Monday, 21 March 2011

Marx Bargain on Ebay Must see

I always like to give my readers a heads up on these things, if you are in the market you can get such a steal but not everyone is on ebay every week.

Marx are a classic collectors item, i have no idea what the book price is on these trains so make sure you consult a price guide first but could be a steal as no-one has bid yet.

 

 

Marx Trains "O" Scale Freight Cars

 
Item condition: Used
 
Time left: 2d 13h (Mar 23, 201114:43:47 PDT) 
 
Bid history:

FREE shipping
 Marx Trains "O" Scale Freight Cars

 

Friday, 18 March 2011

Model Train Show in Santa Susanna

Stephen Osman/The Star Bruce Hedin, of Simi Valley, with son Cameron, 4, riding on his shoulders, visit Santa Susana Railroad Depot and Museum in Simi Valley in February.

 

The club's expansive model layout represents Southern Pacific Railroad's Coastline in the mid-50s from Union Station in Los Angeles to Seattle, Wash. It is a constant project in progress.

Some of the work can be done independently and some must be done right on the layout. Goudsward made the bridge at home, but must construct the work around the bridge on the layout itself. "Buildings can be done at home and then brought and put in place," said Goudsward.

Tobias Vincent drives all the way from Palmdale to be a part of this club. He's a new member, who recently completed the six month required apprenticeship, and he pointed out the miniature model of the Santa Susana Depot, which houses the model trains.

The room is open to the public on Saturdays and Sundays from 1-4 p.m., and the docents work the trains for the visitors.

Read more: http://www.vcstar.com/news/2011/mar/17/santa-susana-model-railroad-club-brings-together/#ixzz1GwJIlLfI 
- vcstar.com 

Thursday, 17 March 2011

Heads Up - Train O Rama in Dover on Sunday

Train O Rama Comes to Dover!

Donald Brill of Dover is the organizer of the Train-O-Rama train show taking place at Dover  High School this weekend.

NORTHWEST JERSEY TRAIN-O-RAMA

WHEN: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday
WHERE: Dover High School, 100 Grace St., Dover
TICKETS: Age 11 and older, $6; age 10 and younger, $3
MORE INFO: www.dovertrainshow.com

http://www.mycentraljersey.com/article/C0/20110317/NJENT/110316010/1026/Train-O-Rama-pulls-into-Dover-Sunday

Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Need Inspiration for Layouts?

These are GREAT for kids, if you are thinking of making a set for children these are great to have a look at get an idea of what you can do.

 

 

Dsc_0013_sm

 

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Dsc_0838_sm
See more photos here:

http://modeltrainsforbeginners.com/model-train-layout-photos-from-charles-countess

Friday, 11 March 2011

EnterTRAINment Junction this weekend

"The train display attractions hosts the 2011 Model Engineering Show from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday.

“This fills up the big expo center and spills over,” said Bill Mefford, the publicist for EnterTRAINment Junction. “These are, in my opinion, artisans. Rather than just being small replicas, or what have you, this has moving parts.”

The show will bring in about 30 or 40 collectors, including Peter Villarreal, a volunteer at EnterTRAINment Junction who builds some of the bridges and other structures in the display."

 

For more information ask here: erobinette@coxohio.com

Saturday, 5 March 2011

Trains O Scale Hopper Car

This is on: http://www.tias.com/14177/PictPage/3923868407.html

If your in the market this could be a great collectible.

 

 

We love to combine shipping so if the shipping is not calculated correctly on your cart, just send me a quick email and I will reduce it for you promptly!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hornby Trains O Scale Hopper Car in Box (Image1)
 


 

March Madness 10% Off! March Madness 10% off Use coupon code 10 when ordering for 10% off.


Circa: 1920s-1930s
Country of Origin: United Kingdom
Manufacturer: Hornby

Hornby Trains O Scale Hopper Car in Box

It says "Goods Van" which I believe makes the car and the box not a marriage. I appears to be a hopper or dumper car

Equivalent to 0 scale in American. Both the car and box are excellent

Friday, 4 March 2011

Model Train Show - Run by Enthusiasts

 

Great show - story courtesy of independantmail.com

 — Destiny Absher, 7, climbed across the seats of a small rail car Saturday while her friend Alex Beaty tested out the controls in the middle of the car.

 

 

Three rail cars stood in front of the doors to the 15th Annual Central Railway Model and Historical Association Train Show at the J.B. Owens Sports Complex in Easley.

“Guess what? He said he might drive us in this!” Destiny said.

“He” was Jim Hopkins, a member of the Greenville Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. Hopkins owns and operates two small rail cars, having ridden the rails with them in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia. He’s been interested in trains for 10 years.


Destiny’s dad, photographer Jonathan Absher, is also a train enthusiast. He looked on while Destiny and Alex clambered over the rail cars as he spoke about an 8-foot-by-10-foot display he keeps in his Simpsonville home.“You just pay a fee and ride for the weekend,” he said of the Easley event.

“It’s an historical display covering from 1941 to the end of steam locomotives,” he said.

Inside the Bagwell Gymnasium at the sports complex, three full basketball courts will remain filled until 5 p.m. today with things related to trains. Model trains, building kits, reference and historical books, and train magazines are there. Items for model train landscaping, crafter’s tools, and sound systems and accessories for trains are available as well.

Trains for little hands are available at a low table that bears a wooden track complete with scenery, miniature signs and model locomotives. It sits very near the toy area, where train stickers, books, puzzles and play mats can be found. The fictional steam locomotive Thomas the Tank Engine — star of books, videos and more — is there too.

Dave Winans of Simpsonville stood Saturday in front of a model display that was 37 feet long. He said that he “has been interested in model trains all my life.”

“And she married into it,” he added, speaking of his wife, Anne, who stood beside him.

“The big issue is trying to encourage younger people into an interest in model trains,” he said. “Other than Thomas the Tank Engine, I don’t think they’re into it as much as they used to be.”

Several of the models on display from the Piedmont & Southern Model Railroad Club of Greenville were built by Winans when he was a part of the club 20 years ago. He now has a 2.5 foot-by-10 foot model, “not a very big one,” in his home, he said.

The club began in the 1980s and took its name from the two major railways in the area at the time, the Piedmont & Northern and the Southern.

Dave Cummins of Georgia kept a watchful eye Saturday on the longest train display in the Easley complex, a 66-foot model with 2-inch scale tracks. He is glad to talk about the old days, when train tracks were not standardized and ranged anywhere from 2 feet to 6 feet across. For Cummins, railroads run in the family.

“My brother was a railroad fireman,” he said. “They would call him to move an engine, and my father would drive him to the tracks in his Model T Ford. I was about 6 years old, and I would ride along.”

That’s when he began to love trains and everything about them, he said.

“Out of high school, I went to work on a 3-foot narrow gauge railroad as a switchman,” he said.

Besides vendors and model trains from all over the Southeast, a display from the Central Railway Museum is set up just inside the front doors at the event this weekend. The museum is in a house owned by the city of Central. The Central Railway Model and Historical Association has gutted and rebuilt the interior of the structure. Ettie Ruppert takes care of publicity for the association and builds scenery for displays at the museum.

Central was a major railroad town in the 1940s because it was centrally located between Charlotte and Atlanta, which is how the city got its name, said Jack Green, curator of the museum.

“Steam locomotives needed water every 100 miles and coal every 200 miles and had to be serviced every 24 hours,” Green said. “Central was the ideal location for that.”

In terms of model railroads, a lot is involved with building one — first the wooden framework, then the electronics, and finally the landscaping. The Central Railway Association has put more than 2,000 hours of labor into renovating the museum and building displays. The club’s original membership total of 15 has grown to 50.