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Lego trains

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Lego trains
Posted by screamingman13 on Saturday, June 24, 2006 6:50 AM
I have been recently thinking about building a layout in "L-gauge" (lego). Has anyone ever attempted anything like this before? If so, what happened.
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Posted by areibel on Saturday, June 24, 2006 8:35 AM
I know of several people that have, my brother in law had one that was probably 4' by 16' on two sheets of plywood.
He had three sets he combined, along with buying more track. It's kind of a novelty, but it isn't set up to do much except run loops, so it got boring pretty quick.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 25, 2006 9:30 PM
I bet you could operate... be a rebel!! I'm 100% behind you. (lovin those legos)
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Posted by larak on Sunday, June 25, 2006 11:07 PM
Did it when I was eight years old then graduated to HO. Legos are great things but not very "realistic". I literally had thousands of pieces and managed to not loose about half of them. Now I play with legos with the grandson.

If I remember correctly, the lego track at that time was approx O gauge, I used the standard lego motor with loco wheels and battery power pack and there were never derailments. I had turnouts and a crossing. It was a long time ago [sigh]

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Posted by emdgp92 on Monday, June 26, 2006 12:21 AM
I remember the older Lego trains. All I had was the pull train...later motorized. Lego's enlarged their trains a bit--the old cars I have look tiny behind one of their F units.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 26, 2006 4:21 PM
Well my sister has an older "3" rail set (the contact's ran down the middle and all the track was for was traction). I liked it. Couldn't build much beyond small switch engines or small 2-6-2's. But when it came to diesels and electrics, look out. They had instructions on how to build a Crocodile, after i saw that whenever my sister rebuilt it into the DB-9 I would rebuild it into the Croc...until mom yelled. The Croc looked a lot better...

Thier not bad. I keep looking on ebay for sets for her, and of course the rolling stock is interchangeable with the newer stuff, but that old 3 rail stuff was the best. Turnouts, Switch's, tips, dumps, coupling, uncoupling. We had a lot of fun. Hers got tobe 5"x12" with a 8 foot passing siding, coal loading facility, passenger facility and frieght depot.
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Posted by TrainFreak409 on Monday, June 26, 2006 4:30 PM
You can do some awesome things with Legos...[:D] I haven't played with them in a while.

The Super Chief F unit is a great unit. I have one, and motorized it. Good looking Lego train.[tup][tup]

I would say GO FOR IT. It'll be cool to see the kind of stuff that you come up with.

Scott - Dispatcher, Norfolk Southern

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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 26, 2006 4:57 PM
The San Diego Model Railroad Museum has a Lego layout. Interesting stuff.
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Posted by zgardner18 on Monday, June 26, 2006 5:34 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by CARRfan

The San Diego Model Railroad Museum has a Lego layout. Interesting stuff.


Actually they don't or they don't anymore. I was just there and didn't see one.

I still have all the parts to the old Lego train that they first had. It's in a box in my storage unit, just sitting there waiting for my son to get older. I still have all my legos that my brother and I played with. I have about 6 plasic bins full. I couldn't throw them away when I knew that someday I will have a son.

--Zak Gardner

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Posted by reklein on Monday, June 26, 2006 5:54 PM
You should probably google up LEGO and see what they have to offer. I've seen some pretty cool setups at shows out here in the Pacific NW and was impressed with the novelty and play value. The younger kids 4-12 just love em.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 26, 2006 6:06 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by zgardner18

QUOTE: Originally posted by CARRfan

The San Diego Model Railroad Museum has a Lego layout. Interesting stuff.


Actually they don't or they don't anymore. I was just there and didn't see one.

I still have all the parts to the old Lego train that they first had. It's in a box in my storage unit, just sitting there waiting for my son to get older. I still have all my legos that my brother and I played with. I have about 6 plasic bins full. I couldn't throw them away when I knew that someday I will have a son.


Bummer, they had one a the last time I was there, probably 2 years ago. I have some pictures of it here somewhere...
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Posted by TrainFreak409 on Monday, June 26, 2006 7:47 PM
Here's a great link for some Lego Trains. There are so many possibilities with Legos! It's the easiest form of scratchbuilding!

http://www.mocpages.com/directory.php/7

Scott - Dispatcher, Norfolk Southern

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Posted by ModelTrainman on Monday, August 7, 2006 10:56 AM
I have a 4x5 LEGO model railroad that depicts Harry Potter, the Super Chief and a BNSF GP38-2, haven't used it in a while..... it's great I'm sure you'll LOVE lego trains(check out ebay for the electric ones and the Super Chief, I think all they have now is RC, but they still carry the GP38-2  and the intermodal cars . I'm trying to operate my trains.
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Posted by ModelTrainman on Monday, August 7, 2006 11:08 AM
there's a book, getting started with lego trains, that you might find interesting, search on amazon, it comes with instructions for building a gp38-2, an intermodal car and a reefer car. I think you'd like it! also check out this website, www.trains.com they have info about lego trains as well as MR.
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Posted by sfrailfan on Monday, August 7, 2006 11:19 AM
There was a HUGE Lego layout at the NMRA convention. This is from the 2005 show.

check link:

http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y47/tigercraft/dscn5744.jpg
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Posted by ModelTrainman on Monday, September 11, 2006 5:27 PM
bump
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Posted by rayw46 on Monday, September 11, 2006 6:33 PM
There is a Lego Train Club in the Atlanta, Georgia area.  They show a layout that appears to be about 12' x 12' at model railroad show and sales on a regular basis so it's obviously an adult club.  It actually sounds like fun.
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Posted by METRO on Monday, September 11, 2006 7:32 PM
I got a Lego Shinkansen from the Lego website, it looks great and I have an oval of track for it but it currently just sits on top of my entertainment center in my living room.

There were rumors of a guy trying to build a DCC machine from Lego Mindstorms computers for his layout, quite a feat.

I was thinking about building a Japanese Lego layout for my Shinkansen but never got around to it and the costs were downright prohibitive, even compaired to my HO-Scale layout. It's not the trains that get you in L-Scale it's the buildings!

Cheers!
~METRO
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Posted by rrebell on Monday, September 11, 2006 10:13 PM
there are alot of lego train clubs, look around in you area
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Posted by monkeyman2 on Tuesday, September 12, 2006 3:54 PM
http://www.bricksonthebrain.com/instructions/index.cfm
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Posted by Bapou on Tuesday, September 12, 2006 6:04 PM
I just checked the lego site because i have always liked runing there trains and they still have 9v trains. I also would like to say that you can desing trains with lego digital desinger. I now model HO its better.Smile [:)]
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Posted by ModelTrainman on Tuesday, September 19, 2006 8:55 PM
bump, bump
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Posted by ModelTrainman on Saturday, November 4, 2006 11:32 PM
bump

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