Have fun with your trains
Terry
Owner and superintendant of the N scale Texas Colorado & Western Railway, a protolanced representaion of the BNSF from Fort Worth, TX through Wichita Falls TX and into Colorado.
Check out the TC&WRy on at https://www.facebook.com/TCWRy
Check out my MRR How-To YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/c/RonsTrainsNThings
QUOTE: Originally posted by Bob Hayes ......As for heating my 4300 sq. ft. house, I have a Water Furnace.....
QUOTE: Originally posted by Javern I read it in USA Today http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/2005-09-08-energy-costs_x.htm
QUOTE: Originally posted by jnichols Let me tell you what I think about all this crapola... Before going to California last weekend, I was paying $2.85 for a gallon of gasoline in and around my home in Salt Lake City. Once in California, I was paying $2.76 for a gallon of gas (and this was in downtown LA). This is the first time in 20 years of my traveling to California where I could purhcase gas cheaper than I could at home. On a side note, there are two huge oil refineries less than 20 miles from my home. So what does it all add up to? Greed my friends and lots of it... [;)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by willy6 It was sad to see the hurricane's destruction and watching the looting being done by EXXON/MOBIL,SHELL, AND CHEVRON/TEXACO.It's a amazing how your stock price can increase by $9.71/per share the day after.............................
QUOTE: Originally posted by grayfox1119 Come on guys, the native Americans lived in tents all winter in the open, what a bunch of whimps, and they didn't pay one dime for gas or oil.!!
QUOTE: Originally posted by grayfox1119 Dave, my wigwam is a split entry, circa 1967. I have enough trees around the 6 acreas to supply my own wood, the axe takes no gas, so I don't spend a dime on wood. Split with spitting mall. That way I also keep in shape, no gut, so I can have an around the room 4x8 tables, and 2foot isles, because I'm not FAT ( ohh ohh, I can't say that these days...so sorry....lets say, not circumferentially challenged...how's that guys? )
QUOTE: Originally posted by cspmo QUOTE: Originally posted by waltersrails Thanks I could not agree more dthurman. [#ditto] If everone in the country would refuse to pay there bills, how long would prices stay that high?
QUOTE: Originally posted by waltersrails Thanks I could not agree more dthurman.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Allan Miller No matter how you heat your home, you WILL be paying more this coming winter season. If you cut your own wood to fuel wood stoves, you'll be paying more for the gas for your power saw. If you heat with gas, propane, or oil, you'll be paying more for that fuel. If you heat with coal, you'll be paying for the cost of getting that coal to you. And if you heat with electricity, you can be sure that the power companies will be passing their costs along to you. And, of course, the costs of everything else will be similarly affected, from the price of food items to the cost of heating the stores you shop in, including shipping costs for those trains you buy on eBay or elsewhere. What impact that will have on anyone's hobby budget depends solely on how well-off the individual happens to be; how well he/she has saved in advance for situations like this; and how much faith he or she has in the future prospects for a leveling-off of fuel prices. I, for one, figure we're in for a long term of $3 a gallon gas (at minimum), along with significantly increased prices on just about every consumer-related product and service. And this doesn't even take into account the increased costs you'll find for plywood and other lumber products when you want to expand that existing train layout. With the increased need for such products along the Gulf Coast, and the anticipated long-term shortage of supply, you can be quite sure that you'll be paying a king's ransom for such items.
QUOTE: Originally posted by TBat55 I wonder if a train with hoppers full of rocks could slow down a storm surge if the tracks were along the shore in an arc. Derail, yes, but better than nothing (and moveable).
QUOTE: Originally posted by Overdurff OK need a show of hands, how many of us want an oil refinery built in your neighborhood to increase the refining capacity, increasing supply, and lower costs? Part B: Who wnts to blame this latest disaster on poor *** and "W"? 3: Can we blame this all on the "liberals"? 4: Who hasn't seen the adds for the SUV's and trucks yet? 5: Who knows where Jerry Falwell is to lead us out of this mess? Will