fiberglass Soy Sauce Tank

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Posted by BRAKIE on Monday, September 7, 2015 12:20 PM

steemtrayn

Those Model Power "removable tanks" that keep showing up on ebay.

 

 

Don't write those off so fast..You an make a decent looking septic tank cleaning truck with those tanks or if you model a farming area you can make a decent looking non-potable  water truck.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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Posted by dknelson on Monday, September 7, 2015 10:21 AM

My list:

People who do difficult things well without apparent effort.  Especially if they are young.  Grrr.

Being absolutely certain an article in an old MR exists and not being able to find it using the index.  (Sometimes the indexing is at fault.  Sometimes the article turns out to have been in the NMRA magazine Embarrassed)

Buying the same thing twice when I only need one.  Bad enough with structure kits or rolling stock.  Really annoying with books!   And really really annoying when I buy the same thing more than twice.

Dirty track/wheels bring operations to a halt during operating sessions.

How-to articles which I read and re-read and still somehow cannot grasp what the author is trying to convey to me (happens most often with wiring articles).  Related gripe: clinics where I simply am not understanding what the author is saying (again happens most often with wiring or DCC clinics, particularly where the clinician has an engineering background).

And somewhat related to the above - incoherent kit instructions.

Coupler draft gear boxes which seem to have been designed with the primary purpose of defeating the installation of Kadee couplers (admittedly this was more common decades ago).

Dave Nelson

 

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Posted by jfallon on Monday, September 7, 2015 9:58 AM

"For any Digitrax users, I sure wish they could design the throttle so you could keep the rechargeable battery in place and just put the throttle in a charging cradle... like my cheap cordless phone has. Sure, it only takes f few moments to put batteries in, or out, or back in again... I use four throttles when I'm operating. It gets old real fast!"

Digitrax throttle battery covers. As often as you need to replace batteries, the cover could have been made a bit less fragile.

 

 

If everybody is thinking alike, then nobody is really thinking.

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Posted by gmpullman on Monday, September 7, 2015 8:48 AM

steemtrayn

Those Model Power "removable tanks" that keep showing up on ebay.

 

Dave,

I had to search eBay and see what these things were, exactly. Now I see what you mean! The silly things must be reproducing themselves. There's even a seller that has a flat car with a pair of them in a Walthers Proto box!

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Model-Power-Gulf-Gasoline-6225-with-Tanks-/121482520215?hash=item1c48ec2697

Too bad you couldn't use them for fishing bobbers...

Ed

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Posted by BRAKIE on Monday, September 7, 2015 6:23 AM

I have absolutely no desire to model three rail tinplate of any prototype, Swiss metre gauge, German Marklin, British OO, Lego trains, any scale other than HO, roundy roundy layouts and the Union Pacific.

I've seen a Lionel O-27 layout built on 36" x 80" hollow core door that featured  Santa Fe trains.

Oddly that got my attention and should I ever need to change to a larger scale due to poor eyesight I kept that idea in mind..

Larry

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Summerset Ry.


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Posted by hon30critter on Monday, September 7, 2015 3:02 AM

Dan:

DCC is actually making big strides in terms of reducing engine stalling. The relatively recent developement of 'keep alive' technology is changing the 'stalling engine' problem significantly. My personal experience is with tiny two axle switchers (critters if you will). I love building them but in the past getting them to run consistently has been very frustrating. Every time I wanted to put one of them on the track I had to vigorusly clean the track or stalling was a given, particularly over turnouts. Then I decided to remove the flywheels and put a Loksound Power Pack in the space. The difference was amazing! Literally, there was no stalling. The critters would crawl through turnouts at speed step 1 without hesitation. One of them had code 88 wheels (since replaced) that caused the switcher to almost fall over as the narrow wheels dropped into the gap at the frog. Still no stalling even at the lowest speed.

Here are a couple of videos showing the switchers going through turnouts. The yellow boxcab has the keep alive. The CP 25 tonner did not have it installed when the video was made:

Maybe it is time to consider DCC. At least keep yourself up to date on the keep alive technology.

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 "JaBear" on Monday, September 7, 2015 2:17 AM

'What really seriously irritates me those are those miserable so and sos who are so convinced that their blinkered narrow ideas are the only correct way to model railroads and then make it their duty to loudly disparage others."

BRAKIE
Is that akin to complicating simple fixes or when HO modelers tries to answer  N Scale questions base on  antiquated knowledge or has no  real time hands on experience?

No it isn’t Larry.
I have absolutely no desire to model three rail tinplate of any prototype, Swiss metre gauge, German Marklin, British OO, Lego trains, any scale other than HO, roundy roundy layouts and the Union Pacific. However it doesn’t mean that I don’t get enjoyment observing those who enjoy their choice, and appreciate their efforts, more so if it is well done. Besides what right do I have to rain on others parade, None!
Cheers, the Bear.Smile

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Posted by Trainman440 on Sunday, September 6, 2015 10:34 PM

Not including what others mentioned, other things that annoys me in model railroading is inflation, and the time when you forgot to pretest the spray can for clogs/chunks. (I had to rebuy an expensive engine, because the shell was covered with paint that came out chunky/grity. )

 

Charles

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Posted by BRAKIE on Sunday, September 6, 2015 10:18 PM

Southgate
I run DC. If DCC absloutely guarenteed this, I'd switch tomorrow. You asked. Dan

I have found DCC/Sound is very touchy when it comes to dirty track so,if I will be using one of my DCC/Sound engines I break out the 91% alcohol,rags(actually I use 12 gauge shotgun cleaning patches) and bright boy before operation..No need for cleaning if I use the DC engines.

Larry

Conductor.

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Posted by BRAKIE on Sunday, September 6, 2015 10:09 PM

What really seriously irritates me those are those miserable so and sos who are so convinced that their blinkered narrow ideas are the only correct way to model railroads and then make it their duty to loudly disparage others.

Is that akin to complicating simple fixes or when HO modelers tries to answer  N Scale questions base on  antiquated knowledge or has no  real time hands on experience?

Some of the complicated answers to a simple question really irks me as much as "its my layout" or "do whatever you want" especially in  discussions on prototypical operations.

After all what does "its my layout" or "do whatever you want" have to do with a operation discussion?

 

 

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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Posted by Southgate on Sunday, September 6, 2015 3:46 AM

Nobody has even mentioned ABSOLUTE ENEMY #1 (at least mine). Everything else mentioned, and yes, I can relate to many of them,  all combined still pale in comparison.

The one thing I absolutely HATE in regards to this hobby is multiple metal wheels riding on all metal rails and somehow failing to produce a path of electrical conductivity.

That is far and away the single most annoying problem I face, and it alone has made me feel that  if I had to start over, I wouldn't.

Yes, I clean my track and wheels fastidiously, and it works. For maybe a couple weeks.  I live in a dusty area, and there is no way around it. And I pack weight into my locomotives to help.

My eyesight becoming blurry? Wear glasses. Coupler fails? replace with Kadee draft gear and "whiskers". Flinging tiny parts, I can deal with that. Losing that tool for 15 minutes? In 16 I'll be back under way. Derailments annoy, but the problem can be isolated and corrected. Snobs, know-it-alls and attitudes don't phase me the least.

Locomotive stalls?  AAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRGGGGGGGGEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Enemy # 2, is following at a fair distance. As already mentioned, it is that the worst failures are when someone's watching. Often, that's because of enemy # 1  

I probably have close to 40 locomotives. If I could somehow do so, I would trade 35 of them all for a magical way to make my choice of 5 that would just never stall. Or heck, anyone do the choosing, I'll take what I could get.

I run DC. If DCC absloutely guarenteed this, I'd switch tomorrow.

You asked. Dan

 

 

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Posted by steemtrayn on Sunday, September 6, 2015 1:49 AM

Those Model Power "removable tanks" that keep showing up on ebay.

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Posted by Santa Fe all the way! on Sunday, September 6, 2015 12:27 AM
FINALLY getting some time to do benchwork, grabbing the cordless drill and remembering you didn't recharge the battery :(
Come on CMW, make a '41-'46 Chevy school bus!
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Posted by hon30critter on Saturday, September 5, 2015 11:38 PM

BRAKIE
And above all accidentally dipping my paint brush in my coffee!!! Bang HeadAngry

LaughLaughLaughLaughLaughThumbs Up

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 vsmith on Saturday, September 5, 2015 10:24 PM
Shaking that brand new can of spray paint well, making sure that the temp is good, begin spraying and 10 seconds in having the can seize and die, or worse, having the can explosively sputter globs of paint everywhere. :-[

   Have fun with your trains

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Posted by farrellaa on Saturday, September 5, 2015 9:49 PM

What davidmbedard  said!

  -Bob

Life is what happens while you are making other plans!

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Posted by BobL609 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 6:17 PM

A model structure containing 24 window openings, 24 window castings and 23 pieces of glazing.  

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Posted by chutton01 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 6:05 PM

I'm going to add my votes to the small part conundrum - I'm good getting them off the sprue safely, and storing them in a small box so they don't vanish during construction, but still they can spring out of tweezers during construction. I have reduced losses a great deal by a) adding a small wall of styrene around the sides and back of the work area and b) adding a section of gutter (with ends capped) across the front of the work bench so parts propelled only by gravity (e.g. "dropsies") end up there. Still, I can't really build a roof for the workarea (I'm sure someone has do so for their workbench), so maybe I need to get an large floor mat with a color that will match no small part I ever would conceivable work with - maybe hot pink?  Blue tape works for securing the parts when cutting them off sprue, but its too cumbersome to use when they need to go into position.

Even though I clean, repaint, and keep my fine point art brushes stored bristle up, after a (too small) number of uses the bristles start going all over the place and I can't keep a nice point after that.

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Posted by gzygadlo on Saturday, September 5, 2015 5:59 PM

To get something that is a roadname that isn't produced much and having to pre-order 3-6 months ahead of time

Having passenger cars cost more than $30.00 as I think passenger cars are over priced.

 

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Posted by gmpullman on Saturday, September 5, 2015 5:28 PM

SouthPenn
I'll start with the metal clip that Athearn uses to hold couplers on. They don't pop off very often, but when then they do, they can cause a mess

I would put this near the top of my list, too! I have been systematically sorting through my freight roster and weeding out some of my old "friends" — rolling stock that has been with me for over thirty years, so some of the Athearn BBs with the clips are being retired. Worse yet are some of the Atlas cars with the two-piece plastic couplers (I don't know the brand of these**, I don't mean the EZ mate or McHenrys) and the box cover is glued on so as NEVER to come free without destroying the draft gear! A few of the Proto and Accurail cars have glued boxes, too but seem to pry open and can be re-glued if necessary.

** edit: I looked them up, Accumate

Another thing that bugs me are, well — BUGS. I don't know how many of you have basement layouts, and my basement is nice and dry, well lighted, has a frame wall with drywall and insulation, carpet, ceiling and spiders! Every time I have to get under the layout, or even in an aisle, I'm fighting off cobb webs. I've used all sorts of sprays, vacuumed, dusted and broomed and still... they're everywhere. I even have little tan spots on my cars from some sort of insect "droppings".

Not quite as bad as Mark H with a black widow derailing a train, although I chased a mouse out of a tunnel once with a fast US Mail train!) AND like Mark mentioned, the gremlins that show up only when you have visitors. Happens to me all the time!

Like Guy, I also find parts along the right-of-way and I wonder where they come from. I found a couple of Accurail pegs... and still haven't found the cars they fell out of! I have a huge can of various screws that I've salvaged from old computers and lots of other electronic gear that I find screws that I can use in place of those poor fitting pins.

Some other manufacturer has a sort of "brake beam" made out of "slippery engineering plastic" that I keep finding along the r-of-w. It looks like a shiny black TV antenna. Fortunately they haven't caused any derailments that I know of... at least until I have visitors again!

For any Digitrax users, I sure wish they could design the throttle so you could keep the rechargeable battery in place and just put the throttle in a charging cradle... like my cheap cordless phone has. Sure, it only takes f few moments to put batteries in, or out, or back in again... I use four throttles when I'm operating. It gets old real fast!

Still, the pleasures of this hobby outnumber the hassles by 100:1 (I do have my beer, and a bathroom near the layout Beer Big Smile Thumbs Up) so I have learned to deal with the inevitable oops moments!

I'll remember a few other things to add to the list but I have to go look for my fancy wire strippers right now... I think I left them—no wait, maybe I used them in the garage?  I'll get back to you on that.

All In Good Fun!!! Ed

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Posted by angelob6660 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 5:06 PM

Things that irritates me are.

Show the family a new freight car or locomotive and say " Don't you have that already?"

Small parts flying while installing them.

Not buying the locomotives and freight cars you need until you have money for, and find out that its sold out. Then try to find one on EBayAngry

A have a few more but can't remember.

The one that irritates me the most is not enough information on the time periods that you're working on, specifically on freight car paint schemes.

Modeling the G.N.O. Railway, The Diamond Route.

Amtrak America, 1971-Present.

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Posted by "JaBear" on Saturday, September 5, 2015 4:40 PM
-The very tiny scratchbuilt detail part that goes piiiinnnnngggggggg when it pops out of the tweezers, and must end up in an alternative universe, cos it’s never to be seen again.
-How all the parts that fit so nicely on the trial fit don’t as soon as the CA or solder is applied.
-How my rock steady hands suddenly start shaking once CA or solder is about to be applied; let’s not mention trying to paint with an 0 size paint brush.
-How, after dithering what  or how to make an item, when my extensive research fails to come up with any definitive information or photo, and then dithering even more over my educated guess, and finally having knuckled down and made the said item,  on the next totally unrelated search up pops the photo and accompanying caption that shows it all. And no prizes for guessing, my well considered educated guess, wasn’t!!!
 -Those who ask for an opinion and when they get a carefully considered opinion that happens to be oppose theirs, act all surprised and get all snotty!
-What really seriously irritates me those are those miserable so and sos who are so convinced that their blinkered narrow ideas are the only correct way to model railroads and then make it their duty to loudly disparage others.   Actually, come to think of it, I feel sad for them because of their inability to recognise and appreciate others enjoyment of the hobby and the efforts that have been put in doing so.
Cheers, the Bear.

"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."

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Posted by Guy Papillon on Saturday, September 5, 2015 4:40 PM

Pegs used by Accurail to hold the trucks on older cars. Last night, a box car I was switching lost its two trucks at the same time. I found the pegs a few inches away.

 

Guy

Modeling CNR in the 50's

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Posted by rrebell on Saturday, September 5, 2015 1:24 PM

You know, a lot of things bother me a little. The only thing that bothers me alot is people that give newbies (or others) wrong info. Case in point is people who push Homasote, now don't get me wrong, it is great for hand spiking, don't think I have seen better, but it tends to swell up when wet from scenery as most use water in their scenery making at some point or another and even without water, can expand up to 1/2" over 24', just look up the data.

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Posted by SouthPenn on Saturday, September 5, 2015 12:53 PM

All the different sizes of Code 83 track. Every manufacturer has their own specs, and none of them are compatable with someone elses. That means you must keep four or five different couplings on hand to lay some track.

One manufacture makes couplers that work well on their track, but not on their switches.

Another manufacturer changed the size of their code 83 track and didn't bother to tell anyone or change their couplers.

The local hobby shop only carries one brand.

South Penn
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Posted by DAVID FORTNEY on Saturday, September 5, 2015 10:41 AM

Know it all's on these forums

people who respond to your threads and add nothing to the subject

people who can't enjoy what you like and must set you straight 

people who criticize your choice of mfgs.

I think that is enough for now. 

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Posted by willy6 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 10:35 AM

Walking into the only hobby store in your area 35 miles away and remembering you left your shopping list at home on the layout, especially when you know one of the items is sheet styrene and you forgot the thickness.

Being old is when you didn't loose it, it's that you just can't remember where you put it.
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Posted by GP-9_Man11786 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 10:25 AM

Hmm, I could proably write a small book on this topic. Anyway, here goes:

1. People who think their approach the hobby makes them a "real model railroader." The ultra fine scale supper accurate prototype modeler is no more or less of a model railroader than the guy who builds a table top roundy rounder for his postwar Lionel stuff.

2. A certain model manufacturer continually pushing back the release date of a certain PRR N Scale steamer.

3. People stealing my credit card and forcing me to call my dealer (I know, that makes me sound like a junkie), due to item number 2.

4. The layout running great when nobody else is watching but acting up when the guys come over.

5. Not having a mini fridge in the train room, forcing me to walk down to the garage to get a cold beer.

6. seeking permission from the ICC (my wife) before making major capital purchases.

Modeling the Pennsylvania Railroad in N Scale.

www.prr-nscale.blogspot.com 

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Posted by luvadj on Saturday, September 5, 2015 9:40 AM

Rivet counters and people who judge others modeling skills too critically....

Just my .02......

Bob Berger, C.O.O. N-ovation & Northwestern R.R.        My patio layout....SEE IT HERE

There's no place like ~/ ;)

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Posted by carl425 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 8:32 AM

BMMECNYC
That tool that you just had in your hand 5 seconds ago, that you spend half an hour finding.

A variation on this is the object that you moved out of the way 5 minutes ago that is now in the way again.

I have the right to remain silent.  By posting here I have given up that right and accept that anything I say can and will be used as evidence to critique me.

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Posted by cedarwoodron on Saturday, September 5, 2015 7:30 AM

Rod Stewart mentioned that apron trick in one of his MR articles- proves that great minds think alike!

Cedarwoodron


 

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Posted by Hobbez on Saturday, September 5, 2015 7:23 AM

BroadwayLion
 
BMMECNYC

That tool that you just had in your hand 5 seconds ago, that you spend half an hour finding.

 

 

 

 

One time the LION spent 15 minutes looking for that tool. It turns out that it was in his left hand all the time.

 

ROAR

 

OMG, at least once a week.  Makes you wonder if your losing your mind sometimes.

 

My layout blog,
The creation, death, and rebirth of the Bangor & Aroostook

http://hobbezium.blogspot.com
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Posted by richhotrain on Saturday, September 5, 2015 6:56 AM

SouthPenn

What irritates you in model railroading?

My layout.   Super Angry   

Alton Junction

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Posted by BroadwayLion on Saturday, September 5, 2015 6:26 AM

BMMECNYC

That tool that you just had in your hand 5 seconds ago, that you spend half an hour finding.

 

 

One time the LION spent 15 minutes looking for that tool. It turns out that it was in his left hand all the time.

 

ROAR

The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.

Here there be cats.                                LIONS with CAMERAS

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Posted by BRAKIE on Saturday, September 5, 2015 6:02 AM

Getting down on all fours  with flashlight in hand looking for a dropped  part---only to find it defied the law of gravity and landed 6 feet away from where it drop.

Decaling and can't find the decal scissors or small tip decal brush that I just laid down.

And above all accidentally dipping my paint brush in my coffee!!! Bang HeadAngry

 

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt  Safety First!"

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Posted by RR_Mel on Saturday, September 5, 2015 4:52 AM

This is a great topic!!!! 
 
I have learned several things I hadn’t thought about.  The one that sticks out the best is the apron from Paul.  I put an Army-Navy white apron on my wife’s shopping list.
 
I also found out I’m not alone with many things that wind me up.  But I have to say that despite all of the irritable things that put me into orbit it’s still the best hobby in the world!!!!    
 
Thanks South Penn!
 
Mel
 
 
Modeling the early to mid 1950s SP in HO scale since 1951
 
My Model Railroad   
 
Bakersfield, California
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, September 5, 2015 3:56 AM
  • Detail parts to be applied by user on a $ 500 loco.
  • Product announcement years before it is released.
  • No manual for that $ 500 loco, leaving it to the user to find out how to open it and lubricate it
  • No standardized pin socket for a plug & play installation of a DCC decoder.

 

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Posted by Burlington Northern #24 on Saturday, September 5, 2015 3:46 AM
Lack of models for my roadnames(primarily the SP&S).

Lack of models owned by my roadnames(primarily SP&S again).

Lack of DCC friendly Alco FA/FB's(cash cow loco, come on Walthers.)

Lack of DCC friendly RS1-3s and other unique hood units(I'm talking like drop in friendly with no soldering).

SP&S #700 not yet being made(Looking at you KATO, the solid 4-8-4s you guys make needs a new member in N).

Seriously we can make one road wonders but not a C636 or more 424s or 425s or 415s in N?

Lack of '60's vehicles(civilian and military, from motorcycles to jet fighters) in N.

Lack of Info regarding prototypes operations and history/ shots of infrastructure/ rolling stock owned by prototype but not shown in books/ references.

There's more but I'll keep it to myself, as they do not irritate me as much as these things.

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 NittanyLion on Friday, September 4, 2015 9:22 PM

Measure twice, cut once, find out you had the wrong dimension in the first place.

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Posted by peahrens on Friday, September 4, 2015 9:03 PM

Well the kids are not here yet for the weekend so here goes:

10. I often can't find the list I started of things I want to be able to find because I may have put them in any of several places

9. My batting average of replacing the few Kadee coupler springs that become missing.  I have lots of extras but the poor replacement average is a man vs. machine thing

8. My hands shake sometimes when I'm working on small stuff. Which makes me worry about when they will always shake.

7. The one step forward, two steps back things.  Today I used a sound meter to help narrow the too wide range of my diesel sound levels across the fleet...at idle, horn, bell, etc.  It helped considerably, but I discovered a number of locos that go the wrong way, I think, so adding to the To Do list.

6. Keeping notes that aren't quite good enough.

5. Skipping the Do-It -Right-The-First-Time approach (intentionally) and having to fix something to make me happy later

4. Having to choose between model railroading and things I gotta / oughta do. Correcting this misconception is my primary goal.

3. Working nicely on a project and getting stopped by lacking the right tool or materials I could have foreseen

2. Getting so engrossed in what I'm doing, with the TV on, that I can't even tell you who's winning the golf match (or where it is this weekend)

1. That nothing about MR'ing bugs me enough to make me take another path

Paul

Modeling HO with a transition era UP bent

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Posted by tstage on Friday, September 4, 2015 9:01 PM

BMMECNYC

That tool that you just had in your hand 5 seconds ago, that you spend half an hour finding.

Totally relate to that one, BMMECNYC. YesStick out tongue

Two annoyances that come to mind:

  1. Weathering an e-n-t-i-r-e layout heavily and calling it "realistic".
  2. Canned video shots where all locomotives run the exact same speed.

Tom

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

Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.

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Posted by Hobbez on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:47 PM

Molded on details.  The wife calls me a car snob all the time for it, but molded on details just hit my eye so, so wrong.

My layout blog,
The creation, death, and rebirth of the Bangor & Aroostook

http://hobbezium.blogspot.com
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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:44 PM

I drop stuff all the time but I work over a smooth floor so I can usually find the stuff when it goes straight to the floor. What really bugs me is that piece that flies off into the ether after it pops out of your pliers, never to be seen again. It is especially frustrating when you can hear it land and you think you know which direction it went.Bang HeadSuper AngrySmile, Wink & Grin

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 Paul3 on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:37 PM

As far as modeling goes, I have to agree with dropping things as my #1 irritant.  That's why I bought a white shop apron (at an Army-Navy Store, of all places).  This apron is made of denim material.  What I've done is clamp the bottom of it to the underside of my workbench.  When I sit in my chair to work at my bench, I slip the neck strap over my head.  Now when I drop anything, the apron catches it and I don't have to get on my hands and knees with a flashlight looking for that one-of-a-kind part that is crucially needed to reassemble that expensive model.

The only change I'm going to make is to replace the neck strap with a breakaway type normally found on an ID necklace.  I've already tried to walkaway once while still tied to the workbench.  The bench didn't move, and I stopped abruptly.  Sigh

Paul A. Cutler III

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Posted by RR_Mel on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:27 PM

Things that irritate me:
 
1)   I’m very impatience so anything that fights me is at the top of the list.
2)   Dropping stuff, old age has dinged the feelings in my finger tips and it causes the dropsy’s.
3)   Having three pairs of glasses, X2 for reading & computer, X4 for working on my layout and airbrushing, and X6 for working on fine detailing at my workbench.
4)   Sales calls while I’m working on my layout, having to stop what I’m doing to tell them ‘if you want money I don’t want to talk to you.”
5)   Running out of supplies or parts without a local store to purchase more and having to wait for them to come by mail.
 
Dropping stuff stays near the top of my list when I’m at my workbench.   
 
Mel
 
 
Modeling the early to mid 1950s SP in HO scale since 1951
 
My Model Railroad   
 
Bakersfield, California
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Posted by crhostler61 on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:21 PM

Many things irritate me in the hobby. Most things outside my control. But...the most irritating thing for me is on one day operating a train on my layout and having it run flawlessly, then the next day running the very same train with no changes anywhere and having it derail repeatedly and sometimes piling up in my tunnels. Gremlins...critters...who knows. I have had black widows creep onto the layout and derail trains. Anyway. I'll typically spout out a long series of very colorful metaphors, shut down the railroad, and find something else to do for the day.

Mark H

Modeling in HO...Reading and Conrail together in an alternate history. 

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Posted by WVWoodman on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:17 PM

Winner - the tool that you had just 15 seconds ago.  Every I put something down I can never find it when I need it again. 

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 4, 2015 8:05 PM

That tool that you just had in your hand 5 seconds ago, that you spend half an hour finding.

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Posted by Catt on Friday, September 4, 2015 7:47 PM

Modelers with blinders that will not look at other than their chosen scale and make a point of telling me how much better their scale is than yours.

Their reasoning being that if it isn't their scale there are no useful ideas to be culled from the other scale (no matter what it is).

Johnathan(Catt) Edwards 100 % Michigan Made

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