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How did you get started in Model Railroading?

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  • Member since
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  • From: Memphis, Tennessee
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Posted by SD60M on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 10:45 PM
It all started on christmas when i was 5 and i got a tyco Santa Fe set with a F7. Then always passing by BN's Tennessee Yard going to my grandma's got me into modeling the BN. It's been the same ever since!
Long Live The Burlington Northern!
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Posted by ArtOfRuin on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 10:22 PM
I've loved trains all my life. My favorite children's show was "Thomas." When I was about 3 years old, I got a Playskool Express battery-powered toy train set. I was six or seven when I got my first electric train, one of those Bachmann HO sets with the pancake-motor, red warbonnet GP40. From about age 7 to 13, I would go to my LHS and buy expensive locomotives to pull my cheap consists on cheap track with a cheap transformer, while I'd railfan Guilford, Amtrak, CSX, Conrail, and MBTA from MBTA stations whenever I took it into Boston. I tried my hand at airbrushing at that time. I wasn't bad, though the models I painted were cars and fighter jets. I stopped modeling at 14 partially because I needed to save my money and partially because I was sick of being made fun of for liking trains. I never stopped liking trains and my friends would always roll their eyes whenever I'd gawk at a train at a crossing or going under an overpass. When that LHS I so fondly rememeber closed in August, he had a 50% off sale, from which I bought a Walthers Trainline kit to get me restarted in the hobby. I really have no space, so I'm concentrating on stockpiling a small fleet and learning how to superdetail. I'm 21, and I'm at a point in my life where I don't care if people laugh at me.
-Jonathan Then it comes to be that the soothing light at the end of your tunnel, Is just a freight train coming your way - "No Leaf Clover," Metallica
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Posted by mearrin69 on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 10:08 PM

Most certainly train-watching with my grandfather (dad's dad). I stayed with them most weekends when I was a kid (<8 or so) and we used to drive from place to place looking for trains crossing the road. This was in Smyrna, GA in the early- to mid-70's.

Later I got an O-scale hand-me-down to play with and then some HO-scale cars and a diesel from my brother. In 7th grade I made the mistake of tacking down some flex track and switches I had bought at the LHS to my bedroom floor (hardwood) - didn't hurt the floor any, really, but it got me driven to the model railroad club every Sunday for the next couple of years. I built an HO-scale module for our club layout and a few pieces of rolling stock and a new diesel - but, truthfully, I didn't learn as much as I could have and abandoned it during my late teens.

I've been buying Model Railroader and such over the years, though, always meaning to get back into it. Back in 2000 I had another round of yearning and picked up a great many how-to books from Kalmbach and other publishers. I wasn't quite ready to build something then - but I think I might finally be ready to take the plunge.

I'm actually kind of glad I waited...modeler forums, DCC, and other modern conveniences are, I think, going to make my first layout a very fun experience.

Cheers,
M

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 10:03 PM

It's been fun to read all these stories!
I find that if you're like me, they are treasured memories of days gone by, but it's always fun to take a trip back down memory lane once in awhile!

Happy MRRing!!!

    Ed
 

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Posted by Kenfolk on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 9:43 PM

It started with train watching with my father, next an American Flyer set, and then first of many passenger train rides in 2nd grade; later, I built HO layouts "for my sons".

I've had the good fortune to know a couple of steam locomotive engineers and fireman, and hitched a ride in the cab once.

One of my sons worked as a conductor for a steam excursion train.

Now I model n-scale to get "more train in less space".

By the way, that American Flyer layout is still running in my brother's basement!

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Posted by georgev on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 7:54 PM

My first memory was of the Lionel train that went under the Christmas tree, and I loved it. Had two track switches, the milk car that throws out the milk cans, and the big Lionel Trainmaster transformer.    I can remember begging to have it left up after Christmas.  When I was probably 5 I got to keep it in my bedroom for maybe an extra month!  I got my first HO set when I was 6 - a Varney Little Joe docksider (which I still have - and it runs!), two cars and a caboose.  After some months of sectional track on the floor, Dad built a 4x6 layout from one of the track plans in the Atlas layout book complete with block wiring and remote switches. 

I still have some of the rolling stock from those early years and memories of trains that have gone to the great boneyard.  I remember the Christmas after the train layout was built - a three car Athern PRR passenger train with the rubber band drive F7.  I loved that train.  Dad took the time to build some kits with me including a Bowser Pacific (which he built!), so I think that's where I first learned the trade, so to speak.  He was handy with tools but wasn't a model railroader - this was just something he did for his train obsessed kid so I guess I was pretty lucky.   

That was almost 50 years ago and I've been at it ever since except for 6 years in the Navy and few years here and there to renovate the houses we moved into. 

George V.

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Posted by SMassey on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 7:21 PM

WIth me it started kinda slow and worked its way into the madness that it is today.

When I was 4 my Dad bought a Tyco Chatanooga Choo Choo Diesel set for the X-mas tree.  I didnt get to play with it that year and I could only play with it while mom and dad were around the next 2 years but it didnt matter.  The train was my favorite part of getting the X-mas tree up and even after I got all those shiney new toys I still played with the train. 

The next step in my adiction was every now and then I would see a BN freight pass by the tracks near my house.  I loved watching the trains.  Also once a year we would go to a park/beach that had tracks running by it and I would see the BN, UP, and Amtrak trains while I was there.  I loved trains so much that my grandpa made me a small wooden train that had one car and a caboose that I could pull around on a string (the Tyco only came out on X-mas so I needed another train to keep me busy) 

And the final nail in the coffin was when I was about 6 or so and my Dad brought me to a train show at the Puyallup fairgrounds.  That was it I was hooked and I had to have one of those in my toy room... bedroom... heck I am not picky I will take any room in the house for the trains it didnt matter to me.  Dad put some track down on a 4x8 sheet of ply and I had a loop of track that worked for a little while but we couldnt get to the far side to throw the switch for the passing siding and things happened to the layout so we took it down.  It would not be until 20 years later that I would get the chance to build my own layout in a spare room.  It didnt last long but I learned alot building it, it did work good, and that spawned 2 other layouts, the last of which I am still building. 

Through almost the entire 20 years I always had a locomotive sitting on my dresser or bookshelf reminding me that I was going to build my layout someday.  Durring my high school years my buddys would tease me about the toy train sitting there but I told them that one day  I was going to be building my model empire and that usually shut them up. 

Today my son's favorite toys are his Thomas The Tank Engine toys.  I gave him more than just train toys but he seems to prefer the trains over the dinosaurs, cars, and airplanes.  He is too little for video games and bikes so I hope when he gets to that age he still likes trains enough to learn more about them.

 

 

A Veteran, whether active duty, retired, national guard, or reserve, is someone who, at one point in his or her life, wrote a blank check made payable to "The United States of America" for an amount of "up to and including my life."

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Posted by twhite on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 6:59 PM

Marx. 

Yah, MARX.  Don't laugh.  Wind-up train right at the end of WWII.  Ran the thing to death, Dad realized that maybe I was ready for electric.  Another Marx.  Ran THAT one to death.  When I was 12, Dad bought me--yes, ANOTHER Marx!  This one was a deluxe set with track all over the place, actual 4-wheel trucks on the freight cars, neat accessories (my buddy had Lionel and he was always jealous of how MUCH my set had, LOL!).   Transferred my love to HO when I was fourteen, courtesy of a high-school buddy who wanted to get rid of some Athearn metal and Silver-Streak wood and Ulrich and Varney metal cars because he was going back into O scale.  Saved up my money, went out and bought an Athearn Rubber-band drive F-7 in SP Black Widow.  Curved my own track (with fibre ties), bought a DC Rectifier to convert my old Marx transformer to DC.  Had a ball.  When I got to college and had an apartment, bought a REAL Athearn set--F7 A-B set with about eight freight cars and Atlas 18" radius.  Set it up on the rug, drove my room-mate NUTS!  Sneaked out one day and spent the ASTONISHING  sum of $45.95 for my first Brass Loco, a PFM Santa Fe 1950 2-8-0 (still have it, still wobbles along as cute as it ever did, though the motor is now an NWSL can).  Worked it up from there over the last 40+ years.  Oh, BTW, still have most of the Athearn and Varney and Ulrich and Silver Streak cars on the present layout.  They may not look as detailed as the newer cars, but they've got a lot of mileage and a HELL of a lot of my affection!

Tom

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Posted by perry1060 on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 6:40 PM

When I was little, my Dad got me and my two older brothers into model airplane building and flying. He taught us to scratch build from balsawood, from kits, and then to fly what we built. This was in the early 60's. From that time forward, my two brothers went on to compete in pylon racing, pattern contests, scale contests, quickie 500 racing, and they became well respected among the hobby.

I flew one pattern contest and then lost interest in planes. They went to the flying field one day and I had Dad's workshop to myself. I started building my first diorama in that workshop and it was a log cabin setting. Later I sent up the Lionel train on the carpet and in the middle of it I set up my log cabin. That was it --- I was hooked for life.

My oldest brother became a world class builder of pylon racing rc planes --- but sadly enough the paints and resins took their toll on him and he passed away many years ago from a form of blood cancer. My other brother, who is a commercial pilot, still loves to fly planes with Dad to this day.

Every now and then I go to the flying field with them and take the transmitter for some mode one action but it scares them to death when they see me fly. Trains on the other hand never crash into a million pieces --- so I'm not too scared to let them have the remote.Smile [:)]

Enjoy the hobby Perry
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Posted by ssgauge on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 4:16 PM
My Dad bought an American Flyer set...supposedly for me...when I was six months old, in 1947.  I still model in S gauge, although I long ago switched to scale, rather than tinplate. 
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Posted by luvadj on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 4:12 PM
My grandfather got me started with an HO set when I was 4. I still have the picture in my toolbox. From there I went to post-war Lionel 027 (sure wish I had that stuff now). These days, I'm into both, HO & N-scale, but I mostly spend my time with my N stuff.

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 Dave Vollmer on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 4:06 PM

My father has been a model railroader since the '50s.  I used to watch him scratchbuild structures, often based on photographs an measurements he took in the field, mostly in Pennsylvania, but some in New England.

I gotmy first HO trainset at age 7 or 8 (I forgot which Blush [:I]) for my birthday.  It was a Bachmann freight set with a Sante Fe warbonnet F, a yellow Chessie boxcar, a blue Rock Island hopper, perhaps another car (?), and a Sante Fe wide-vision caboose. 

My father built me a layout based on Bob Hayden's Yule Central (it's a 4x6 in one of Kalmbach's project books).  I ended up learning my own scenery and structure building on that layout.

The rest is history!

Modeling the Rio Grande Southern First District circa 1938-1946 in HOn3.

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Posted by gmcrail on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 3:48 PM

Old thread or not, it's worth sharing... 

 Me?  1945, Christmas - age 3 1/2.  We're visiting my grandparent's house in Jackson Tenn, and on Christmas morning, I found, spread out all over the dining room, a huge set of pre-war Marklin #1 gauge electric trains.  Freight, passenger, steam, diesel, all German prototype, with lights, and everything..  Buildings, switches, accessories galore.  All salvaged from the ruins of WWII Germany by my father.  I didn't eat anything all day.  By mid-morning I could run everything myself.  Hardly looked at any other presents.  The "bug" bit hard and deep, and hasn't let go since. Big Smile [:D]  Incidentally, I still have those trains, and they still run.

---

Gary M. Collins gmcrailgNOSPAM@gmail.com

===================================

"Common Sense, Ain't!" -- G. M. Collins

===================================

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Posted by TheK4Kid on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 2:42 PM

My Dad always setup his Lionel trains around the Christmas tree each Christmas from when I was about 4 years old, but the following Xmas season, my Grandfather who worked for Sear and Roebuck (remember when it was called Sears and Roebuck ?).
Anyway Grandpa ran the hardware and roofing dept in the Fort wayne Indiana store, and took me to work with him one Saturday(December 1956) since I was staying with Grandpa and Grandma that weekend.
There was HUGE  Lionel layout setup in the main display windows, and Grandpa took over to see it, and let me stay with the guy who was running the trains. I remember that there were about 3 or 4 ttrains all running at once!!! I was on cloud nine! One orr two were steam engines and they had smoke coming out of the smokestacks!There were all kinds of Lionel accessories and building setup with these trains. I was there until lunch time until Grandpa and I went home  for lunch, and I stayed with Grandma while Granpa went back to work. My Grandpa passed away the following April.

 

When I was 10 years old (1961), my folks got me an HO trainset through Sears, and I still have it.It was a NYC diesel, and Dad later bought me a small Lionel steamer swtcher engine.My Grandma later added to it for one of my birhdays, and bought me some track, and a couple of HO rolling stock, one was the rocket launcher caar, and a gondola car with some crates that set inside of it.It was red in color, and the crates were a light tan in color.I've been hooked evwer since and got serious about building a layout last fall.I've been collecting HO rolling stock, kits, etc, for the last ten years, with an eventual layout in mind.
My dad also worked as a brakeman on the Pennsy out of Ft wayne Indiana and I remeber going down to the "Baker Street Station when I was maybe 5 to 6 years old, and we'd wait for Dad's train to come in, and watch off in the distance for the big plume of smoke from the steam engine, and listen for the steam whistle, then it would roll into the station!
6 years ago, my dad passed away, and I now have his Lionel trains.They are vintage about 1935.A Commodore Vanderbilt steam loco and and another 2-4-2 steam engine.A set of freight cars and a set of passenger cars.They all still work.

 

TheK4Kid 

Working on the "Pennsy" 

in HO 

 

 

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Posted by zeis96 on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 1:36 PM

Don't mind me, I was working on my benchwork and then the kid went down for a nap so I'd thought I'd dig up this old thread and post something. I remember always asking for a trainset for Christmas but never did get one.Sad [:(]   I also remember when I was really young I was at an Aunt's house and going up this metal spiral staircase led to a room with a train set. I remember nothing more about it other than it wasn't hooked up and how bad I wanted to play with it. Well 2 years ago we bought a house with a basement and I may now finally get that trainset I've always wanted!

hi

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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 26, 2006 3:14 AM
Back in 1996 when I first moved back to wichita, I spent a while living with my grandparents since our house wasn't completly ready yet. My grandpa would take me to the train museum and train store every saturday, and I would see those big shiny Santa Fe GE's smoking, and I fell in love. I first ran my grandpa;s lionel PA1 with that magnet traction thing, and then I started collecting HO scale. Christmas of 1996 came, and there it was under the tree for me, an athearn box! I opened it to find a BN F45 with all the parts (which of course I lost but still have the engine) In christmas of 1997, I gto a life-like set, that I ran the guts out of and ended up burning the little things that make it tick. In january 1997, BNSF heritage 1 paint was starting to show up (oh dear [:(]) and I went to the train store with my dad and bought a really nice athearn engine (SP F7A) In summer 1998, I got my 4x8 board that I still own. I used life-like power-lock track on it up until 2000, and then we finally laid the roadbed and track. Then came christmas, and it had to go into storage for 6 months.I was so depressed! Then, over that period of time I got athearn kits, and plastic buildings, and ran the guts out of that SP engine. It was on consignment for 3$, so not much loss there. It was made when atheran had the box before the ATSF one, so it must have been older. I got an engine replacement, and a new shell for it. I bought some passenger cars too. Now my layout is nearing its 8 year mark, and still going strong pulling little unpainted plastic men and women [:D] Looks like I did my homework for today..
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 26, 2006 1:08 AM
My earliest recollection of trains was when my Grandma used to haul me back and forth from Idaho to Texas during big brawl no 2 - when I was about 8 my stepfather stopped in Fort Dodge Iowa - he had an Uncle who was with the Northwestern - he must have been a hostler - and we went out to the roundhouse and I got to ride in the cab of something while the unit went around on the turntable prior to being put into the roundhouse - I never forgot that experience.

My brother and I shared a Lionel set as a Christmas present in 1950 but my pappy wasn't really into things like hobbies so I soon tired of it and it fell into disuse - that trainset is now in the attic of my brother's garage in Michigan. I had developed a moderate interest in ship modeling. I kindled an interest in railroad history before I ever got interested in railroad modelling.

My interest in (model) trains dates from the summer of 1962. The Air Force had sent me to Vandenburg in California for some special computer training and wound up extending me there for two weeks to be an observer at a missile shoot - they also left me broke (do you know how many places there are to party in the Golden State???) I had enough money for two cartons of cigarettes ($1.76 a carton) and a little left over so I went to the exchange to replenish my reading material - Playboy was my preference and Vandenburg was one of the few military installations that carried it on their newstand but they had the old issue so I browsed the magazine rack for something else to tickle my interest -------- and the July, '62 MR and Craftsman caught my eye. I bought them and for the next two weeks I read and reread them. I was hopelessly hooked!!! And I've stayed hooked!!!
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Posted by wjstix on Friday, June 16, 2006 10:48 AM
Well, pretty standard for my era I guess. By the time I was born (1958) our family lived along the Minneapolis Northfield and Southern Ry. so I grew up seeing real trains every day, plus our local (Mpls-St.Paul) daytime kid's show was "Lunch with Casey Jones" so I watched that every day too. I had an American Flyer "S" train set as a kid (including Atlas S-Snap Track), actually had a very early "N" trainset in the later sixties.

On Saturdays, there was a local 15 min. TV show sponsored by the Woodcraft Hobby Shop on Lake St. in south Minneapolis. My dad was a mail carrier out of the Lake St. Station, and starting around 1969 became their mailman. Thru them, he got a Tyco HO train set and an MRC Golden Throttlepack for me for Xmas 1971. That and the Dec 1971 copy of MR got me started on 'serious' model railroading.
Stix
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Posted by RyanLaP on Thursday, June 15, 2006 2:51 PM
I got started by going to a railroad museum that had alot of trains running and thats when I got started. I started with a N scale Railking set and I had a ball with it. After that I got use to playing with HO trains since N scale was to small for me and it did not give me much intrest. HO was better for me since I get to use DCC which I have used on one of my layouts and it gives me a chance to put more scenery on my layout.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 15, 2006 2:35 PM
I only really got started recently. I'd always enjoyed layouts I'd seen over the years in stores, rail museums etc, then about three years I came across a layout by chance on the internet, and thought 'why don't I build one?' I only wish I'd started years ago!

My first train set, however, was a Fleischmann battery-operated one, when I was about 10 (that was back in the mid 'Sixties). My mum got fed up of buying the big, expensive batteries it used, so got my dad to fit a mains plug to the leads. Luckily I wasn't touching the rails when I turned it on, as there was a loud band and a flash, and the loco was fused to the track!

Not so sure I'm much more sensible now...
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Posted by bill e on Thursday, June 15, 2006 1:57 PM
An Illinois Central freight ran about a half mile or so behind the house where i grew up in Mississippi. My friends and I used to play on and fish underneath the trestle. When I was 11 or 12 , I got a Lionel HO starter set for Christmas. Then I started buying a whole lot of assorted track, accesories, rolling stock and stuff, but I never had the space to set it up, nail it down and leave it set up.
About six years ago during a most stupid phase I liquidated the trains and all my hockable assets for cheap. But the love of trains stuck with me.

A couple years ago I ran across some old issues of model railroader at a library sale. I was especially intrigued by the n scale layout you could build on a door in the Dec. '93 ish. Soon after I bought a starter set and kept adding to it. I think I'm hooked.
Bill Eaker
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Posted by Renegade1c on Thursday, June 15, 2006 12:50 PM
My dad lived two block from the Union Pacific Main Line in Cheyenne when he was a kid. His dad had given him some american flyer and he had been interested every since. I have been exposed to trains since birth and will never lose interest. I was 3 weeks old on my first train trip here in Colorado. Been interesting in trains and model railroading ever since.


Colorado Front Range Railroad: 
http://www.coloradofrontrangerr.com/

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Posted by CSXFan on Thursday, June 8, 2006 11:08 PM
I received a Lionel set and a 4x8 sheet of plywood for Christmas when I was 6 and then switched to my uncle's HO set when I was 12.

And it all went downhill from there... [:D]
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much space...Wink
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Posted by Texas Zepher on Thursday, June 8, 2006 10:38 PM
You mean there are people out there that haven't been doing this forever?

As far as I was born with box cars for red blood cells delivering the oxygen in my blood. I've always had, at least one, electric train set...... I remember a layout mounted on the wall that folded down. I had plastic pu***rains that fit on the track, and occasionally my parents would let me get out the electric ones and run them. That was before I was in school.

I remember driving on the bridge over the rail yards (SF, D&RGW, MP, C&S) in Pueblo (1962-1964). I would cry because there were interesting trains there and my parents wouldn't stop so I could look at them.

In grade school I owned (still own) exactly one train magazine - "Practical Guide to Model Railroading". I memorized the book and wore out the cover and first few pages. I still refer to it from time to time. Then in Jr. High I discovered MR and Trains in the public library, then in a drug store that I could actually buy. In 1974 I actually got a first subscription! Only missed one year since then due to a snaffu while I was away at college.

This topic seems to surface regularly in June:
http://www.trains.com/community/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=38780
http://www.trains.com/community/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=7143

It is a shame we can't combine them somehow.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, June 8, 2006 7:42 PM
I was raised by a railroader, so I grew up around trains, complete with helping unload sheep from a stock car and a ride in the cab of a switch engine at about 8 years old. So I guess you could say it's in the blood.

Followed the hobby off and on over the years, but you know the drill; family, job, money, etc. About all I could do was watch the trains, never had time for modeling.

Well, kids are all growed up now, not so many demands on the ol' time & money, and the new house backs up to a busy mainline, complete with siding. [:D]

As several others before me have said, "The rest is history." [swg]
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Posted by SilverSpike on Thursday, June 8, 2006 7:18 PM
I would like to point out many of the positive influences that have assisted me in creating the current incarnation of my model railroad layout. They are listed in chronlogical order.

My grandfather who first introduced me to HO scale model railroading when I was just a little tike coming down the pike. He modeled his layout in the 1950's and early 1960's after the Rock Island railroad with pulpwood operations centered around a prototype that he and his father ran. He owned the Pioneer Timber Company in Pineville, Louisiana and provided pulpwood to local paper mills in Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi. His father was also a dispatcher for the L&N railroad at the Eunice Depot in Louisiana for many years. I need to pick my mother's brain for more details on this railroad family history.
My parents who gave me an HO scale railroad set for Christmas one year in my pre-teen days. It was the carpet floor model, but my dad soon recognized that it needed to be lifted up and soon I assited him with my first real layout back in the 1970's. It was a 4X8 plywood express in the shed and then we added another 4X8 attached to the first with 2X2 sheets of plywood and the control panels in the middle. We had a lift up bridge and it was mostly just running trains around, with little switching. This layout was dismantled after I moved out of the house and attended college at LSU in Baton Rouge, LA.

Ryan Boudreaux
The Piedmont Division
Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger era
Cajun Chef Ryan

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Posted by Milwhiawatha on Thursday, June 8, 2006 1:37 PM
The beginning I was about 3 we lived in a condo and my dad had a small layout in the basement had some good ol' Rivarossis going around and factoried nothing to eliaberate. Then we moved and trains got lost for years. the mid 90's came around we got into Dept 56 Dickes collecting ad wanted a train to go around the town. We didnt like the size of O or s scale so I purchased a Dickens village eletric train which was for the Dept 56 set. Well that started it all. Now after those years The Christmas layout got as big as it can, and the layout in the basement changed 2 times and being worked on slowly due to my business keping me busy.
Owner & Operator of Midwest & Northern RR and Midwest Intermodal (freelanced HO)
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Posted by dean_1230 on Thursday, June 8, 2006 8:53 AM
my brothers had gotten train sets for christmas... and then one day we were over at my cousin's and they had a box full of old train stuff that they were about to throw out. we took it instead and for the next several years, we played with it. it was mostly tyco stuff, but we supplimented what died with new stuff. and actually had pretty good luck with the Tyco warranties and repairs.

of course, it all sat in a box for 20 years while i was in college and starting a family. about 5 years ago, i had my dad send it to me. i then started supplimenting it with better stuff. starting with Athearn blue box and p2k.

and the rest, as they say, is history.

Dean
  • Member since
    July 2001
  • From: Shelbyville, Kentucky
  • 1,967 posts
Posted by SSW9389 on Thursday, June 8, 2006 4:10 AM
My first train set was from the back of a cereal box when I was five. It did not last long. I graduated to my Dad's handed down Ives tinplate set and the following year got a Lionel set for Christmas in 1962. Scale modeling in HO took hold in the fall of 1969 and I am still at it today.
COTTON BELT: Runs like a Blue Streak!

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