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Demographics Poll

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  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: 4610 Metre's North of the Fortyninth on the left coast of Canada
  • 9,352 posts
Posted by BATMAN on Monday, July 27, 2020 10:01 PM

I have enjoyed reading all these responses, thanks to all those that contributed. I hope we get a few more before this thread drifts onto the back pages.

selector
Don't laugh...high fat, low carb, and intermittent fasting. 

Crandell, My diet is high fat low carb and I eat my first meal of the day at about 1400hrs and dinner at 1800hrs so I also follow the intermittent fasting routine and I have never felt better. I suffered horrible Arthritis pain taking Oxycocet and 6 Tylenol every day. Sugar (carbs) is the great giver of inflammation. I lowered my carb intake and within a week I was pain-free after years of a miserable existence. I don't need any help with pain relief at all. 

Staying fit keeps cholesterol, blood pressure and all other chemistry at perfect levels.    

 

Brent

"All of the world's problems are the result of the difference between how we think and how the world works."

  • Member since
    January 2012
  • 61 posts
Posted by Pantherphil on Monday, July 27, 2020 6:58 PM

Sixty nine turning 70.  Semi retired attorney from Maine.  Started with Lionels in the 50s and 60s with my dad.  Had a nice HO layout for my kids in the 80s and then switched to a nice little N scale Atlas Gulf Summit Line with my son in the early 90s.  Catzilla, a damp basement and my son growing up and losing interest led to scrapping that one.  Moved to a new house with a big dry walk in daylight basement without cats in 2008 and turned the remains of my old N layout into a new 4 x 8 which is now pretty much complete and operational.  Most locomotives and cars are 1990 Atlas, Kato and Bachman all still working after 25 years. Now adding a second larger N around the walls. Track work around 80% complete.  Should drive the golden spike this winter.  Both layouts are loosely based freelance on East Penn--  PRR, Reading, LV --  where I grew up and Northern New England--  Maine Central, Bangor & Aroostook, Boston & Maine, Central Vermont,--  where I have lived since 1980.  Mostly transition era.   I have a Lionel Polar Express set up for my 6 year old grandson.  Model railroading is my winter hobby.  Summer is for baseball (I play in a 45 and up league and umpire high school and rec league), golf, fishing and hiking/camping in the Maine Woods.  

 

 

 

 

  • Member since
    March 2012
  • 716 posts
Posted by trwroute on Monday, July 27, 2020 3:10 PM

I joined in March 2012 and have 570 something posts, and am a few weeks away from 57 years on this planet.

I spent many years as an alternative school teacher, but I am currently a professional home inspector.  I have a degree in business.

When our kids were young, I also spent a lot of time doing custom model building and painting for a couple hobby shops.  This allowed my wife to be a stay at home mom, so our kids never went to daycare.  They are now in their mid 20's.

I am currently in scale / gauge limbo.  I have some space to build a layout, but I have built so many different things over the years, it makes it hard to decide.  Am leaning towards N (which I began modeling in '74) or HO.  My dad was an HO modeler.

My other main hobby is motorcycle restorations.  I love to ride dirt bikes! 

Chuck - Modeling in HO scale and anything narrow gauge

  • Member since
    May 2014
  • From: Pennsylvania
  • 1,154 posts
Posted by Trainman440 on Monday, July 27, 2020 2:06 PM

Hi all!

Joined 2014 with 595 posts.

Age 19

Currently entering sophmore year of college (UIUC)

Major in Mechanical engineering, but have great interest in other engineering majors. 

I live 30 minutes outside of Philly, PA (Paoli)

Scale: HO

I got into this hobby simply because I loved the moving valve gear of steam engines. It inspired my choice of major. I entered the rabbit hole of model railroading since age of 8, and haven't seen the end yet!

Current layout is a 4'x8' due to lack of space. Layout is of a "The Virginian" MRR 2012 Project layout. 

I have 90% steam, but I got early diesels(F units) and a single Amtrak F40ph. I model the PRR in the late 40s and Santa Fe in the early 50s, but also have a little NYC,SP, and B&O mixed in. 

I mostly enjoy the restoration side of the hobby. You can tell because my unfinished layout has been on stand still for a while now!

I also enjoy Naval History (mostly WWII), playing World of Warships(ship game), Photography(Instagram: charles.li.photography), and circuitry.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Modeling the PRR & NYC in HO

Youtube Channel: www.youtube.com/@trainman440

Instagram (where I share projects!): https://www.instagram.com/trainman440

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Northfield Center TWP, OH
  • 2,538 posts
Posted by dti406 on Monday, July 27, 2020 1:37 PM

Hello,

I am 72 years old, and have been modeling since the early fifties, I got a Lionel Train set in the early fifties and graduated into HO Scale with a Gilbert Set followed by the Tyco General Set.

I have an Associates Degree in Data Processing and Bachelor of Business Administraton Degree which I earned in 1971.  I ended up working mostly for construction companies which accounts for my moves from my hometown of Toledo, OH to various locations including Loveland and Denver CO, Allentown, PA, Achorage, AK and now back in Cleveland, OH.  I have had the opportunity to work with our project managers and engineers on some challenging project like the dam on top of the mountain in New Jersey, the Alyeska Pipeline, the Red Dog Mine in Northwest Alaska and numerous building and electrical projects.  Also did some contract work with Timken, Goodrich Landing Gear and other manufacturers.  Spent 4 years training Harley-Davidson Dealers on how to utilize the Dealer Management Software including accounting.

I have never built a home layout but will be starting soon as I am now semi-retired and waiting for this disruption in the economy to start training a replacement at work. I have collected a lot of stuff over the years including a lot of brass steam engines back in my single days of the 60's and 70's. Have been weeding out the incorrect models and refining my modeling, painting and decaling skills over the last few years.

I have been a member of various Model Railroad Clubs in Toledo, Anchorage and Cleveland areas along with NMRA Division memberships in Toledo and Colorado.

In addition to model railroading, I sang in various church and dicocesan choirs, I bowled in numerous leagues and am the Secretary-Treasurer of two leagues here in Cleveland as well as a Director of the Cleveland USBC Association.

I don't know when I started on this forum, and my history here is all messed up when I changed my E-mail address, so my posts went down to "0" and my old posts all disappeared.

Rick Jesionowski

Rule 1: This is my railroad.

Rule 2: I make the rules.

Rule 3: Illuminating discussion of prototype history, equipment and operating practices is always welcome, but in the event of visitor-perceived anacronisms, detail descrepancies or operating errors, consult RULE 1!

  • Member since
    November 2013
  • 2,763 posts
Posted by snjroy on Monday, July 27, 2020 10:02 AM

I'm 56, I live in the Ottawa region, Canada. I have a post-graduate degree in social sciences. Not yet retired... Married, and we have two boys.

I'm into HO, HOn3 and HOn30. I loosely model CP, CN and the local logging and mining lines that disappeared from our area in the 1970s. I am finishing a portable O scale layout.

My dad was not a model railroader. But as a construction entrepreneur, he taught me a ton of things about wood, fasteners, tools and paint... I also like fiddling with old 1:1 scale cars. I own a 1986 Alfa Romeo that I enjoy driving in the summer.

Simon

  • Member since
    February 2005
  • From: Vancouver Island, BC
  • 23,330 posts
Posted by selector on Monday, July 27, 2020 1:31 AM

I see I wasn't the only one to retire in his early 50's.  In my case, I was flat-out told by my Base Commander, with three years until retirement, that I was not going to be promoted.  He said I was too close to retirement.  Well, his actual words were, "You're too old."  So, I took an unaccompanied posting to National Defence Headquarters to max out my pension (best six years in rank), and pulled the plug 13 months later.

At 52, I inherited my recently late mother's seaside property on Vancouver Island, and retired to a life of bliss.  Then two adult daughters returned home. Indifferent  So, I went to work teaching officer professional development exams on line.  One of them was Leadership & Ethics, also part of a BA curriculum in General Military Studies, but the course was generated and taught as part of the Department of Military Psychology and Leadership.  That lasted for about seven years in total.

I built two layouts in the basement of that place, then a third out in the loft above the 'barn', which was a barn-looking hip-roofed garage not quite double-wide.  Then, things started to show substantial wear and tear, and costs began to mount.  We decided to sell and move into town.  It was a happy coincidence that my aged father wanted to sell his place and move into a first-floor condo nearby.  So, we purchased his place.  The deal was sweet.  He dropped the price $10 if we agreed to take it as is (he didn't want to clean up the exterior.  He installed a new water heater, and the roof and deck were just five years old by then).  It also came with a nice garden maintained by my father, a master gardener.

I'm 68 now, have atrial fibrillation, and have recently dropped 22 pounds.  I used to be a competitive runner, but poor sleep, late night snacks, and sleep apnea helped to place me on the road to metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, and more serious heart problems.  How did I lose 22 pounds?  Don't laugh...high fat, low carb, and intermittent fasting.  Youtube has numerous videos on those subjects, and I strongly advise people to learn what they can about it.  Just be sensible; more is not better.  Customize your approach so you can live with yourself and so that others will live with you.  If anyone would like some tips or videos to consider, please send me a PM.  I have no fiduciary interest in any of this.  I just wanted to collect my pension for a few more years.

I model HO.  I'm not an expert in anything.  Pretty close with classical music, but that was 25 years ago.  I have moved on and forgotten much.  I also enjoy astronomy, choral singing, cycling, stand-up paddle boarding, running/walking pretty much every day, and of course continuing the legacy garden my father left me.  I peg my road as a protolanced hodgepodge of about six different roads between the time the Pennsy took possession of its first K4s 4-6-2 and the time the last CP T1-a 2-10-4 dropped its fire near 1959. 

  • Member since
    October 2001
  • From: OH
  • 17,574 posts
Posted by BRAKIE on Sunday, July 26, 2020 7:08 PM

I'm 72 and join the forum in 2001.. I model in HO although my real love is   N Scale..

I live in Ohio.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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

  • Member since
    June 2005
  • 4,366 posts
Posted by Darth Santa Fe on Sunday, July 26, 2020 5:01 PM

I joined June 2005 and have gotten up to just over 4,000 posts!

Turned 30 this year, but I've been in the hobby since I was 6 months old (proof is in our family videos)!

Homeschooled through high school, then got a 1-year community college degree.

Currently a technician and patent-holding product engineer.

Been in central IL my whole memorable life.

Main scale is HO.  Also have some N, 00, O and Standard.

Finished layout portion is 7' x 4', but will be expanded with a 5' x 3' + 4' x 4' section.

Era and area don't matter to me.  If it looks interesting, I'll get it!

Some other interests include, gaming, custom PC building, baking (not gonna lie, my cheesecakes rival the Cheesecake Factory), plastic models (cars, ships, etc), and some gardening.  I was also a hot Wheels collector until the product line got too huge and kind of boring.  I'm also a sound and video engineer at my church, and used to be really good on the piano.

It helps to have multiple hobbies.  Whenever I feel burned out on one, I can just switch over to another for a while!

_________________________________________________________________

  • Member since
    February 2004
  • From: Elyria, OH
  • 2,586 posts
Posted by BRVRR on Sunday, July 26, 2020 1:19 PM

I live in Northeast Ohio.

I'm 73 gaining on 74.

Joyce and I celebrated our 52nd anniversary this past June.

I retired from the Coast Guard in 1995, a LCDR, Naval Engineer, after 30-years.

I finished my BA, Business Administration from Columbia College and then a Masters in American History at Cleveland State. Worked at the Cleveland Police Museum for 10 years, starting as collection manager and ending a Curator of the museum.

Started my HO-scale BRVRR in 2003 and joined the forum in 2004. The original 4x4 layout in the utility room has expanded to the current 4x10 BRVRR in a spare bedroom.

My oldest grandson was fascinated with trains, particularly steam engines and Santa Fe Warbonnet diesels. His little brother, now 14, is still fascinated with trains, steam engines again. The first locomotive was a SF F7. I model the NYC and Santa Fe because I liked their liveries. We've added Pennsy and UP plus a few others that have fascinating steamers.

Its a rare week that goes by we don't go train watching at Olive Street in Elyria, Berea or other hot spots in northeast Ohio.

In addition to trains, I read a lot, maintain a website which will turn 16 next month, have mild interest in computers and digital photography.

I try to contribute to WPF weekly and to 'Show Me Something' as often as I can find time to do so.

The forum has proved to be a rich source of information and ideas for the BRVRR and is one that I check on almost daily.

Thanks to all of the forum participants out there.

Tags: BRVRR

Remember its your railroad

Allan

  Track to the BRVRR Website:  http://www.brvrr.com/

  • Member since
    June 2001
  • From: Anderson Indiana
  • 1,301 posts
Posted by rogerhensley on Sunday, July 26, 2020 5:55 AM

The earliest post I can find is 2001. I've been here longer than that.

I'm 80 and have been modeling on and off since I was 6.

Modeling this time since 1983.
 
At home, I model in HO Scale.
 
Retired at 63.
 
Live in Anderson IN
 
Have been a member of the Madison County Historical Society for the past 16 years.
 
Came into the society to put on a model train exhibit and am still there with a much larger 3 room exhibit. At the society, I model On30, O scale traction, S gauge, HO, HO Circus Train exhibit, N scale and O gauge (Lionel)
 
Have a layout at home since 1983 when I closed the hobby shop that I owned.
 
Am a member of the New York Central System Historical society for umteen years.
 
My Web site just turned 25. That's a lot of years and information for railroads running through Anderson (and Traction, too)
 
Been married over 50 years. The wife tolerates the trains. Is the recording secretary at the Historical Society.
 
Thoroughly enjoy Jerrell's Show Me Something. contribute occasionally.
 
That's enough!
 
 

 

Roger Hensley
= ECI Railroad - http://madisonrails.railfan.net/eci/eci_new.html =
= Railroads of Madison County - http://madisonrails.railfan.net/

  • Member since
    August 2003
  • From: Collinwood, Ohio, USA
  • 16,367 posts
Posted by gmpullman on Sunday, July 26, 2020 5:01 AM

Hello, hello —

 

<<<  Joined the Forum in August 2003

<<<  Looks like I have 10.3 k posts Whistling

 

I'll be cresting the big sixty-four here in a few weeks. Been railroadin' one way or another since I could walk.

Here I am with dad holding me on the C&O 2707 when it was placed on display in Cleveland back in 1957:

 April_RR_C&amp;O2707 by Edmund, on Flickr

Then a year or two later on the East Broad Top, riding the private car Orbisonia, of course:

 EJT_EBT_20_edited-1 by Edmund, on Flickr

We even tip-toed into Canada a few times for some of the great C-N fan trips through the '60s:

 6218_Chatham-cab by Edmund, on Flickr

Looks like I'm giving the Churchill Victory wave there.

Dad built a 4 x 8 layout in the basement for "us" but it wasn't long before I pretty much took control, with his help:

 First_HO-1962 by Edmund, on Flickr

Dad's father and his three brothers all worked for the Boston & Albany their entire careers other than a little stint in Europe in the early 1940s. I applied at one railroad, the Erie Lackawanna here in Cleveland back in the late '70s but I'm sure they figured I was just too young at the time. Actually I'm kind of glad I didn't actually get hired on the railroad as I later found a good job as a millwright at a GE plant here that lasted almost forty years. Retired from there in 2016 just one week before they announced they were closing the plant.

I did get plenty of railroad experiences thanks to several friends and acquaintances I've had along the way. Through most of the 1970s I was involved with a group running the fromer GTW USRA 2-8-2 4070:

 Edmund at Conneaut 4070_0002 by Edmund, on Flickr

That's me with the snarky look on the far right. We had some good times with that engine. I got to fire while double-headed with the Reading 2102 on the Pennsylvania Railroad main line on segments between Pittsburgh and Altoona back in '77. I actually was snoozing when we went around Horseshoe Curve. Lots of great railroad adventures back then. 

 4070_derby by Edmund, on Flickr

Another friend worked on Penn-Central and Conrail and I tagged along on quite a few runs with him. Yep, things were sure a lot different on the railroad back then.

 P-C 3246 by Edmund, on Flickr

I met my first wife, Sandi, through one of the other 4070 crew members and we  had two sons together then she died suddenly, aged at only 27. Since that time I've pretty much stayed with the model side of the hobby. Occasionally going on some private car trips and dabbled with running a Fairmont "speeder" for a few years. Even played dining car waiter for a while Surprise

 P1100033 by Edmund, on Flickr

Many of my scenes and equipment on my present HO layout are done with the prospect of recreating some of the memories I recall from my early railroad days.

Today my terriffic wife, Dee Ann, and her two children, plus nine grandchildren enjoy a quiet life out here in the "country" east of Cleveland. I built a "replica" caboose as our cabin in the woods and I get plenty of layout time, daily actually, since I really enjoy the benefits of this hobby. Dee Ann has quite a few hobbies of her own and we both stay busy with "projects" and activities.

There's another thread here about the cost of the hobby. In my estimation, for the relaxation and "theraputic value" of building models, creating scenery and running trains there's no substitute at any cost. Worth every penny!

Regards, Ed

 

 

  • Member since
    January 2014
  • 1,500 posts
Posted by ROBERT PETRICK on Sunday, July 26, 2020 12:08 AM

I've only recently gotten involved with The World's Greatest Hobby.

I was born in Florida, and for 35 years I lived three blocks from the ocean. Got tired of the heat, the bugs, and the tourists, so I moved north (Atlanta) to work on some very large high-profile multi- multi-million dollar engineering projects.

Got tired of the heat, the bugs, and the traffic, so I chucked it all and moved to a small little farm two miles outside a dinky little town in the mountains of west Virginia (west Virginia, not West Virginia).

Ten years ago, the economy changed and circumstances beyond my control required that I relocate. I now find myself living and working in an even dinkier little town in the high desert of Wyoming. And I build small little tiny structures.

Not yet retired, but starting to think about it.

Robert 

LINK to SNSR Blog


  • Member since
    January 2009
  • From: Maryland
  • 12,897 posts
Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Saturday, July 25, 2020 9:44 PM

I joined this and the Bachmann forum in 2008?

I am 63, born, raised and still live in Maryland. I did spend one year in my teens living in Huntington Station, on Long Island.

Originally from the area south of Baltimore, I now live northeast of Baltimore in Havre de Grace, where the mighty Susquehanna River joins the Chesapeake Bay.

I am married to my wonderful wife Donna for 26 years now. Before that I was married to my first wife for 17 years. I have three children from my first marrage, and Donna has three children from her first marrage. And 10 grandchildren in all......

Yes, I married young the first time.....it did last 17 years........

High School education with some college level study, mainly in Architecture and Historic Presevation.

Originally trained and started out as a draftsman, I have worked both in the field and as a project manager/designer in many trades, electrical, plumbing, industrial refrigeration, carpentry, architecture and HVAC. 

I have also sold MATCO TOOLS, been a shop foreman in a BMW store, and wrote service for several brands of new car dealerships.

Today, and for the last 20 years, I have been self employed as a historic restoration consultant, residential designer, and master restoration carpenter.

I began model railroading at age 10. My father was a "holiday modeler" setting up a large Christmas layout every year when I was young.

When I was 10, we moved into a house with a basement. My father set up the trains, building a nice "L" shaped layout with the two 5x9 platforms he had used for years in the living room for the holidays.

This time with elevated track, hidden staging, semi-automatic block control and more. 

He quickly turned over creative control to me.

At age 13 I was working in the local hobby shop, at age 15 I was accepted into membership at the Severna Park Model Railroad Club, and at 19 I was managing the train department of a another hobby shop.

I have been active in the hobby is some way all of my life, building equipment, belonging to clubs or round robins, even when I did not always have a layout.

I have always model in HO, and I have modeled the same era and prototype roads for the last 30 years.

I am a freelance/protolance modeler with my ATLANTIC CENTRAL which interchanges with the B&O, C&O and WESTERN MARYLAND. The layout is set in 1954, three years before I was born.

I run DC, using an advanced cab control system I designed, using Aristo Train Engineer radio wireless throttles.

I am about to start my 5th layout in my new to me retirement digs after just selling the 1901 Queen Anne home Donna and restored and lived in for 25 years.

I have a wide open rancher basement of about 1500 sq ft, I plan to fill it......

My other hobbies/interests include listening/collecting music (vinyl), HiFi speaker design and construction, guns/shooting, classic cars/hot rods (although I don't have any right now, I have restored several cars from the ground up), GRAVELY garden tractors, old houses (go figure), and studying history.

 

 

 

 

 

Sheldon 

    

  • Member since
    January 2004
  • From: Canada, eh?
  • 13,375 posts
Posted by doctorwayne on Saturday, July 25, 2020 8:31 PM

gregc

maybe people should update their profiles

 
I've tried, but can't get rid of the wrinkles on what used to be my "good side".
 
Wayne
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Huntsville, AR
  • 1,251 posts
Posted by oldline1 on Saturday, July 25, 2020 4:49 PM

Well, I just turned 70.

I was born, raised and lived in Maryland until I joined the US NAVY in 1969.

During my 6 years in the NAVY I found and met my wife of 46 years. She passed away almost 3 years ago.

I worked for an airline which changed names 3 times from 1978-2013 as an Aircraft Inspector. Worked on some great aircraft and also Airbusses!

That unfortunately had me stuck in Scum City (Houston, TX) for 35 years. I loved Texas but hated Scum City.

Retired in 2013 and moved to the NW Arkansas area in the mountains.

I started out with American Flyer as a child changing to HO about 1960. Around 1977 I changed to HOn3, then HO again moving into Sn3 then S standard gauge. In 1996 I again changed to HO and have been there since that time. 

I model the Western Maryland Ry in 1954 by proto freelancing. 

I started custom painting in 1973 having been inspired and taught the art by Joe Luber of Pro Custom Hobbies. It's my favorite aspect to this hobby.

Currently working on the layout in a custom built 14x16 building.

oldline1

 

 

  • Member since
    February 2019
  • From: Sacramento, California
  • 98 posts
Posted by L. Zhou on Saturday, July 25, 2020 3:47 PM

I am 16, will turn seventeen in November. I will graduate high school in 2022.

I joined last year, however I had been reading the forums many years before the point. 

I started off with HO scale and I am still with it to this day. Initially I was interested in only North American railways but my tastes have shifted overseas to China two years ago. I was fortunate enough to travel with my family every three years to China to visit our extended family and purchase a item from the Bachmann Shanghai shop every trip before it's closure.

My home layout is a 4x8 built on a foam core base with plywood reinforcement, started in 2012 and construction is still ongoing, albiet slowly. 

"No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel until he comes home and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow." -Lin Yutang

-

  • Member since
    July 2009
  • From: lavale, md
  • 4,677 posts
Posted by gregc on Saturday, July 25, 2020 3:04 PM

maybe people should update their profiles

greg - Philadelphia & Reading / Reading

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: west coast
  • 7,657 posts
Posted by rrebell on Saturday, July 25, 2020 1:25 PM

I am 67. I got a degree at the Maryland Institute in Interior design but got into renovation while in college and as I was about to graduate started asking "what am I really going to do for a living". Landlord at the time who I had given free labor to (was bored alot) said "have I got a deal for you" and sold me three shells of apartment buildings on the fringes of a good neighborhood along with a job. Retied first time at 29, then got married and had kids and there went retirement. Retired second time at 52.

  • Member since
    December 2014
  • 443 posts
Posted by Wolf359 on Saturday, July 25, 2020 12:32 PM

SeeYou190

 

 
Wolf359
I'm attempting to write a graphic novel, but it's on hold at the moment due to noisy, annoying neighbors.

 

I am sorry for this. When my middle daughter was in 11th and 12th grade we had a very noisy and annoying neighbor. She was in AP mathematics classes, and I could not believe how much more difficult this situation made concentrating on her studies.

Right now my neighborhood has the best set of neighbors we have ever had. Noise is minimal and eveyone is getting along. It has not always been this way.

I hope you can continue work on your graphic novel.

-Kevin

 

Thank you, Kevin. I wish my neighborhood was like yours. Something I forgot to mention is that I was born in Gainesville, (small world, isn't it?) but we lived in Ocala, then Pensacola, back to Ocala, and then here to Colorado Springs when I was 3, and we've been here ever since. All of us would love to move to Wyoming though. Just waiting for the door to open.

  • Member since
    January 2017
  • From: Southern Florida Gulf Coast
  • 18,255 posts
Posted by SeeYou190 on Saturday, July 25, 2020 12:17 PM

Wolf359
I'm attempting to write a graphic novel, but it's on hold at the moment due to noisy, annoying neighbors.

I am sorry for this. When my middle daughter was in 11th and 12th grade we had a very noisy and annoying neighbor. She was in AP mathematics classes, and I could not believe how much more difficult this situation made concentrating on her studies.

Right now my neighborhood has the best set of neighbors we have ever had. Noise is minimal and eveyone is getting along. It has not always been this way.

I hope you can continue work on your graphic novel.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

  • Member since
    December 2014
  • 443 posts
Posted by Wolf359 on Saturday, July 25, 2020 12:10 PM

I joined in Dec. of 2014.

Age 29.

Caregiver for my disabled father. (My mother is very petite and can't do the heavy lifting etc.) I'm attempting to write a graphic novel, but it's on hold at the moment due to noisy, annoying neighbors.

I live at home, in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Scale is HO.

Started out with O and G scale as a kid.

Current layout is a 6' by 4' oval with a spurr/team track that's about 3'.

Like BATMAN, I like steam the best, but can't resist things from all eras. (And road names).

Other interests include model building, (I'm currently in the finishing stages of building a Nebula class starship from Star Trek. (It's a kitbash of an AMT/ERTL Galaxy class Enterprise D model). Also drawing and reading. I also enjoy classical music.

P.S. Happy early birthday Mel!Happy B-Day

  • Member since
    October 2004
  • From: Blair, Nebraska
  • 205 posts
Posted by Boiler-man on Saturday, July 25, 2020 12:09 PM

First, thanks for starting this.

It's interesting to read the background of others on this site.

Age:  70

Semi-retired:  

Graduated from Portland, Oregon's Benson Polytechnic High School in 1967.

I have helped manage a small machine shop untill 1976 then started an automotive body shop specializing in the repair and custonmizing of corvettes which opened the door for being a fiberglass component subcontractor to Freightliner, did this for a few years until the economy tanked in the early 80's.

Worked in the boiler industry from 1985 through 2006 then went to doing Industrial Mechanical Project and Site Managent consulting which I still do.

I left Oregon in 2001 for employment in Wisconson, then to Nebraska and now in Tennessee looking for another opportunity. 

I think I joined this forum in 2004

I was given a Lionel train set for christmas in 1952, got interested in HO back in 1957 to 1962.

Left the model train world in 1962 and then started back up in 1974 with N Scale and have been there ever since.

Currently I have my layout in storage while my wife and I find a sutable house for us and my 27 ft, by 24 ft pennsula shaped layout.

My other interests are Corvette automobiles of which I have a 2011 Grand Sport and helping people with their business'.

Boilerman
  • Member since
    February 2008
  • From: Potomac Yard
  • 2,767 posts
Posted by NittanyLion on Saturday, July 25, 2020 11:49 AM

I'm 38 years old, married with no kids.  Grew up in Butler, Pennsylvania and am old enough to remember when the big gray building in Lyndora still said PULLMAN STANDARD on it.  Been in Northern Virginia and DC for 10 years now.

I'm a Federal contractor, currently working at FAA headquarters supporting a team that manages air traffic control systems.  Most of the last 10 years I spent at NASA headquarters in performance management. 

Did my B.A. in Political Science/International Relations at Penn State.  In less than a month, I'm starting grad school for my Master's in Transportation Policy, Operations, and Logistics at George Mason.  

No layout right now, only three modules for my modular club.  We bought a house last summer and the basement renovation has been very delayed from the original plans.  When I get the basement refinished, I'll be building a contemporary Pittsburgh area layout.

I like to watch college football and my Penguins.  I enjoy playing board games, but wouldn't call myself a board game guy because those people are way more serious about games I can't even wrap my brain around.  Like doing projects around the house, even if sometimes I bite off more than I can chew.  I also like going antiquing with my wife.  I resist a lot of things because I don't want to become a railroadiana guy, because you want to talk about an expensive hobby?  There's one.  I also enjoy American military history and particularly like the Revolution.  Found out my house is on land once part of one of George Mason's plantations, which I thought was neat.  Although he had 676 acres here and I have .25 acres of it.

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Bedford, MA, USA
  • 21,481 posts
Posted by MisterBeasley on Saturday, July 25, 2020 11:09 AM

I've been here since December 2004.  I've got over 19,000 posts.

I'm 73 years old.  My health isn't what it used to be, but until a couple of years ago I still played ice hockey and did downhill skiing.  Now I'm happy to just bicycle.

I also play Flight Simulator and I enjoy cooking, although dietary restrictions have taken some of the fun out of that.

After a divorce a couple of years ago, I'm a happier man but my trainroom is smaller.  Maybe this winter I will make a serious effort to reconfigure and reassemble the layout.

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

  • Member since
    February 2018
  • From: Flyover Country
  • 5,557 posts
Posted by York1 on Saturday, July 25, 2020 10:19 AM

Thanks, Brent, for starting this.  It's interesting to read the background of others who enjoy this site.

Age:  68

Retired:  Age 64

Educaton:  Master's Degree from Louisiana State University at New Orleans

Work:  Teacher, then school prinicipal for 42 years, much of it in the mid-city section of New Orleans

Now:  Middle of the Great Plains in a town of 7,000.  The nearest town over 7,000 is 50 miles away, and that town has only 55,000, which is huge to us

Joined Forum:  2018

Railroad experience:  Started my first layout in 2017

Model railroad:  N Scale, 'L' shaped layout 9 ft by 8 ft.  Modern locomotives, Union Pacific and BNSF.  I also have a Stratton & Gillette boxcar on the layout, thanks to Kevin

Discovery:  Like Bear, I was surprised to find that I enjoy scratchbuilding structures more than any other part of the hobby.

Other interests:  Not many.  I watch a lot of 1930s and 40s Turner Classic Movies on TV, and naturally enjoy time with my daughters and their families, although none of them live close to us

Forum Favorites:  Jeffrey's Trackside Diner and the Weekend Photo Fun!

 

Happy Birthday, Mel!  You, your modeling skill, and your website have been an inspiration to me in this hobby.

York1 John       

  • Member since
    April 2020
  • 526 posts
Posted by Ringo58 on Saturday, July 25, 2020 9:18 AM

I have a feeling that I am going to be the youngest on here!

- Just turned 21

- I work in a dodge dealership, actively persuring a job in the rail industry 

- Just moved into an apartment with my amazing girlfriend who let me put up a 8x2 layout in our living room, she loves it!

- Had a 4x8 when I was 10 and never progressed more than track nailed down to plywood

- started another 4x8 about a year ago, never finished becasue I was moving out

- now I am modeling WSOR in southern wi and northern IL, specifcally the fox lake sub with a taste of the CNW lake geneva sub ( now abandoned and a walking trail with some really cool bridges) 

- This forum has been a really nice experiance for me, lots of great guys with great advice 

- love cars and trucks as much as trains, my silverado is my baby. Hoping to buy another one soon and turn it into a drag truck with a big ole supercharger

 

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • 685 posts
Posted by Howard Zane on Saturday, July 25, 2020 8:49 AM

This is an excellent thread for so many reasons.

I'm now 82,

Played with trains since 1941

Influenced by my dad, two uncles who ran steam, and John Allen.

Started with pre med in college and after being tossed out after two semesters, then found a job on the Southern Pacific for almost a year.

Went back to college.... Parson's School of Design, NYU, Universities of London and Paris.....BFA Industrial Design

US Army throughout the 60's and became a professional pilot. Quit in 1977 and started an Industrial Design firm..sold it 10 years later and retired into model railroading as the co-promoter of the Great Scale Model Train Show and owner of the Piermont Division/brasstrains.com which was sold to Dan Glasure in 2005.

I built several model railroads...some for others, and my own which I think is well known.....HO and O scale. I have added two rather large additions over the years....henceforth the huge space.

I've been married to Sandy now for 18 years after two failed marriages. She is wonderful and supportive.

I began [website URL removed] building custom buildings and now rolling stock in any scale.

I also started a hobby shop in 1973 as a part time venture with mostly HO trains. I sold it in 1975 as I had received an incredible opportunity to fly as chief pilot for a major company which required 100% of my work time.

There is really too much other stuff, but my other passion is old timey and folk music. I play clawhammer banjo and guitar for a popular local string band with a bunch of other dinosaurs including my wife Sandy who is the fiddler. Our band slogan is "Live music by folks nearly dead". I once played fiddle, but Sandy and cats will not allow me to take it from the case.

 I grew up in north Jersey (Allendale and Teaneck) and moved completely to Maryland in 1966. Also I have never laid claim to having my groundhog fully baked.

Howard Zane
  • Member since
    January 2010
  • 2,616 posts
Posted by peahrens on Saturday, July 25, 2020 8:33 AM

I'm 72 and aging fast...

Grew up in NY / NJ and graduated as chem engineer from Penn State.

Got to fly F100s in the Air National Guard for 7 years.

I worked for an oil company (in LA & TX), retired at 58 and we moved from Houston area to central TX.

I think I've been on the forum since 2010.

I built a snap-track 4x6 HO layout in Jr High (in an apartment), a flex track layout (poorly done, many derailments) in 1980.  Did not get much past rioadbed & track stage and gave it up after a few years.

I got interested again in retirement and around 2008 I planned some modest layouts with XTrackCAD.  Started the current 5 x 9 or so layout in 2012, completing ballast & scenery this year.

 20200424_090128 by Paul Ahrens, on Flickr

I enjoy building structures, converting locos to DCC with custom speaker arrangements, and building car kits.  

I have a very strict UP period modelled, from a camelback & 2-6-2 to C44-9W & SD70M.  (I say I have a UP museum, and buy any loco I like.)

A favorite activity is running trains for the 7 grandkids and friend's young ones.  Thus I like the folded loop layout, which can run two trains handily.

My other key activities are family visits, golf, occasional vacations, and volunteer income tax prep for the AARP TaxAide program.  A prior hobby was restoring, starting 1991, a '66 GTO, which I sold 2 years ago.  

Though I never knew my grandads, one was a switcher engineer in Sidney, NB, and the other worked at the Baldwin Loco works in Philly.  A great-granddad was a construction supervisor on the parallel UP mainline additions in the late 1800s.

I got to chase UP #844 two times with my grandson in TX a number of years ago.  In 2019, a friend & I did a road trip for a 2-day chase of #844 led by Big Boy #4014 in the run to Utah.  I got to chase #4014 on its run through TX in October, including a special day with my grandson (then a HS senior).

I do enjoy the forum, and check it out daily.

 

Paul

Modeling HO with a transition era UP bent

  • Member since
    November 2013
  • 618 posts
Posted by DAVID FORTNEY on Saturday, July 25, 2020 7:25 AM

I'm 73 and have been in model railroading since I was a kid.

Been on the Forum off and on for many years

Started out in 3 rail O gauge, went ho, then to N scale and now back to ho to stay. . 

I model today's railroads, love big modern diesels with sound and dcc.

worked for 54 years in the grocery industry in various positions.

have lived in NE Pennsylvania my entire life

high school and some college education

have built many layouts in many scales, now building a ho layout. No theme just nice scenery to run my trains.

Dave

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