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What was your first train?

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Posted by grandeman on Saturday, July 16, 2005 9:00 AM
My first was a trainset I got for Christmas in 1970-71. In the background of this pic is the engine in a shadow box my mom made for it. The photos with it are of me standing beside the BigBoy in Cheyenne, Wyo at maybe 7 years of age. I remember that day well. [:)]

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Posted by UNIONPACIFIC4018 on Saturday, July 16, 2005 7:29 AM
I received my first train when I was two. My Grandpa wanted insure that I got the train bug as early as possible. It was all Athearn blue box a Santa Fe geep, a few boxcars, a flat car and a caboose. I had hoped I would inheirit his collection (est value 20g's) but Grandma sold the "stupid trains" to the first guy who showed up for 2000.00
He was no fool he loaded as fast as he could and took off. Luckily while she wasnt looking I got his rivarossi passenger set labled from his railroad oh and his engineers cap.
Sean Steam is still king
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 16, 2005 12:30 AM
Sadly the man who got me started into model railroading I never met, he died when my mother was 12. My Grandfather had bought a HO train set for his kids way back when. Unfortunately (he was a rail fan and had a love of farming, both of great interest to me) his son never used it. After Thomas the train this was what I had. It started to grow the old F7 was pretty beat up so my dad bought me a UP Alco S unit. Then a few years later My other Grandfather bought me a Bachman 0-6-0 UP Greyhound. Now I have started a real railroad (4X8 on my dad's pool table).
James[C):-)]
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 16, 2005 12:11 AM
For Christmas 1978 I got my dad's 1949 Lionel starter set, nothing fancy like F3's or a Turbine, just a 1655 steamer ( 2-4-2 ) still the good running version before Lionel cheapend them up for the scout series. I still have it on our overhead Lionel layout and it gets run at Christmas time every year. I moved on to HO scale inside and G scale in the garden. Cheers Mike
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Posted by Darth Santa Fe on Friday, July 15, 2005 11:45 PM
My first trains were from my grandpa's old layout. He died when I was 1, so I don't remember him. The things we got from him include:
a Mantua 0-6-0 Big Six,
an AHM 4 wheel diesel switcher,
a Bachmann U36B,
some frieght cars,
some passenger cars and
some track.

My first new engine was a Life-Like N scale F40PH, undecorated.

_________________________________________________________________

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, July 15, 2005 11:30 PM
HO Scale Tyco set. There was a transformer (I can't believe I can remember this...) a circle of 18" radius track, a boxcar (light blue), a hopper car (black), an orange shell tank car, and a green ATSF flatcar with two 20' trailers. The loco was an Alco C430 painted in a white with red Canadian Centennial paint scheme. There was a matching caboose. I don't know if the paint was based on a protoype.

The set was waiting for me under the Christmas tree when I was six years old. I knew what it was right away by the shape of the box. I'll never forget that Christmas!
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, February 23, 2005 4:06 AM
myne was a hornby flying scotsman train set.[:)]
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Posted by aloco on Tuesday, February 22, 2005 11:40 PM
My first train set was Model Power, and the freight cars were made by Lima of Italy. The cars looked very similar to Athearn in terms of detail, but they had snap-in Talgo type trucks . The set came with a Santa Fe bay window caboose, a Pacific Fruit Express 50' mechanical reefer, a Southern 50' gondola, a Pennsylvania 50' flat car with containers, an oval track set, and a crossing gate. As for the locomotive, the set came with a Santa Fe FP45, but I wanted a model of a GM switcher and I asked the hobby dealer to substitute the Cox SW1500 in Union Pacific colours sitting in his display case. I got the switcher at no extra charge, and I had no idea that I was getting a better locomotive than what came with the set. I still have the reefer, and I recreated my first train set by acquiring some replacement cars of the same vintage. I had an Athearn SW7 to pull the train, but I got tired of it stalling on switch frogs and now I use a Life-Like SW9 .
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 22, 2005 7:02 PM
I received exposure to the hobby when I was about 5 years old. I really got my first experience with the hobby when I bought a Life-like train set at a garage sale. Now, over 8 years later, I am in the process of planning a layout based on the CSX railroad near my hometown.[8D]
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 22, 2005 6:32 PM
TYCO HO Chattanooga set with an 0-8-0 and six freight cars.
Got that from my granparents. Near the same time I also got an O27 set,
think they were both for Christmas, though I stuck with the HO.
I was about four or five.
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Posted by CBQ_Guy on Tuesday, February 22, 2005 4:10 PM
Lionel toy train set, O-scale, Christmas of 1956. I was three years old. [^]
"Paul [Kossart] - The CB&Q Guy" [In Illinois] ~ Modeling the CB&Q and its fictional 'Illiniwek River-Subdivision-Branch Line' in the 1960's. ~
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, February 21, 2005 4:28 PM
After seeing the layout that brought me to the hobby. I went to a hobby shop and picked up an athearn blue box GP38 which i still run even to this day.
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Posted by bluepuma on Monday, February 21, 2005 4:01 PM
My first train was a NYC Marx from Sears, when I was eight or 9, it was 0-4-0 switcher, had a tender and folded printed metal sides on the cars, the wheels were 4, but the trucks were dummy metal sides. The couplers, plastic, fixed knuckles, ran on the same Marx track as Lionel, got my folks to get me more track, two manual switches. Took care of it, maybe 3 years later, got my prized Lionel diesel, Lehigh Valley, red, like a big 44 ton GE with maybe 3 cars, and caboose, it was good to have a quality set, I appreciated it. Also from Sears Catalog. That was maybe 57, before I was 12, got into electronics in 59-60. Very much liked that train, got some more cars for 50 cents each off the Post Grape Nuts side panels, a dummy FA1, a stand in for the F7A/B sets that ran on SP, the couplers worked with the Lionel as long as every other car was Lionel, my flatcar melted on my south facing window sill, only got a metal one in N scale recently. Took care of that set, ran it on the patio slab in the summer, finally let the trains go at 16. But received an Atlas Santa Fe N scale 4-6-2 set in '69, luckily, parts still worked in 2000 when I tried running it again, the FA2 works, the cars and power pack worked for up to 4 new locos at onces. Now I've got MRC and lots of t rains.

My first train to see/like was a PE red car in Long Beach, Calif., the second was like a RS-2 in '53. The 027 was nice, hard to get on track when I got it, but N just has seemed right size since, I still dream of that long run the distance of that patio end to end with N scale. That was living room to den. :)
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 20, 2005 11:04 AM
Rubber band drive Lionel HO 0566 Texas special alco FA. I later redid the drive using Athearn U-boat trucks and an Athearn drive to get rid of the rubber bands.
40 years later, I still like em!!
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Posted by siberianmo on Sunday, February 20, 2005 10:43 AM
For RoyalOaker (Dave):

I really appreciate your response! Those memories are so vivid that I cannot understand why there is a "blank" when it comes to the two cars. I suppose given that other cars were added, somehow they all run together in my mind.

Now here is what I have found out. My set had Magnetraction - I don't think that was available in 1943. My set may have been one that was "promotional," in that only a limited number were produced. If so, that would account for why it does not appear in the Lionel catalog (1945-1969) that I have.

So, the set your father had and the one from my childhood may be similar in most ways, but when it comes to those cars ....... just can't say. Cannot remember a transformer car of any type - BUT - there was a gondola. Whether I added it or it was an original, again - lost in my aging head! The gondola did have cargo - not milk containers, but some other bulk type "thing."

You are so fortunate to have the set. I cannot tell you how many times I wished that those Lionel trains from my youth were still with me. Wow. But life moves on - when I left for the service - I left for good. That was that. Thirty two years later, I retired - and that was 16 years ago.

I have ordered a Lionel Polar Express set that will run on a shelf arrangement in my HO trainroom in my basement. This is the first Lionel I will have since my youth - although I did buy a set for one of my sons when he was in 4th grade (he still has it!). Anyway, the Polar Express will give my five grandkids something to enjoy when they come to visit Grandpa and his trains.

See ya.




Happy Railroading! Siberianmo
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Posted by Cox 47 on Saturday, February 19, 2005 8:21 PM
a American Flyer set in the early 50's Steam two cars and caboose with a circle of track that my Dad nailed to a 4 by 4 sheet of plywood that I later painted green with grey roads. I never got to add any other flyer to that but it was my pride and joy! Cox 47
ILLinois and Southern...Serving the Coal belt of southern Illinois with a Smile...
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Posted by ericsp on Saturday, February 19, 2005 7:55 PM
My first train was a set from a certain manufacturer that I got for Christmas from a netional toy store when I was a kid. When I opened the box I noticed some of the handrails had fallen off. I returned it, then when to a hobby shop to buy some real model trains (Athearn).

"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)

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Posted by Pruitt on Saturday, February 19, 2005 12:46 PM
I got one of the plastic Lionel 0-4-0 loco train sets in 1961, at age 5.

Later, when I was about 10 my grandmother gave me my uncle's old lionel set from the early '50s.

Still later, at about 14 I got into scale and wanted to build a layout in HO. A friend knew a guy who was a model train dealer. I traded all my Uncle's Lionel for a Tyco GP-20 CB&Q set. It was several years later that I learned how much the guy had ripped me off. The slimeball knew what he was doing, too. The Tyco set gave me a lot of fun and was the seed that got me really started, but retail it cost all of around twenty dollars at the time. Even then the Lionel was worth a lot more (unbeknownst to me). The guy could have least been honest and told me about it, but I probably still would have made the deal - to my young and inexperienced eye, the detail on that Geep was fine!
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Posted by Sunset Limited on Saturday, February 19, 2005 11:23 AM
I had a variety of small trains when I was young, but they were'nt really train sets that can really grow. I had a O scale Marx train set that was a figure eight and had the cardboard figures and signs. But officially what really started me was an HO scale Tyco set, with the small industrial switcher in a Santa Fe silver and red? That's weird come to think of it! with a Shell tank car, Swift reefer, UP gondola, Santa Fe- Pennsylvannia style caboose. I use the boxes for factories. I only have the switcher. This was a present from my Grandmother.
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Posted by BRAKIE on Saturday, February 19, 2005 10:48 AM
For me the first train was my Dad's O scale 2 rail even though it was his I called it mine! But,I was only 3 years old. [:D]

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 19, 2005 10:28 AM
1959 HO F unit red and white Texas Special. All I can remember of the freight were to me what were oddballs. The three head tank car and the flat car with light up nuclear power (waste?). Probably Marx purchased at either the base PX, Sears or at Western Auto, 29 Palms, CA. The sets snapt track was soon attached to a green painted 4x8 with painted roads and a rerailer at each road crossing for a total of four. It made six continental trips before the last of my brothers outgrew it. Remnants passed on to a brothers children 15 years ago and are still rolling. I think the count is ten kids hands it passed through. My folks saw one toy (excluding footballs and baseball mitts) that outlasted our childhood.
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 19, 2005 1:37 AM
Although my first train was a browser 0-4-0 saddle tank. My 1 most oddest getting
a modeltrain experinces where when I got my 4th engine. I first got this engine
in 1997 but I returned it because I didn't know how to operate it (I was seven years
old) but 3 yrs later I found the same exat engine (I had accidently got red paint on
the tender) & got it again, at a different toy's r us (it was life like).
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Posted by AggroJones on Saturday, February 19, 2005 12:31 AM
Unlike the vast majority, I never recieved any Lionel or American Flyer as a child. My parents would have never spent several hundred dollars on one item for one of their children. Never.
I did have various train toys as a youth, most of it came from the flea market.

The first set I got was a G scale, giant toy 2-6-2 and 3 freight car set for $30 at "Toys R Us". T'was a 6th grade graduation present.

"Being misunderstood is the fate of all true geniuses"

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Posted by BRVRR on Friday, February 18, 2005 11:06 PM
My first train was a Marx FT diesel (I think) in Baltimore & Ohio colors. Small oval of 3-rail track, a transformer, and about 4 cars, including the caboose. Wish I still had it! Lost in one of the family's many moves.

Remember its your railroad

Allan

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Posted by METRO on Friday, February 18, 2005 10:31 PM
I got my grandad's (by way of my dad) ancient Athearn F7 in Blue and Yellow Santa Fe Freight scheme. My dad had repainted it (from the original Canadian National colours) to fit his layout. I also got some very old freight cars, I remember there being a Great Northern 40 foot boxcar with opening doors.

The locomotive still runs, and I'm going to repaint it in my Selenian Lines colours eventually. As for the rest of the rolling stock, most of it has found it's way into my scrap parts box and will probably be recycled into something else soon.

The only other thing from my first oval of track to make it to my current layout is a pair of deck bridges that have been re-weathered.

~METRO
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Posted by camarokid on Friday, February 18, 2005 5:26 PM
It was a Marx. Can't remember much about it as it's been 50 years ago and I told my Mom she could give it to the Salvation Army (didn't use it much after discovering girls) when I joined the Marines. Sure wish I had it now, though. Ain't it great!!
Archie
Ain't it great!!!
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 18, 2005 5:13 PM
When I was 7 years old, my dad took me to the local swap meet in Portland, OR, and we picked up some trains. A Tyco 1976 set (u-boat and caboose), an Athearn F40, and a few pieces of rolling stock. That weekend, a 4x6 layout was born, and it stayed with me for over a decade. 19 years later, I still have the '76 caboose, and the Athearn, and almost all of the cars, as well as the station and the farmhouse from the layout.

-dave
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 18, 2005 4:49 PM
Actually, silverchampion, I'd forgotten about that one. I had a windup train, too, with a brightly lithographed metal engine. I was about three or four. My mom for years told the story about her son's first train. He and daddy were upstairs playing with it, and after about half an hour she heard a little voice ask, "Daddy, can I do it now?" She got a big kick out of 'my' first train! I'm not bitter, though. Dad and I had lots of fun on railfan trips and with HO in later years. Those were golden years. At 57, I'm still wound up about trains, thanks to him.
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Posted by twhite on Friday, February 18, 2005 4:16 PM
Mine was a wind-up Marx set with little bright red four-wheel passenger cars. New York Central. Second was a Marx electric freight hauled by a 2-4-2. New York Central. Third was an Athearn F-7 HO scale diesel unit. Southern Pacific (which made more sense than New York Central, seeing as I lived in California). Been HO ever since. Still have the Marx electric boxed away in the garage. It's still New York Central. Still runs. Every now and then I set it up under the Christmas tree.
Tom [:P]
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 18, 2005 4:14 PM
My first electric train was a Marx set the Christmas before I was 3. (2 2/3 yrs.)(1952) I had gotten a wind-up train the Christmas before but my parents got tired of me constantly asking "Wind it Daddy", "Wind it Mommy". So I got the Marx set (which I still have, a little worse for wear but it still runs) and the thing I remember most is myself and my cousin Johnny sitting on the couch watching my Dad and my Uncle John on the floor playing with the train.

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