SeeYou190I have ridden along on a couple of speeder events in the Scale Rails of Southwest Florida speeder back in the day. It was a lot of fun.
Had my share of speeder fun, too. Brought it home and the cat took over.
IMG_3144 by Edmund, on Flickr
Once the cat claimed it I couldn't get it back
Edison by Edmund, on Flickr
Regards, Ed
Good looking cat, Ed.
Rich
Alton Junction
Thanks, Rich
That was Mr. Edison. He was a cat of few words and he was friendly and a loyal companion. Another rescue from the GE plant where I worked.
Ed, since you are speaking in the past tense, I assume that he is no longer with us. If so, sorry for your loss.
My biggest hurdle to the speeder purchase is that my little Colorado really cannot pull it. The one in Bonita Springs also does not include a trailer.
I would need to rent a truck every time I went somewhere, and it I travel out-of-state, which I want to do, that would get expensive.
I really do not want to buy another vehicle.
I am sure this speeder ambition will pass soon. Just having a nice one so close by at a reasonable price is sparking desire.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
Kevin,
I am sorry but I feel your innability to readily descern those rather obvious differences between the Kato F Unit nose and the Highliners F Unit nose is unfortunate.
From the Highliners website kindly view the now uploaded nose images in my first blog post in this thread. Note too, it is the only "Thin Wall" F Unit cab (in plastic) and the singular F Unit with true, flush-fitting glass.
For too long this hobby has had to live with the unfortunate stigma that goes along with the term; "Toy Trains".
I believe this stigma too be the actual impetus for a great many towards fine-scale modelling. Otherwise, "make-believe" is the rule, and all the many negative connotaions that go with that term.
Sncerely, the 1987-introduced Kato nose was never hailed as "accurate". I suppose it is O.K., but it is proportionately too narrow, the windows are positioned considerably (by several scale inches) too high and inset too deeply. The pilot is much too wide below the quarter round, there is no requisite centerline vertical crease, the parting line is just awful... I can go on.
From my experience, sculptors see these variations both immediately and as glaring differences. Thank you.
--M405
A lot more than "10 Grand", or "100 hours" are required to acquire such "things". Trust me, on that.
Issac, firstly you do mean "none (F Unit noses) are perfect" don't you? And you are wrong in that regard as the Highliner's F Unit nose is demonstrably, objectively perfect.