One more time...The best price buster you have is your computer..There are several on line shops that have great prices..So..
Here's the choices:
1.Continue to pay high prices at your LHS.
2.Use your computer to save $$ by buying on line.
3.Or start a topic and moan about the high cost of the hobby..
Its your call.
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
I got started in this hobby with the money I earned from delivering newspapers at age ten! If prices continue to do what companies like Walthers are forcing them to do I am afraid it is only a matter of time until the worlds greatest hobby is no more. Youngsters (our future) are simply not going to be able to afford quality stuff. The marketers are buying from the Chinese for next to nothing and selling here for small fortunes. Kids that are forced to buy cheaper and inferior trains will quickly get frustrated because of poor appearance and/or operation and take up some other hobby. Without new blood the ranks of enthusiasts is likely to begin shrinking. The unfortunate prospective these days seems to be "big profits now - no matter what the long term effects"
One other interesting developement... Hobby shops that specialize in trains are becoming fewer and fewer... Five of the nine stores in Atlanta where dads could take their kids to hopefully spark an interest have now closed... Trying to get a youngster excited by looking at pictures in a magazine and ordering on the internet just doesn't have the same impact.
A lot has been said about the current prices in the replies above. Let me add my thoughts.
You don't need to buy something the day it's released. That's almost a guarantee you'll pay full retail price, and possibly with an added premium.
Kits ARE still available for almost all rolling stock types, and are almost always cheaper than RTR. Especially steam kits can be a great education on how these models work, and give you an insight as to whether that "great buy" at the swap meet is worth buying and fixing up. Try for one of the old Tyco or Mantua steam kits with the die cast metal boiler for a first try. These show up on Ebay regularly. A switcher would be the best to start with.
Patience DOES pay off. Even Walthers puts their things on sale on a regular basis. Sign up for their monthly sale flyer, as well as other hobby discounters' flyers.
The more "bells, whistles, and flashing lights" a model has, the more you'll pay. Think about it. Do you really need them? If your answer is yes, don't complain about the price.
I'm also not the type that "needs" every new gadget that comes out. Think about what you really want or need.
It's not that complex of an answer. Priorities and compromises are the answer. If I hear one more of my customers complaining that 65.00 is too much for a decent locomotive, but man that meal at Outback last night sure was good and it was less than 80.00..........
You can get into this hobby for less than 200 dollars. 4 months of cable. 5 tanks of gas. A lifetime of enjoyment. It can be done with the right attitude.
Well,
While I concur it is expensive, my answer is swap meets and Ebay. Patience is key here (I just got a brand new Rivarossi 2 truck heisler for $82!!!) and you often have to shop around for 6 months or so for good deals, but they can be found. Similarly, swap meets can be good, but it is buyer beware... difficult for the newbie, but great once you know the hobby more. Also, I would recommend shopping around on the internet. Standard Hobby Supply has some GREAT deals (Stewart engines for like $60!!!), so I would check out the internet....
Brian
I look for good deals and buy what I can afford. There are still some high quality, but inexpensive products that can be afforded easily, like Atlas's new Trainman line. Bachmann's new standard engines aren't bad either. With the more expensive stuff, you usually get what you pay for. $400 pays for one of the highest quality drives available with an extremely well detailed body, and a high quality sound system.
I wish I could afford one of those Rivarossi 2-6-6-6s, but they're as well or more detailed than most other plastic steam engines today, and have a very, very high quality drive that makes them smooth running and nearly silent, and were made in Italy, which is why they retailed for $585. Hornby is moving production to China and knocking $85 off the retail price so they'll be more affordable, that is, if they ever get around to bringing them back out, so maybe I still have a chance of getting one.
_________________________________________________________________
eBay is a great discount hobby store, but I am 15 and my mother doesn't like me saving money it seems, and she doesn't let me go on as often as I like, but my LHS isn't too outragous yet, so I do the best I can in the hobby, not the hoppy. I like going to the LHS, but gas is high and its 40 miles away, so it isn't exactly ''local'', but a local shop is developing. Who knows what will happen. -beegle55
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
Well... Inflation is a fact of economic life. My dad was outraged when gas went over $0.20 per gallon - yeah, that's 20 CENTS per gallon. Maybe a better question is how do today's prices compare in constant dollars to prices 5, 10 or 20 years ago. But it's even more complex as you also have to factor in quality and new materials.
I was out of the hobby for several years and was a little shocked at current prices. And, due to the downsizing in telecom, I am not making what I made 5 years ago. But I choose to invest in the hobby, so I'll watch for sales, promos, used items. If it gets too expensive, I can always railfan for almost free - I bought a scanner and digital camera years ago so not much new investment is required.
Yours is a complex question.
GGB,
I know what your saying and I'm with you on the fact, but unless model railroaders a retired or super rich or however they pay for their model trains. People will pay for what they want....theres an old saying. " Theres a sucker born every minute" and the manufactors know it. I've complained on this forum and to the model makers. What I got from these fine folks on this forum is, quite your whinning!!!
The only thing that you can really do is shop around for deals on the net. The rich modelers will only drive up the price of models....so what can we do?
The hobby is going in the crapper and the model train makers are doing a fine job helping this dieing hobby along.
The only advice I can give you is, buy what you can.
Patrick
Beaufort,SC
Fear an Ignorant Man more than a Lion- Turkish proverb
Modeling an ficticious HO scale intergrated Scrap Yard & Steel Mill Melt Shop.
Southland Industrial Railway or S.I.R for short. Enterchanging with Norfolk Southern.
Many ads in MRR magazines reflect the high costs involved with this hoppy. Some box cars going for as much as $39.00, locomotives as high as $400. Flex track for $3.50 each, turn outs up to $20. It seems to me the RR modeling industry is working hard to price the common man out of the hobby.
I would never purchase tracks from Peco with the price the company demands. And Walthers prices -- on nearly every item -- are skyhigh. Is there a move here to limit the development of our hobby to only those who work for the wealthy?
Many MRR items are made in China, where labor costs are very low, yet purchase prices are very high, and continue to rise. It appears the manufactures are inflating the product costs, thus deflating my urge to spend money on their products.
I still have many MRR items purchased decades ago that look just fine -- as realistic as those made today. Flea markets are an excellent place to spend on's cash on used RR items.
Some items produced today are greatly improved and should cost a few dollars more, but not three or four times more. How can anyone afford to stay in this hobby?
What would MRR manufactures do if we all decided to stop buying for six months or for a year? Raise the price, I'm sure. The excuse: They're losing money!
Am I on the right track with my thinking?
GGB