Sunday, December 30, 2012

WA: Expert specializes in model train layouts for small rooms

From HeraldNet:  Expertspecializes in model train layouts for small rooms

 EVERETT -- Mike Scheerens has been a model train enthusiast his entire life.

When he was about 10 years old, he watched his father, James, build tracks for HO-scale trains, one of the largest models available. When his father tried a smaller model called N-scale, Scheerens remembers the size was better suited for him.

"He tried fiddling with the N-scale and he couldn't do it because it was too small," said Scheerens, 47. "He threw it away and I took it out of the garbage later and fixed it. I got it working."

That fascination with model trains hasn't disappeared. Scheerens earlier this month published a book, "Apartment Model Trains: Two Examples," to share what he's learned about building model train layouts in small apartments. It's also a way to preserve the ideas he originally posted to a website.

Scheerens in December 1999 started building a model train layout that would loop throughout his roughly 500-square-foot, one bedroom Everett apartment. He attached the railway to wooden planks and positioned them under cabinets in his kitchen, around a stacked washer and dryer, and eventually around his bedroom.

He designed paper mountains and painted broken foam pieces with beads on it to look like seawall or rock. His basic construction tools were a 25-foot tape measure, a 45-degree triangle, pencils, a handsaw, Elmer's wood glue and a cordless screwdriver fitted with drill bits.

The whole arrangement had to come down in 2007 when Scheerens, who works at Boeing, moved into a two-bedroom apartment. He dreamed up a layout supported on the tops of bookshelves and plastic storage containers. The layout wasn't completed in 2011 when Scheerens moved again into his approximately 900-square-foot home. He started in September to build another layout where his black Lionel locomotive can now pull several cars along part of his living room wall. He's planning to expand the route throughout his home.

"It's kind of like an art," he said.

Scheerens said he's found most of what he needs to build his layouts at local hobby and hardware shops.

One store which supplies Scheerens and others who build model train layouts is Broadway Hobbies in Everett. The store hosts a train club so people can share their layout ideas and problem-solving tips. The club's discussions often include ways to build layout in small spaces, said Lou DeBenny, the store owner.

His store also sells magazines and books that can help create layouts, DeBenny added. Still, the most common problem he's heard when it comes to building happens when the designing and buildings is supposedly complete.

"The beauty is that the second they say they're done, they want to do something different," he said.


 

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Christmas model railroad display a lesson in history of 1940s- era

From Republican-Herald:  Christmas model railroad display a lesson in history of 1940s- era

The Christmas trains are running on time in the Hazleton area, and the conductor is calling, "All aboard!"
The trains are owned and operated by members of the Anthracite Model Railroad Club, which is hosting its annual holiday open house at the club headquarters, 1057 Hanover Court, Hazle Township, weekends through Jan. 6.
The trains are HO model rail cars that travel continuously past detailed replicas of 1940s-era Greater Hazleton over more than 1,000 feet of hand-laid track.
Visitors who enter the clubhouse step into a magical, miniature world of villages along rivers and railways covering hundreds of miles of terrain, all depicted in meticulous detail and contained within a building that formerly housed a bakery.
The first community visitors see is Jim Thorpe as it appeared about 75 years ago, with the twin mansions owned by coal and railroad moguls Asa and Harry Packer. The mansions are perched on a hillside overlooking the Jersey Central Train Station and other landmark buildings in old Mauch Chunk.
Chugging into the tiny, but authentically re-created town, is one of eight model locomotives that move through the communities, rail yards and colliery patch towns that lie along the pike.
Each home along the track, along with the mountains, bridges, creeks and rivers along the railway were hand-built by members of the club. Each of the hundreds of tiny people, pets and livestock that populate the scenery were hand-painted.
"It's a labor of love, really," said Joe Deluca, railroad club secretary.
Model railroading is an old-fashioned hobby, but it hasn't been forgotten by modern technology. Some of today's HO trains have programmable on-board computers that keep them traveling on their pre-determined course. Others can generate sound effects that mimic authentic rail sounds.
Club members also used modern technology to create a working drive-in movie theater with a mini DVD player embedded into the scenery and painted to resemble an old-fashioned outdoor screen. The drive-in is showing classic Christmas movies this time of year.
The trains travel past Cedar, Wyoming, Laurel and Church streets, and by businesses such as Caputo's Ice Plant, the Markle Bank and Trust building, Price's Dairy, Deisroth's and the Blue Comet Diner, as working railroad crossing gates lower across the roadways when the train-crossing lights begin flashing.
Some say model trains and Christmas have a historical connection because the first regularly scheduled passenger train in the U.S. began in 1830 on Christmas Day. Others say the tradition of trains at Christmas dates to the 1940s when railroads helped bring thousands of American servicemen home for the holidays.
Regardless of how the tradition began, the sight of a model train circling a Christmas tree, or traveling eight at a time around a miniature pike at the Anthracite Model Railroad Club, is a delight to children and a source of sweet memories for adults


 

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Model trains bring back Christmas memories

From Courier-Post: Model trains bring back Christmas memories

When Rich Drobil was a little boy in the 1950s, Santa Claus labored through the night to set up a Christmas tree amid a working model train set on a large platform in his living room.
The joy he felt at the sight never left the Glassboro resident.
“I couldn’t wait for those sounds and the smell of smoke from the Lionel steam engine running around the tree each year,” recalled Drobil, now a 61-year-old model train enthusiast who works for Camden County College’s information technology department.
“It wasn’t until years later that I discovered that the layout platform lived behind all the shelving of my father’s workbench in the basement til Christmas Eve,” he added. “After I was in bed, my mother and father would drag it up from the cellar and spend the entire evening placing the houses, wiring the tracks, testing everything, (and) then putting up the tree with lights, tinsel and the other hanging decorations.”
For many children of a certain generation, Christmas and trains go together like a pair of rails. Though the tradition faded for a time, it has seen a resurgence in recent years as technology has improved and as grandparents introduce their childhood hobby to a new set of fans.
Beloved children’s classics like The Polar Express, the Harry Potter series and Thomas the Tank Engine have also revived interest in trains, said Conrad Daniel, owner of the Toy Train Emporium in Cherry Hill. The store is packed floor to ceiling with trains and their accessories, both new and old.
“There’s something about trains and Christmas,” said Daniel, who has been in business for 16 years. “It may have something to do with the fact that, back in the day, trains were a little pricey. It was something you got for Christmas.”
Indeed, model train makers like Lionel offer holiday-themed trains and accessories — there’s even a blue-and-white Hanukkah train.
But the association between model trains and the holidays may stretch back even further to the 18th century, said Drobil, a member of the Strasburg Model Railroad Club of South Jersey. Back then, homes would feature a miniature village under their Christmas trees.


 

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

New posting schedule

Now that I've got this new full-time job, I'll be posting in this blog twice a week - on Monday's and Wednesdays.

So the next post for this blog will be on Monday.

Thanks for your patience.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Posts resume this Wednesday

I'm a freelance writer and I am way behind on a job I have to do, so I won't be posting here until Wednesday..

Thanks for your patience!

Friday, December 14, 2012

Community Corner: Small trains are fast fun for High Sierra Model Railroad Club

From ChicoER:  Community Corner: Small trains are fast fun for High Sierra Model Railroad Club

CHICO — "Old toy trains, little toy tracks. Little boy toys, comin' from a sack," theses opening lines from Roger Miller's 1965 Christmas carol "Old Toy Trains," capture the long romance between boys, model trains and Christmas.
"My daughter asked me what I wanted for Christmas and I told her I wanted a model train set. I never had one as a boy," recalled Joe Clark.
"And, sure enough, on Christmas she gave me a big box with everything in it. I set it up in the garage," he said.
That was in the mid-1990s. Little did Clark know then his daughter's gift would lead him to become a serious model train hobbyist. Eventually, he would found High Sierra Model Railroad Club, the only model train club between Sacramento and Redding.

"It was my son-in-law who suggested I start a model train club. I thought it wasn't a bad idea so I made fliers and put them up in hobby shops in town and Paradise," Clark said. "Our first meeting was in March of 1999 and 12 people showed up."
Clark's son-in-law, Larry Trimboli, offered the unfinished loft in the warehouse of his business, Sierra Log Homes in south Chico. Though the shape of the loft was an awkward "L" — measuring 10 feet wide with each leg of the L being 40 feet long — Clark was grateful to have a space. He named the club "High Sierra"
in honor of Trimboli's company. After seeing the barren loft with its unfinished ceiling and patched floor, most of the new members "went away never to be seen again," he said.
"Those of us who stayed had a vision of what could be done with the space, though, so we went to work," said Clark.
Members decided to install a complete train control system, a Digitrax DCC. It allows multiple trains to be run simultaneously and handles all the layout control and operation as well as lights and sounds on the trains.
The loft, which has been remodeled, now holds more than 300,000 feet of mainline track plus turnouts and switches. The mainline runs through small towns, countryside and mountains, for the most part duplicating Western Pacific Railroad's Feather River Route through the Sierra during the 1950s.
Club member Ray Hauling is a retired Southern Pacific "railroad man" who worked as switchman, brakeman, yard master and conductor during his long career with the company. He created most of the three-dimensional mountains, hills, valleys, farms and orchards through which the High Sierra model trains run.
"I like to work with my hands and I was looking for something to do," Hauling explained.
"Art classes were too expensive so when I found the club, I thought what the heck, I'll check it out. I love it. I can't wait for our meetings each week. It's a great group of guys," he said.
The High Sierra layout also includes tunnels, a U-shaped curve and a water tower where the steam engines can "fill up." The club has 20 locomotives "on the bench" ready to go, most are equipped for sound.
Bill Delgardo, an early member who likes building models, used a set of Southern Pacific Rail Road plans for a 50,000 gallon main-line water tower as the blueprint for the High Sierra water tower. Scaling the plans down to size, Delgardo made a special jig for his saw and cut the "timbers" for the model tower from old barn redwood.
"It's 8 inches tall and looks just like an old water tower. I painted it so that even the part that holds water looks like water is wicking through it. Boy that was fun and oh man it is cool," said Delgardo.
These days there are eight members who meet each week on Tuesday and Thursday evenings to run the model trains, add to or reconfigure the layout and take in each other's company. Several others have moved or passed away.
"It's a neat hobby, the world's greatest hobby," said Delgardo. "It's not horrifically expensive and it gets us guys together and keeps us out of bars chasing women. I like to encourage people to come see what we have and then to come back again.
"It's like watching a great movie: You watch it again to see what you've missed the first time. There are a lot of little details in our layout that make it remarkable," said Delgardo.
———
The High Sierra Model Railroad Club a membership organization for model train hobbyists.
Location: 3650 Morrow Lane
Meetings: weekly, Tue. And Thurs. 6:30pm ­ 10:00pm, open to visitors
More information: www.highsierramrrc.webs.com or 342-4305
Membership Cost: $100 one-time initiation fee; $25 a month 

 

Monday, December 10, 2012

Charleston: Where to find model trains and little snowy villages this season

From the Charleston City Paper: Charleston: Where to find model trains and little snowy villages this season 

Some Christmas traditions make more sense than others. Santa Claus gets cookies, kids sing Christmas carols, and we chop down fir trees and put them inside our homes (ok, that one's a bit weird). But model trains — where did they come from? Once the holidays arrive they show up everywhere, from public spaces to store windows, and in people’s homes circling the Christmas tree.

While no one knows for sure why model trains have become such an iconic Christmas symbol, Mary Lehr, Curator of the Best Friend of Charleston Railway Museum, shared one theory with us that has roots in a little-known Charleston icon. The Best Friend of Charleston was the name of the first train ever built completely in the United States and was also the first steam locomotive in the U.S. to establish regularly scheduled passenger service. The inaugural voyage of the Best Friend occurred in 1830, on Christmas Day, which is how model trains came to be associated with Christmas in America. “You have to understand that the Best Friend of Charleston was like the rocket ship of its day. When witnesses saw the Best Friend for the first time on that Christmas morning, it was like nothing they had ever seen,” explains Lehr. The amazement which that first locomotive voyage inspired may be why trains have come to symbolize the wonder and magic of the holidays, not just for Charlestonians, but for American everywhere.
Though Charleston isn't exactly overflowing with holiday model train setups, there are a couple of places around town where you can find them.

One of the most famous model train displays in town is located in the lobby of the Charleston Place Hotel which first began operating their O Gauge model trains in 2001. Last year, Lou Nappi, the mastermind behind the Charleston Place’s train set up, added a mini-camera to the train, so that viewers could take a virtual trip on the train. To see what new surprises have been added this year, head to the lobby of the Charleston Place between 9 a.m and 10 p.m from now until New Year's.

Want more trains? Check out the The Best Friends of Charleston Rail Museum. Though the life-size replica of the original Best Friend train is out on loan to another museum, you can still see displays of artifacts, videos, and other model trains. The museum is free and located in the Citadel Mall on Sam Rittenberg Road. It's open on Tuesdays and Thursdays from  5 to 9 p.m and Saturdays and Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m.
Starting this Friday, Dec. 7, you can see paintings of trains by the official artist of the Lionel Train Corporation, Angela Trotta Thomas, at COCO VIVO Fine Art. There will also be a model train chugging its way through a snowy village.

And if just seeing trains isn't enough for you, head to the James Island County Park Holiday Festival of Lights to take a ride on the Festival Express. This 54-passenger trains travels throughout the festival, taking visitors through displays of more than 2 million Christmas lights. Find more information about the Festival Express on the Charleston County Parks and Recreation department website.Where to find model trains and little snowy villages this season



Sunday, December 9, 2012

Iowa: 90-Foot Model Railroad Layout Makes Big Dream Come True

From The Gazette:  90-Foot Model Railroad Layout Makes Big Dream Come True

A 13-foot tall mountain in the background overlooks one section of the new 40-by-90 foot Lionel model train layout at Dumont Museum south of Sigourney. Photo was taken Friday, Nov. 30, 2012. (Dave Rasdal/The Gazette-KCRG)
SIGOURNEY — I should have brought binoculars. That’s the only way to see from one end of Lyle Dumont’s new model railroad to the other. It’s 90 feet long, nearly a third of a football field.
“This IS the crazy man’s project,” laughs Lyle, 72. “I’m not done yet. This is something I always wanted to do so I decided to do it.”
Yes, it’s a Lionel model railroad that’s 40 feet wide, meaning it covers 3,600 square feet — about the area of three houses — at Dumont Museum three miles south of Sigourney on Highway 149 just west on 255th Street.
Lyle Dumont and his wife, Helen, share a laugh as they look over the new 40-by-90 foot Lionel model train layout at their Dumont Museum south of Sigourney. Photo was taken Friday, Nov. 30, 2012. (Dave Rasdal/The Gazette-KCRG)
Six years ago, when I stopped here for the first time, Lyle had satisfied his childhood dream of owning a model railroad by building a 25-by-30 foot layout in the front room. It includes a six-foot tall mountain and plenty of cars, buildings and scenery to match.
This new layout, started in 2008, features a 13-foot tall mountain. Trains circle it on two levels. In all, if the track was laid end-to-end, it would stretch more than a mile.
“Yep,” Lyle grins. “A mile. That’s what it is and I’ve laid every piece of it myself.”
But, this is about more than model trains. This is about creating a fantasy world. Lyle is good at that.
His museum began with life-size Oliver tractors, farm equipment, Roy Rogers memorabilia and an extensive doll collection by his wife, Helen. The entire thing is housed under 30,000 square feet of roof after another recent addition.
The first layout, begun a decade ago, used that day’s technology, from the wireless remote controls for the trains to animated displays (a fully-operational amusement park) to a scale-model drive-in theater showing DVD movies.
Smoke pours from a building as firefighters fight a blaze in one scene included in the new 40-by-90 foot Lionel model train layout at Dumont Museum south of Sigourney. Photo was taken Friday, Nov. 30, 2012. (Dave Rasdal/The Gazette-KCRG)
This one goes well beyond that. Lyle can run 30 trains at once. Bridges elevated above your head connect one side to another. Mount Rushmore is incorporated in the mountain. Check out the spinning wind generators, shushing line of snowmobilers, operating tramway.
Yes, a woman mows her lawn while nearby ostriches turn their heads. Over yonder, lifelike flames lick the inside of a two-story building while smoke rolls out above the flashing lights of the firetrucks.
“Every new thing that comes out, he has to have it,” says Helen. “He keeps Lionel and MTH (Mike’s Train House in North Carolina) in business.”
At the annual Christmas open house, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, you can see the front room layout free. For $5, you can tour the entire museum.
Next on Lyle’s agenda is a pair of operating roller coasters, each six feet long and two feet wide.
“It’s just fun to see what you can do,” Lyle says. “And when you get done, it all works. How about that?”

 

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

PA: Holiday trains are rolling through Franklin County neighborhoods

From Public Opinion.com:  Holiday trains are rolling through Franklin County neighborhoods

All aboard!
Franklin County has three indoor model railroad layouts, now open for holiday viewing.
Cumberland Valley Model Railroad Club headquarters
CHAMBERSBURG - Cumberland Valley Model Railroad Club, 440 Nelson St., has more than 3,700 pieces of rolling stock, including 1,207 on the tracks and 2,500 on display.
Layouts are in scales of G , Standard, O, O27, On3, HO, TT, N, Z and T. There's also an operating Lego layout and Jurassic Park.
The latest additions to the club's Thomas layout are the cars Donald and Douglas. The layout also includes Lady, James, Gordon, Percy and Emily.
A complete overhead oval will be in operation.
The club's name comes from the Cumberland Valley Railroad, headquartered in Chambersburg and in operation from 1836 to 1919.
Open house: noon to 5 p.m. on the following dates: Dec. 9, 16, 23 and 30 and Jan. 5 and 12. Children younger than 18 must be accompanied and supervised by an adult.
Mall display: A Christmas display at Chambersburg Mall, 3055 Black Gap Road, Chambersburg, was built by a club member and is on display through December.
Details: 263-6447, 264-3081
Website: http://www.cvmrrc.com
Magic Train World
GREENCASTLE - Magic Train World, a model train layout at 594 Shannon Drive North, is open for the winter season.
The room holds a 500-square-foot layout complete with scenery, four loops of S-scale and O-scale trains, sound effects, operating accessories, and many educational wall displays.
this year are flashing signs, more engines with sound effects, and custom-painted "Piedmont and Western" trains.It also features a unique "Thomas in Dinosaur Land" floor-level layout. Admission is by donation.
Hours: Magic Train World will be open 1 to 4 p.m. (except for snow days) on the following dates: Dec. 8, 22, 23, 2; Jan. 6, 13, 20 and 27; and Feb. 2 and 9.
Website: http://www.magictrainworld.blogspot.com for photos, directions and weather updates.

Waynesboro Model Railroad Club
ZULLINGER - Waynesboro Model Railroad Club, home of Wayne Castle Central and located in an old grain milling building along Waynecastle Road, has converted its HO layout to digital command control, which assigns each locomotive a specific code and allows each one to move or stop by digital command.
New HO and N-scale table layouts, complete with trains, have been built and will be raffled off, along with an O-scale train set. The club offers "scenic tours" and non-stop action along four layouts in four scales.
Open house: 1-5 p.m. on the following dates (unless a major snowstorm): Dec. 8, 15, 29 and 30; Jan. 5, 6, 12, 19 and 20.
Details: 762-9579
Website: http://waynesborotrainclub.blogspot.com

 

Monday, December 3, 2012

Model-train scenes bring joy to Livingston Manor

From Record Online:  Model-train scenes bring joy to Livingston Manor

LIVINGSTON MANOR — On a mammoth construction of tables inside Catskill Art Society's huge ground-floor window, sat a replica of the building that once was.
North Branch resident Marc Switko and his 10-year-old daughter Emma found it as they stood over a mammoth table-top replica of Livingston Manor and its structures, part of the hamlet's "Trains on Main" showcase of model trains.
There was a replica of Main Street Farm, which sits just across the street from the society. There was the Robin Hood Diner and the Livingston Manor School District building.
"And I saw the Hoos building," Emma Switko said. "I went to the Lazy Beagle all the time."
Eleven days after the Nov. 20 fire that destroyed the landmark Hoos building and four local businesses, Livingston Manor buzzed with a day full of holiday activities.
There has been mourning for the business owners and the loss of four Main Street businesses. There also are fundraisers and calls to spend holiday cash in Livingston Manor as a show of support.
"It was a beautiful outpouring of love," said Morgan Outdoors owner Lisa Lyons said. "Quite a few angels talked up having people come here to shop."
Four days after the fire, about 100 people attended the opening of the society's members show. Executive Director Ann Manby partly attributed the larger-than-normal turnout to a desire by some to support the hamlet in the wake of the fire.
Elaborate model-train scenes created by board President Charlie Irace and Manor resident Charlie Sanborn greeted visitors to the society, Morgan Outdoors, Flour Power Bakery and the local library as part of "Trains for Main."
Catskill Art Society also opened the doors to its annual members' show and set up a crafts bazaar in one of its gallery spaces. There was also caroling, and the Plunk Shop held an event featuring clown-themed art.
"It's brought a lot of joy to this area and the people that come and see it every year," Manby said.
Irace has spent five years creating the Manor replica, adding and refining buildings each year. He decided to keep the Hoos building in this year's display, despite concerns by others.
"I just thought it had to be in to help heal things," Irace said.
Like his daughter, Marc Switko was transported by Irace's display of his native Livingston Manor. He remembered when the Catskill Arts Society building housed a movie theater, when Madison on Main was a pharmacy and Morgan Outdoors was a grocery.
He also remembered eating cheeseburgers at the carryout that once shared the Hoos building with the Hoos bakery.
"I hope something happens with that space," he said.

 

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Escapes: Model train exhibit at Napa Valley Museum

From Sacramento Bee:  Escapes: Model train exhibit at Napa Valley Museum

Put on your conductor's hat and head to the Napa Valley Museum. There you will find a first-rate exhibit of HO gauge trains and model railroad layouts from Coastal Valley Lines, paired with a collection of railroad memorabilia.
The exhibit occupies 1,500 square feet, in which model trains climb steep grades, shunt freight cars and take side trips onto branch lines. Trains stop at a variety of stations and industries along their routes.
"HO gauge is the most popular railroad scale, so named because it is half of the size of O gauge, the scale of the once very popular Lionel train sets," said a museum spokesman.
The small-scale model trains have their roots in the 1930s, when "Depression-era budgets had modelers searching for a way to operate model trains in tight quarters," said the spokesman. "Today about 74 percent of modelers are in HO."
The Napa Valley Museum is at 55 Presidents Circle, Yountville; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. The model train exhibit runs through Dec. 16.
Admission is $5 for adults, $2.50 for children 15 and younger. Free admission for everyone Dec. 8. For more information: (707) 944-0500, www.napavalleymuseum.org.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/12/02/5019764/escapes-model-train-exhibit-at.html#storylink=cpy


Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/12/02/5019764/escapes-model-train-exhibit-at.html#storylink=cpy
 

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Wilkes-Barre, PA: Hudson Model Railroad Club’s 2,000-square-foot set-up open again for public view.

From Wilkes-Barre Time Leader:  Hudson Model Railroad Club’s 2,000-square-foot set-up open again for public view.

PLAINS TWP. -- On Sunday, the Hudson Model Railroad Club celebrated its 30th year showcasing its 2,000-square-foot, handmade railroad display with more than 150 locomotives and 2,000 rail cars riding four miles of track.
“We’ve become a local holiday tradition,” said club president Jim Cerulli.
He said the30 members of the club range in age from 16 to more than 80 and all share a “love for trains that can’t be learned.”
They have been meeting once a week to upgrade, maintain, expand and otherwise improve their display all as a “passion for trains,” he added.
“These aren’t just toys. They are exact scale replicas of the real thing. Everything you see in real life you will see here,” he said. Members even will paint graffiti on their cars and exhaust stains on the engines to highlight realism, he said.
Along with the trains, the display includes a model steel mill, harbor and city complete with more than 200 buildings and 500 miniature cars serving the miniature population of more than 750 residents.
A computerized control system allows members to use handheld devices to control the engines, which each have their own computer chip in them, Cerulli said.
“They’re like sophisticated television remotes,” he joked.
More than 200 visitors came by to see the display on Sunday. Every year the club is open from the first weekend after Thanksgiving to the first weekend after New Year’s Day, he said.
Along the walls are photos of local trains along with graphics that define the various types of trains and what type of cargo they could be carrying, Cerulli said.
“We want to teach as well as display. That’s what it’s all about,” he said.
Most of the rolling stock is owned by the club members including several “custom built” pieces not available on the open market, he said.
The club owns the display and the “circus train” Cerulli calls a real crowd pleaser.
“We built a full-length circus train like the types that used to run in the 1970s,” he said.
Another line that gets a lot of attention from the children is the “Caterpillar equipment train,” which offers a line-up of various forms of heavy equipment being transported by rail, he said.
Bill Wightman, a club fan and regular visitor to the display for the last 20 years, said he can’t help but notice the amazing progress and improvements in the layout. What he likes most though is the large variety in the display.
“They have a little bit of everything,” he said.
Cerulli said the club plans to continue into the future allowing train enthusiasts to view the display for free. However, he admits donations from the visitors are very much appreciated and needed to maintain the club’s display.
“It’s a constant work in progress,” he said.

 

Monday, November 26, 2012

Scranton, PA: Model trains entrance visitors to steamtown Saturday

From the Times-Tribune:  Model trains entrance visitors to steamtown Saturday

Model trains were always an "old guy" hobby, said Clem O'Jevich Jr. of the Warrior Run Locomotive Works.
Time, disposable income and nostalgia predispose older gentlemen to the hobby, he contended while operating a garden-scale, live-steam model train at the Model Trains Through the Ages program at Steamtown National Historic Site.
Even in the 1940s, he said, the hobby was dominated by retired men.
But the event co-sponsored by Lackawanna Historical Society drew quite a few wide-eyed young folks, enthusiastic exceptions to Mr. O'Jevich's observation and the newest generation of model train enthusiasts.
Even with the real things chugging by just outside the Steamtown Museum, the buzzing model trains captivated John and Caleb Faia, ages 15 and 11, of Lansdale. Like most passions, this one was handed down by their grandfather, who is active in model trains with a large, year-round set.
"We keep adding and adding," John said. John, Caleb and their parents hoped to get a seat on the Scranton Limited 30-minute train rides.
Bryan Melliand, 13, of Clarks Summit, and his visiting cousin Ben Schwartz, 9, were enjoying the displays of different-size trains from Nolan & Rogers in Scranton.
Bryan recognizes that, as a train hobbyist, he may be a standout among his cohorts. He's limited to no more than one hour of video games daily, and doesn't have a smartphone, which he figures gives him time to pursue interests. With help from his father, Ben converted a bookcase into a fold-down train set.
"Most kids are into video games or sports and don't want to spend time to learn about trains or take the time to put a set together," Bryan said. "But trains are cool and fun."
Also on hand was Dan Emick of Scranton, self-proclaimed "Doctor of Trainology," offering advice to those just starting out or diagnoses for those with problems with their train sets.
The most common problem? "It won't run."
The solution is often simple, Mr. Emick said: rusted contacts and lack of lubrication.
The exhibit continues though today and is included with the national park's entrance fee of $7 for adults, children 15 and under free.

 

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Hamburg, NY: 31st Annual Train and Toy Show

This was last weekend but just mark it on your calendar as it'll be held next year as well at around this same time!


From WGRZ.com:  31st Annual Train and Toy Show

HAMBURG, N.Y. - All aboard! Hundreds of vendors and train enthusiasts rolled into the Event Center at the fairgrounds in Hamburg for the 31st annual Train and Toy show.
There are plenty of model trains, accessories and vintage toys to buy or just look at.
The show is a fundraiser for the Western New York Railway Historical Society, which helps preserve the railroad history in the Queen City.
"To see a little train around the tree at Christmas is a tradition that is shared by a lot of people," said Stephen Kocsis, of the WNY Railway Historical Society. "You can find little one of a kind pieces to add to your collection. You can buy a whole major layout if you need to get one. There's something for everybody."
The train show continues Sunday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the Events Center at the Hamburg fairgrounds.

 

Monday, November 19, 2012

Irondequoit, NY: Room-sized train display delights young and old

From Democrat and Chronicle: Room-sized train display delights young and old
 Train lovers of all ages were treated to a room-sized holiday village Saturday at Chapel Oaks Community Center in Irondequoit.
The third annual train display at the retirement community opened to the public Saturday morning and will continue through Sunday.
“Both old and young really enjoy trains,” said Marie Frey, marketing representative at Chapel Oaks. “We thought it would be a really nice thing to do for the community, like a family affair.”
The train display took eight volunteers from Flower City Tinplate Trackers about four hours to set up on Friday. The group is a train club based in Rochester that operates and displays O Gauge model trains at community events and train shows.
Frey said members of the public typically come to see the trains, as well as the seniors who live at Chapel Oaks.
“It’s very nostalgic for them,” she said. “Just to see their eyes light up when they see the trains, it’s pretty amazing to watch.”
The display will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. Chapel Oaks is located on St. Ann’s campus, 1550 Portland Ave.

 

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Flint, MI: Model trains are newest exhibit for Christmas season at Flint's Sloan Museum

From MLive:  Model trains are newest exhibit for Christmas season at Flint's Sloan Museum

FLINT, MI--All aboard, model train enthusiasts.
The newest exhibit at Sloan Museum will be "Holiday Trains."
These trains, however, won't just be circling the Christmas tree.
"Visitors will be taken back to the days when the Iron Horse sped across Michigan. Marvel at charming model trains as they travel across rustic bridges, along overhead trestles, and even past a zoo," a release from Sloan said of the scaled model showcase.

The exhibit, intended for all ages, will be on display through Jan. 27.

For more information, check out the exhibit's website.

Sloan Museum is located at 1221 East Kearsley Street in Flint, Michigan. Tickets are $9 for adults, $8 for seniors, and $6 for youth ages 3-11.

 

Friday, November 16, 2012

Scranton: Model Trains Through the Ages' holiday program set for Steamtown NHS

From Go Lackawanna:  Model Trains Through the Ages' holiday program set for Steamtown NHS


Steamtown National Historic Site partner, the Lackawanna Historical Society, will present a holiday program, “Model Trains Through the Ages,” Nov. 23 through 25 at the park. The program will focus on model railroading as a holiday tradition.
Visitors at both Steamtown NHS and the Historical Society’s Catlin House have commented through the years about their cherished holiday memories, which always seemed to include a model train set. The memories evoke the arrival of visiting family members, many who traveled home for the holidays, laden with gifts and surprises, by passenger rail.

The program will include a Märklin model train exhibit, a “live steam” garden railroad display, and a traditional holiday train display by a group of dedicated local model railroad enthusiasts.
Dan Emick, a self-described “train doctor,” will display various model railroad scales (“sizes”), and be available to discuss problem-solving techniques for model train hobbyists. Additionally, the public is invited to participate in a model train race each event day at 2 p.m. “O” scale model trains will be available for racing participants.
For further information about this family-friendly event, contact the Lackawanna Historical Society at 570.344.3841 or visit www.lackawannahistory.org.

Admission to the event is included with the Park’s daily entrance fee of $7 for all ages 16 and older. Children ages 15 and younger are free with accompanying adults. The entrance fee includes access to the park’s museums, theater and scheduled walking tours.

The popular “Scranton Limited” 30-minute train rides will also operate, covering a 3-mile round trip that crosses the Lackawanna River and passes alongside the historic Radisson at Lackawanna Station Hotel, pausing near the University of Scranton before returning to the roundhouse boarding area. Tickets to ride this train cost $5 per person, all ages 6 and older, in addition to the daily park entrance fee.

Located in downtown Scranton, Steamtown NHS is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Additional general park information is available by calling 570.340.5200 during regular business hours, or by visiting the Park website at www.nps.gov/stea.

 

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Chicago: Check out model railroad layouts at open house

From Daily Herald:  Check out model railroad layouts at open house

In its 63rd annual open house, the Valley Model Railroad Club is doing something different.
Members are pairing their three-day open house event with a food drive benefiting the South Elgin Food Pantry. Visitors who bring in a canned good or some other nonperishable item will get a free raffle ticket and be entered into a drawing for model railroading prizes.

Duane Tuma, a 25-year member of the club, said the food drive fits in well with the goals of the family-oriented club.
“It’s one way of giving back to the community,” Tuma said. “Especially with the way things are right now.”
The Valley Model Railroad Club is made up of plenty of husband and wife pairs and multigenerational family groups. Tuma said there are third generation members who first came to the club with their grandfathers.
The model railroaders gather to share their love of trains at the old Clintonville Substation on the Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad line in South Elgin. They moved into the building in 1953. For decades members built up a model, constantly adding new bits of scenery and adding new track designs until 1999 when they basically tore out the old layout and started fresh.

“One thing about model railroading, once you think you’re done then you start over again,” Tuma said. “You never finish anything because it’s always changing.”

Members invite anyone interested in model railroads to the open house, whether that interest is backed by extensive knowledge of the hobby or not. Tuma said visitors can talk to club members on various committees focused on parts of the layout like scenery, electricity or track.

The open house will be from 7 to 10 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16; 1 to 10 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17; and 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18 at the club, 33W519 Kenyon Road in South Elgin.

Outside of the annual open house, club members regularly welcome community groups — most often Boy Scouts — to tour the club and check out the layout. And every month they set up a display at the Great Midwest Train Show at the DuPage County Fairgrounds.
For details call (847) 742-2028 or visit vmrr.org.


 

Sunday, November 11, 2012

UK: Hornby services delayed...in China

From the Sun:  Hornby services delayed...in China

Hornby model train
The train now not arriving ... Hornby's Chinese suppliers are running late
 

MODEL train maker HORNBY expects to lose at least £1million in Christmas sales because of chaos at a Chinese supplier.

The company shifted all manufacturing to the Far East in the late Nineties to slash costs.
But it was forced yesterday to admit a restructuring at its biggest supplier in the country would delay key Christmas deliveries. Shipments of key model trains — such as a new B17 steam locomotive — will now not arrive until February at the earliest.
Chief exec Frank Martin said: “We now have five alternative suppliers but the level of shipments is being affected.
“It’s going to be some time before more collectable products such as the B17 arrive.”
The issues with supplier SANDA KAN have affected sales in Hornby’s European markets throughout the summer.
Half-year results yesterday showed sales on the Continent plunged by almost a third.
And the group — which also owns SCALEXTRIC and AIRFIX — fell £541,000 into the red in the six months to September. Hornby also shelved its half-year dividend — and was forced to reassure over its finances, revealing BARCLAYS had offered a new bank loan.
But Mr Martin insisted it still did not make sense to bring production back home to Britain.
He said: “Average wages in China have gone up three times in the past seven, eight years — but the minimum wage is still only around £2,000 a year.”
Mr Martin added that Christmas would be tough — and “later” than normal — as customers hold back on presents until the last minute.
He said: “It won’t be the best Christmas we have had in the past five years.”
Yesterday’s warning came just two months after Hornby said full-year profits would be derailed by weaker than expected sales of London 2012 souvenirs.
But Mr Martin insisted shareholders should “not be worried”.
He said: “We have short-term challenges, but we are working through them successfully.”
Matthew Taylor, analyst at NUMIS, said: “Its stable of brands suggests the group should return to profitability in due course.
“But more tangible evidence of stability may be required for the shares to stage a meaningful recovery.”

 

 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

His hobby has all the bells and whistles

From UT San Diego: His hobby has all the bells and whistles 

Bob Shultz lays next to a train set display in the backyard of his home in Cardiff on Monday, November 5 ,2012.(Photo by Sandy Huffaker)
Bob Shultz lays next to a train set display in the backyard of his home in Cardiff on Monday, November 5 ,2012.(Photo by Sandy Huffaker) 
 
Three years ago, Cardiff resident Bob Shultz went on a hunt for an old toy train for his newborn grandson.
He wanted something fun and not nearly as valuable as the only train he owned — a 1950s-era, high-end Lionel that his father bought him as a boy. So he placed a classified advertisement asking people to dig through their closets and garages looking for dusty old trains they didn’t want any more.
“Buying trains,” his ad announcement declared, and people were eager to sell.
Soon the 67-year-old retired real estate agent had dozens, then hundreds. Three years later, he has a “real massive collection” — about 1,000.
He’s become a train seller, exchanger and donor. He’s now active in a regional toy train club and spends every Friday volunteering with a crew of train enthusiasts who are building an outdoor train layout in an Escondido backyard.
Shultz has stuffed his garage, his shed and his office with trains. He’s created a train repair workshop where tiny drawers stuffed with miniature train horns, bells and fuses beg to be opened. He’s built a circus train layout in his small backyard for his grandson, Rollins Fisher of La Mesa, and the neighborhood kids to enjoy.
And he has already inspired at least one boy to become a train addict.
Alexander Melemed, a 5-year-old from Carlsbad, received his first free train from Shultz months ago. Now, he owns 10 to 15, his dad reports, and the family spends weekends visiting the San Diego Model Railroad Museum and the train display at Vista’s Antique Gas & Steam Engine Museum.
“He’s going to be like Bob — he has them displayed everywhere,” dad Jeff Melemed said, adding that when he takes his son to the Vista museum, he has to stay for hours.
Shultz specializes in the large pre-World War 11 metal toy trains, but he also accepts the plastic versions from the 1940s to the late 1960s. He loves the toy trains because they make sounds, flash their lights and even have slots where real steam pours out.
He used to collect seashells, but “they don’t move, they don’t talk, they don’t buzz,” he said.
Call him a moderately addicted train guy, said Bob Wall, one of the leaders in San Diego’s All Gauge Toy Train Association. The association, which puts on an annual display during the county fair in Del Mar, meets from 2 to 8 p.m. every second Tuesday at Torrey Pines Christian Church, 8320 La Jolla Scenic Drive.
Wall, a University City resident who’s been collecting trains for 35 years, just returned from a three-day train convention where he met a guy who had 10,000 trains in his home. He himself admits to owning “somewhere between” 1,000 and 10,000.
 
 

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Youngstown Model Railroad Assoc. hosts annual open house

From Vindy.com:  Youngstown Model Railroad Assoc. hosts annual open house

Charlie Wood was 4 when he got his first Lionel model train set in 1939.
He still has the set, a steam engine “with a whistle,” a tanker, box car and caboose, and he still is playing with model trains.
Wood, of Hartford, is one of a number of Youngstown Model Railroad Association members on hand to talk knowledgeably about model trains and layouts with guests at the organization’s 2012 Model Train annual open house at 751 N. Four Mile Run Road at the corner of Raccoon Road.
That first set cost $9.75 in the catalog, said Wood, who is president of the Great Lakes Division of the Train Collectors Association that runs periodic swap meets.
The Youngstown Model Railroad Association is one of the few clubs that display both O and HO scales of model railroads, said its president, Jim Pope of Berlin Center. Each layout has more than 100 scale miles of track.
The open house is from noon to 6 p.m. today, Saturday and next Sunday and Dec. 1, 2, 8 and 9. A $3 donation per person is requested. Children under 12 are admitted free.
One of the advantages of being in a club is that many model-train hobbyists don’t have the space in their homes to display their layouts as the Youngstown Model Railroad Association facility has. One floor is devoted to O gauge trains and a second floor to HO gauge trains.
Also, there is a cross-section of talent needed to put a layout together. What one doesn’t know, someone else does, Wood said.
For instance, Charles Willett of Boardman, likes doing the scenery — hills and rivers and trees — for the layouts, much as he did for many years building sets at Boardman High School.
Howard “Bud” Brock of Pittsburgh, who got his first Lionel (which he still has) under the Christmas tree at age 2, said he likes the electrical end of things. Sometimes it’s a little tough when you didn’t do the original wiring and have to repair someone else’s work, he said.
As with club member hobbyists, members of the general public attend the open house to bring back memories of when they received their first train, traditionally at Christmas time.
Steve Wright was visiting with his son, Jesse, and his grandchildren, Jacob and Madison, both 5.
Wright, of Salem, said he and his son enjoy going to swap meets and collecting older Lionel pieces. “We brought Jacob and Madison to try to get them interested at a young age to hopefully keep the hobby going.”
“When things are running well, it’s a pleasure,” said David McNeil of Cortland, yardmaster Saturday in the HO display area. “When things get messed up, it’s frustrating,” he said.
“If you get into it, you become somewhat of an electrician, a carpenter, mechanic and tinker to keep everything going,” he added.
Part of the HO display are replicas of the Republic Steel Center Street mill, Youngstown Sheet & Tube and Sharon Steel, handcrafted by Ed Williams of Girard, who worked at Sharon Steel and Youngstown Sheet and Tube, or as he said, “closed them. I’m trying to do a little bit of each mill.”
Williams said there are so many people who worked in the steel mills and know what they looked like who will “call you on it ” if they find a mistake, so he works with photos of the mills and even replicates the cars in the parking lots down to year and model.
“It makes you feel good when people say you did a good job,” he said.
Their mutual interest is model railroading, but what keeps the hobbyists involved is more personal.
“It’s the people you meet ... the friends you make,” said Wood.
“We have a lot of laughs and a lot of fun. It’s the camaraderie,” Willett said.
“I’ve loved trains since I was about 10, and I’ve been in love with them ever since,” Williams said.

 

Monday, November 5, 2012

Durango a model train mecca

From the Durango Herald:  Durango a model train mecca

Many proud subcultures thrive in Durango: rock climbers, marijuana activists, vegetarians, pet owners, banned-book readers, organic-food proselytizers, gun aficionados, hunters and people who frequently write letters to the editor of certain local newspapers.
 Jim Richards operates one of his trains by remote control as it passes through a replica of the Canadian Rocky Mountains that is part of the extensive model railroad system he has built in the basement of his home.
But, perhaps, its most passionate subpopulation is model-train “maniacs,” who say Durango is their mecca: Not only is it home to the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad and Soundtraxx, the world’s leading model-train sound company, based in the Durango Tech Center, it also has the San Juan Car Co., which manufactures O-scale narrow gauge freight cars. Model railroaders meet in numerous tight-knit clubs, organize Durango’s Railfest, religiously subscribe to hobbyist magazines such as Model Railroader and cover their basements, ceilings and gardens with elaborate tracks.
For the kid in everyone
And according to model railroaders, they are everyone.
Leslie Doran, who, along with her husband, Art Sherwood, is a member of the San Juan Large Scalers Club, said, “There’s huge age range. We have members in their 80s – we had a member in the 90s, but he recently passed away – and our youngest member,” Joe Weigman, “is 7 years old,” Doran said.
They’re a determined bunch. Andy Saez said it has taken him years to lay by hand the 4,000 feet of track for his live steam railroad, which encompasses his garden. His train is so large it can carry 20 people and is visible from U.S. Highway 550.
Meticulous detail
Duane Danielson, a retired stockbroker who lives 10 miles north of Durango, said he owns one of the five best layouts in the country and has written extensively about the construction of his 86-by-45 foot layout for O Scale Magazine.
“It represents the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern, from western Montana to east Washington from the 1930s – that was the classic era of steam and the first part of diesel. It’s my grandpa’s railroad, and that’s what I like about it,” he said. The layout, which spans his basement, is so behemoth that Danielson stores Christmas lights beneath it.
While Danielson’s friend Jim Richards concedes that Danielson’s layout is “spectacular,” he hopes his own “Athabaska Railroad,” which is still under construction, will prove as stunning.
Richards said model training was not child’s play.
“We don’t just take trains and try to run them ’round and ’round, we duplicate as meticulously as possible the real world of railroading,” Richards said.
Right now, Richard’s Athabaska railroad fills his basement. “It’s 55-by-30 feet with additional 25-foot rooms for staging. It’s an imaginary railroad; it only exists in my imagination, but it’s set in the Canadian Rockies. In my imagination it runs from Edmonton to the Pacific seaport Prince Arthur, named after the fabled British king.”
Richards knows precisely what cargo is trafficked on his imaginary railroad. “It holds grain, oil, coal, intermodal containers and highway trailers – there is some passenger traffic, some general traffic – and the trains are quite long,” Richards said.
Richards said building the Athabaska railroad required not just money, years of patience and ardor, but wide ranges of technical expertise.
“There are just so many facets to the hobby. There’s the engineering aspect, building the freight cars, passenger cars, structures such as stations, often from scratch, which means you’re literally working from the ground up. Then, there’s the electrical aspect – a lot of guys’ control systems are amazingly sophisticated. Then there’s the scenery, it’s extremely artistic and can be astoundingly realistic. And then there’s the historical research that goes into it, making sure that you have all the details, the track size, exactly correct,” he said.
Durango’s pull
Paula Berg, who owns Oscar’s Café with her husband, Bruce, said Richards’ commitment to model training is far from unusual in Durango.
“You’d be amazed at the number of grown, mature men here who love these trains in their basements. I really do think it’s something in the blood. I mean these guys – it’s crazy how much they love trains,” she said.
In Oscar’s, a G-model train circles the ceiling. “Actually, we moved here because since 3 years old my husband has always been a nut for trains, and the (Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad) is one of the last steam engines in the country. We even bought our house by the tracks,” Berg said, laughing.
Something about trains
Nationally, train obsessives boast distinguished alumni, including Albert Einstein, Frank Sinatra and Neil Young. They also boast rare devotion. Darius McCollum, a New York resident, has been so enamored with trains that since age 15, when he illicitly drove the E train to the World Trade Center, he has spent more than a third of his life behind bars for transit-related offenses.
Dr. Mason Miner moved his model train from his home to his office when his last child was born. “We needed the bedroom,” he said regretfully. Though he’s been building model trains since childhood, he said when he went to a meeting of the Durango Model Railroad Club, “compared to some of these guys, I’m really low key. Some of them are unbelievably into it,” he said.
The first interactive game
Ray Schmudde built an HO-scale, modern-era layout in a spare bedroom.
“I tell my wife it keeps me out of bars and chasing women,” he said. “The catch with this hobby is that it’s never finished.”
Schmudde acknowledged that if your model train layout was historically inaccurate, some enthusiasts could be critical. “Can we be obsessive? Yes. Is everyone? No,” said Schmudde.
Al Harper, who owns Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, said he “wasn’t a model train fanatic,” though he also owns the seventh largest collection of Lionel gauge model trains in the country.
“Model railroading is for kids of all ages. We talk about interactive games on iPads and computers, but model trains were probably the first interactive game,” Harper said.

 

Monday, October 29, 2012

Miscellaneous Train Mags Library

Classic Tains: The Golden Years of Railroading. Winter 2005
Classic Trains: The Golden Years of Railroading. Winter 2009
Classic Trains Special Edition #8: Dream Trains 2 - 1946-1956

Colorado Narrow Gauge Quarterly 1st Quarter 2008

Continental Modeler (UK) January 2011

Diesel Era July/August 1990

Electric Lines Jan/Feb 1988

Finescale Railroader: December 2005
Finescale Railroader: June 2006
Finescale Railroader: December 2006
Finescale Railroader: The 2007 Narrow Gauge Annual

Live Steam August 1992

Mainline Modeler December 1984

Model Rail December 2009 (UK)
Model Rail April 2010 (UK) 
Model Rail November 2010 (UK)  
Model Rail March 2011 (UK)
Model Rail February 2011 (UK)

Model Railroading November 1991
Model Railroading August 1993
Model Railroading October 1994

On30: Narrow Gauge Railroading for Everyone - 2006 Annual
On30: Narrow Gauge Railroading for Everyone - 2007 Annual
On30: Narrow Gauge Railroading for Everyone - 2008 Annual
On30: Narrow Gauge Railroading for Everyone - 2009 Annual

O-Gauge Railroading

Pacific Rail News February 1988
Pacific Rail News November 1988
Pacific Rail News September 1990

Prospector, The : The Rio Grande Modeling & Historic Society Fourth Quarter 2011

Railfan & Railroad March 2001

Railroad Press, The, Oct/Nov/Dec 2000

Streamliner, The :Official Publication of the Union Pacific Historical Society, Spring 2009

Train Shed Encyclopedia n. 60

Scale Rails Library

Scale Rails April 2007
Scale Rails  May 2007
Scale Rails  June 2007
Scale Rails July 2007
Scale Rails August 2007
Scale Rails September 2007
Scale Rails October 2007
Scale Rails November 2007
Scale Rails December 2007

Scale Rails February 2008
Scale Rails March 2008

Trains Magazine library

Trains Speecial" Locomotive 2008

Trains Magazine  July 1990

Trains Magazine June 1994

Trains Magazine November 2005

Trains Magazine  December 2001

Trains Magazine  July 2004

Trains Magazine May 2005
Trains Magazine December 2005

Trains Magazine July 2006

Trains Magazine February 2007
Trains Magazine  June 2007

Trains Magazine  August 2008

Trains Magazine April 2009
Trains Magazine May 2009
Trains Magazine November 2009
Trains Magazine December 2009

Trains Magazine  January 2010
Trains Magazine  May2010
Trains Magazine November 2010
Trains Magazine  December 2010

Trains Magazine January 2011
Trains Magazine  February 2011
Trains Magazine  March 2011
Trains Magazine  May 2011
Trains Magazine  July 2011
Trains Magazine August 2011
Trains Magazine November 2011

Trains Magazine January 2012
Trains Magazine February 2012
Trains Magazine March 2012
Trains Magazine May 2012
Trains Magazine April 2012


Sunday, October 28, 2012

Railroad Model Craftsman Library

Railroad Model Craftsman July 1994

Railroad Model Craftsman February 2005

Railroad Model Craftsman September 2008

Railroad Model Craftsman February 2009
Railroad Model Craftsman June 2009

Railroad Model Craftsman May 2010
Railroad Model Craftsman June 2010
Railroad Model Craftsman August 2010
Railroad Model Craftsman September 2010







Saturday, October 27, 2012

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Library

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette
"Accurate Information for Fine Model Building"

Selling mags for $1 ea. Or if you'd like a copy of an article, email me.

_____________________

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Nov/Dec 1993

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jul/Aug 1999
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 1999

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2003

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette May/June 2004
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2004
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Nov/Dec 2004

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jan/Feb  2005
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Mar/Apr 2005
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette May/June 2005
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jul/Aug 2005
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2005

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jan/Feb 2006
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Mar/Apr 2006
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette May/June 2006
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jul/Aug 2006
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2006

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette May/June 2007
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2007
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Nov/Dec 2007

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Mar/April 2008
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette May/June 2008
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2008

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jan/Feb 2009
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Mar/April 2009
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jul/Aug 2009
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 2009

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Jan/Feb  2010
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Mar/April 2010
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette May/June 2010

Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Mar/April 2011
Narrow Gauge ad Shortline Gazette Sept/Oct 20111

Friday, October 26, 2012

NMRA Magazine library

NMRA is the official publication of the National Model Railroad Association

Cover scans and TOCs will be available shortly

NMRA Magazine March 2011
NMRA Magazine April 2011
NMRA Magazine May 2011
NMRA Magazine June 2011
NMRA Magazine July 2011
NMRA Magazine August 2011
NMRA Magazine September 2011
NMRA Magazine October 2011
NMRA Magazine December 2011
NMRA Magazine February 2012
NMRA Magazine March 2012
NMRA Magazine May 2012
NMRA Magazine September 2012


Thursday, October 25, 2012

Who knew Rod Stewart liked model trains?

I acquired about 100 model railroad magazines yesterday, They're all old - some some from the 1990s, some from the 2000s. I'll be sharing cover shots and table of contents here.

If you'd like a copy of an article, or wish to purchase the entire magazine, email me. Cost of a single mag is $1. Postage will vary. Email Nocturne_CVS@yahoo.com



Model Railroader December 2010
42. Add DCC Sound to Alco S-2
46. Locomotive sounds add fun and realism
52. Achieve realistic colors under artificial lighting
56. Rod Stewart's Three Rivers City
64. Model trackside brush realistically
66. Urban switching in HO
70. Improve a common water tower kit
75. Use putty to make coal loads
76. An N scale Erie empire in 3 X 7 feet
94. Trackside photos

Plus in every issue:
On the Web
From the Editor
News & Products
Sweepstake rules
Railway Post Office
Information Desk
Workshop
Step by Step
DCC Corner
Product REviews
Trains of Thoughts
Index of advertisers and cartoon
The operators

Model Railroader Library

(I'll be publishing the cover and table of contents of each mag on a regular basis)________________________________________

Model Railroader  January 1986

Model Railroader January 1987
Model Railroader  February 1987
Model Railroader  March 1987
Model Railroader  May1987
Model Railroader  June1987
Model Railroader November 1987

Model Railroader July 1988

Model Railroader January1990
Model Railroader July 1990

Model Railroader March 1992

Model Railroader May 1998

Model Railroader  April 1999
Model Railroader May 1999
Model Railroader July 1999

Model Railroader July 2004
Model Railroader October 2004
Model Railroader November 2004

Model Railroader January 2005
Model Railroader February 2005
Model Railroader March 2005
Model Railroader April 2005
Model Railroader May 2005
Model Railroader June 2005
Model Railroader December 2005

Model Railroader March 2006
Model Railroader August 2006
Model Railroader September 2006
Model Railroader November 2006
Model Railroader December 2006

Model Railroader  January 2007
Model Railroader February 2007
Model Railroader March 2007
Model Railroader April 2007
Model Railroader  September 2007

Model Railroader  March 2008
Model Railroader April 2008
Model Railroader  May 2008
Model Railroader June 2008
Model Railroader July2008 
Model Railroader August 2008
Model Railroader September 2008
Model Railroader October 2008
Model Railroader November 2008
Model Railroader December 2008

Model Railroader January 2009
Model Railroader February 2009
Model Railroader March 2009
Model Railroader June 2009
Model Railroader September 2009
Model Railroader November 2009
Model Railroader  December 2009

Model Railroader  January 2010
Model Railroader  February 2010
Model Railroader March 2010
Model Railroader April 2010
Model Railroader June 2010
Model Railroader July 2010
Model Railroader August 2010
Model Railroader September 2010
Model Railroader  October 2010
Model Railroader November 2010

Model Railroader January 2011
Model Railroader   February 2011
Model Railroader March 2011
Model Railroader  April 2011
Model Railroader May 2011
Model Railroader June 2011
Model Railroader July 2011
Model Railroader  August 2011
Model Railroader  September 2011
Model Railroader October 2011
Model Railroader November 2011
Model Railroader December 2011

Model Railroader  January 2012
Model Railroader  February 2012
Model Railroader March 2012
Model Railroader April 2012
Model Railroader May 2012

Model Railroader - Miscellaneous
Model Railroader Special Issues:
Great Model Railroads 2005
Great Model Railroads 2010

102 Reaslistic Track Plans: How To Build Realistic Layouts #5
 
Model Railroad Planning 2004 (Model Railroader Magazine)

Pullout: 6 Railroads You Can Model  (2008, Model Railroader Magazine)
Tables for your trains  (Model Railroader Magazine)

Vintage hobby show takes over the Ramada in Fargo

This news is from last Sunday, in Fargo, SD, but the event takes place every year so just mark it down on your calendars for next year.


From WDay.com: Vintage hobby show takes over the Ramada in Fargo

Fargo, ND (WDAY TV) -- A bit of nostalgia hit Fargo's Ramada today, as it filled with vintage trains, planes, and tractors.
The Spud Valley Model Railroad Club sponsored its annual Hobby Show. People from all over the region showed up to look at the impressive collection of vintage models.
The show is a fundraiser for the club, and gives people a little taste of the past.
Don Radeck with the Spud Valley Model RR Club says, "we've got Northern Pacific here. Northern Pacific's been gone for more than 40 years now, but it's a way of re-living the old NP days. And farm toys, I think a lot of that is a lot of the people who used to be farmers, they remember these tractors when they were kids and now they've got models of them."
The show went from ten to three today.

 

 

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Model RR show delights kids of all ages at Ludlowe

From Fairfield Citzen:  Model RR show delights kids of all ages at Ludlowe

The Housatonic Model Railway Club's annual train show pulled into town again Sunday, giving children and adults the chance to discover -- and rediscover -- the magic of model trains.
"This is our 26th year doing the show," said Jeff Dean, president of the Fairfield-based club.
"This is basically a show to promote model railroading as a hobby -- for children, for teens ... for adults and for seniors," said John Valakas of Bridgeport, the club's membership chairman.
Two gymnasiums at Fairfield Ludlowe High School were filled with about 35 vendors and four separate model train layouts. Close to 1,000 visitors were expected throughout the day, invited to share in the fun, learn about the hobby and witness the marvel of scale-model collecting.
"I think it's amazing, when you think of all the time and creativity that goes into making this," said Susan Durham of Fairfield, who came with her two sons, Henry and Ethan.
"It's amazing how they did this," Henry said. "I just like the detail put into them."
"We'd like to see more kids get into it," said Marc Rosenblum of Fairfield, a club member who opened the HobbyTown USA store six years ago.
"We're trying to keep it alive," he said. "It's getting challenging today. The kids have so many electronic distractions."
He said model trains make for an ideal hands-on hobby because it involves diverse fields like electronics, art, architecture and mathematical skills. "It encompasses so many different skills and so many different areas of learning," he said.
"You can be an engineer," said Valakas. "You can be an architect ... It's a great hobby.
He said everyone is invited, by appointment, to visit the club and see the new HO-scale layout in progress. "People are always welcome," he said, and can contact the club through its website, http://www.housatonicmr.org
Sunday's show was staged in conjunction with the Fairfield Museum and History Center. Starting around Thanksgiving, the club will set up a model RR layout for public viewing at the museum through the holiday season.
"My son, Julian, loves trains," said Alex Alcaraz of Fairfield. "He started with the Thomas trains, and we've started getting into more things."
"I like them a lot," Julian, 7, said. "They go so fast, or so slow. I enjoy it a lot."
For train shows, club members generally bring sections of track that they've designed and built. Then, at the event, all the sections are joined to create one giant layout.
"It makes a change from the layout at home," said John Kent of Westport, a member of the Valley N-Trak club, who attends many model train shows.
"It's an exchange of ideas and a little bit of socializing and relaxing," he said of the show.
"My favorite part of the hobby is the camaraderie," said Dean, who's been a member of the Housatonic Model Railway Club for 37 years. "I like model building. I like to run the trains. But the best part is ... the long-term friendships."

 

Friday, October 19, 2012

Stamford, CT: Oct 21: Model-train show Sunday at Ludlowe

From Fairfield Citizen:  Model-train show Sunday at Ludlowe

Grand Central Terminal will have nothing on the Fairfield Ludlowe High School gym on Sunday, Oct. 21, when dozens of model trains and scale-railroad buffs pull into town.
The Housatonic Model Railway Club's annual train show will take place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The show -- Station Stop 2012 -- will feature operating layouts with scale-model buildings, equipment and scenery, the club said. Modelers will be on hand, along with dealers selling model-train equipment.
Admission is $6, $2 for children 5 to 12.
For more information, call 203-374-1118 or visit www.housatonicmr.org

 

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Local group receives grant to continue work on model railroad

From White Mountain Independent:  Local group receives grant to continue work on model railroad

SHOW LOW — The Silver Creek Railroaders, who built and maintain a model railroad at the Show Low Museum, have received a grant so they can continue to develop the railroad.
The group learned from the Show Low Historical Society Oct. 4 they had received the grant from the Arizona Historical Society in the amount of $1,500. Silver Creek Railroaders Superintendent Dean Cramblit said the grant funds will allow the group to add a display depicting the railroad along Route 66 and mining and related industries in northern Arizona.
Planning for changes to the existing display are already in progress, such as additional track, new scenery, buildings, background paintings and locomotives and rail cars relevant to mining. The group will also make improvements to the electrical system running the display.
This is the second year in a row the Silver Creek Railroaders have received a grant from the Arizona Historical Society. In 2011, the group received a $1,250 grant for the development, construction and operation of the Last Train to Maverick display. A portion of the club room now contains representations of the town of McNary, its lumber mill and tracks to the lumber town of Maverick.
Much of the display is handmade by club members, including scenery, buildings and rail cars. Members continue to add details to the display, such as the sound of a lumber mill. The Apache Railway is a main point of the Last Train to Maverick display, assisted with a donation from the railway that still runs trains from Snowflake to Holbrook.
The display can be seen at the Show Low Museum, located at 561 E. Deuce of Clubs, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. Club members are on hand every Wednesday and Saturday working on the model railroad. The group also frequently hosts large groups of school children throughout the region to show off their work.

Monday, October 15, 2012

iHobby Expo has trains, cars, models at IX Center

Old news, but make a note to check this out next year. THey'll doubtless repeat it.

From iHobby.com: iHobby Expo has trains, cars, models at IX Center

The iHobby Expo at the IX Center is a full-color celebration of the hobby industry, with radio-control vehicles of every description, trains, trains and more trains, tools, paints, die-cast cars, and all manner of plastic scale models.
Then there is Ken Foran of Wooster.
In this ocean of mass-produced hobby materials of all types and sizes, he is an island of hand-craftsmanship that rises to fine art. His booth features, among other things, a 1911 Ford Model T racer.
Most of it is brass. It is 1/8th scale, which means an eighth of an inch equals one inch.
Foran, the former vice president of research and development at Rubbermaid, spent 1,800 hours building it and said he would let it go for $22,000. To show how fully functional it is, he turns the starter crank that pokes out of the mostly exposed chassis.
A mirror beneath the car reveals that he is turning over a crankshaft (the oil pan is not in place) and the rear wheels turn.
The wooden spokes are wood, and so are the floor boards. The seats are covered in goatskin from a pair of women’s high-fashion gloves.
And that’s not even the most complex thing he’s ever undertaken.
He points to an engine in front of him that’s about the size of a deck of cards. It is a 1/8th-scale 3.8 liter dual overhead cam six-cylinder engine for a 1962 Jaguar XKE.
“I have 60 hours into it,” he said. “But it’s not done.”
It is, however, done enough to reveal a crankshaft attached to six pistons that are visible when he turns it upside down.
There’s also the metal cowl for one of the aircraft. His wife, Gretchen, an accomplished silver- and coppersmith, hand hammered it out of aluminum.
Both learned their skills at the Cleveland Institute of Art, where he studied industrial design after mustering out of the Marines.
The expo was only for retailers and distributors Thursday and Friday, but it is open to the public today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For details, see http://www.ihobbyexpo.com.

 

Wilmington, NC: Model railroad show is fun for everyone

From WWAY.TV:  Model railroad show is fun for everyone

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY)-- The Wilmington Railroad Museum hosts a Model Railroad Extravaganza this weekend. Miniature trains and landscapes fill an entire room of the museum. Guests can watch the model trains chug by, or even conduct these engines themselves. The museum promotes a remote control that allows children and adults to tell the train to go forward, back up, or just stay put.
Executive Director of the Wilmington Railroad Museum, Mark Koenig, says this is an event for all ages. He says children have the chance to engage with the trains, while adults have the opportunity to participate in the craft of model railroads. He also says this is a great way to share the heritage and history of railroads in our country.

 

Friday, October 12, 2012

Enjoying the trains

From the NEAgle:  Enjoying the trains

 Managing Editor
Although Stourbridge Line train excursions are on hold this year in Wayne and Pike counties, Hawley Fire Department had model trains in action again, Oct. 7. Twice a year they hold a model train show and sale at the Fire Hall, benefiting the fire company. The S-gauge layout was set up by Tim Callaghan, of Harrisburg and Tom Keegan of Greeley. Their train layout has become a regular attraction at the show in Hawley. They make it interactive, letting the kids operate a crane to put cargo on the train, or some other function. They very the layout each year. In keeping with the election season, this time they set up a model of the White House, with a dual parade of tiny elephants and donkeys, both heading for the front doors. Keegan says he hopes to inspire the younger generation to love model trains. He lamented that in recent years, locomotives and other accessories have become so costly, it’s hard to make it accessible for kids. Modern model railroads are all computerized, he noted. Their layout at the show uses traditional hand levers to regulate the speed or switch tracks. They also like to use vintage American Flyer cars, made by the A.C. Gilbert Company. The trains used in the show date from the 1950’s. The next model train show and sale at the Hawley Fire Hall is planned Sunday, April 14, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, contact Bill Delling at (570)226-3206.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Regina, Canada: Show cancelled

From the Leaderpost:  Show cancelled

What would have been the 10th annual Regina Model Railroad Show has been cancelled because renovations to the venue are behind schedule and won't be completed in time for the Oct. 13 and 14 show.
"They didn't quite make it," said Gordon Down, referring to renovations to Cochrane High School, which has housed the model railway show for the past nine years. "So we had to cancel the show."
The last-minute notice made it impossible for event organizers to relocate, he said. "You've got to get permits and licences, and all that. So there just isn't time," a clearly disappointed Down explained.
In past years, the Regina Model Railway Show - jointly hosted by the Echo Valley Railroad Guild and Regina Model Railroad Club - set up portable model trains in about 13,000 square feet (1,210 square metres) of space, which included the school's large entrance area, cafetorium and gym. Between 35 and 40 participants were expected this year, Down said.
"We will probably have to look for a new venue (for future shows)," he said.
Despite the show being cancelled, event organizers said they still plan to make their annual charitable donation.
"The board decided we still want to give (the Leader-Post Christmas Cheer Fund) $500," Down said.
In past years, a portion of the event's proceeds supported the charity, which supports four Regina shelters for women and children fleeing domestic abuse.

 

Sunday, October 7, 2012

The Great Train Expo

From CBS 4 News:  The Great Train Expo

Train Enthusiasts from all over the QCA took part in the Great Train Expo in Rock Island in Saturday.
Train vendors from California to Kentucky came showed off their train collections at the Model Railroad Show. Thousands of toy trains, miniatures and train memorabilia are on display and on sale at the QCCA Expo Center.
The show even has a ride-on train and a play area for kids.
"I just think that they have such a history in the country, that you can't go anywhere without seeing them. Pretty much everything you buy is moved by them. A lot of people as kids had trains themselves and now they're parents, so they like to get their kids into that hobby,"  said Bill Grove, Train Expo Show Manager.
More than 2,000 people are expected to take part in the 2 day railroad show. The event continues through Sunday from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.