News:

Please read the Forum Code of Conduct   >>Click Here <<

Main Menu
Menu

Show posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.

Show posts Menu

Messages - ceastonoh

#1
Not really a mouse, but several of my tenders are so afflicted and I can't seem to get it to go away? It seems to be mainly on the Hudsons. The 773 squeaks, the Southern squeaks, the B&O does not. Also either the GS4 tender or the N&W, forget which right now.
Anybody else have this problem?
Anybody have a fix?

Charlie
#2
Williams by Bachmann / Re: Club Car
May 01, 2009, 10:26:43 AM
Quote from: DominicMazoch on March 19, 2009, 11:15:28 PM
Next year, make a "regular" car, with a "nornal" roadname.  But in the place where the trustee info is, place "WBB, Phila. PA , trustee" in font proper to the car.  A collector car, but something somebody could run on a train without it looking like a soe thumb.  MTH did that with their R50B for PRR.

Exactly, Domanic. I don't mind a little bit of promotion on club cars, but subdued and discreet. The last two are up there with aquarium cars and mint cars. OK if that's what you like but what's the percentage of people who buy this stuff. Infinitesimal compared to the market in general I'd bet.
There are ways for Williams by Bachmann to offer club cars without competing with dealers and without making these goofy things. A good club car just expands the customer base making more customers think Williams when they walk in their LHS.

Charlie
#3
On30 / Re: 26118 DRG&W Spectrum Combine car
December 08, 2008, 08:37:39 AM
I'll grant you that. To each his own. Now if you also like the PRR DD-1, NYC T Motor, and the PC E44 we might need to get you into therapy ;)
#4
On30 / Re: 26118 DRG&W Spectrum Combine car
December 06, 2008, 08:10:59 AM
Thanks again Dieter. You have really expanded my knowledge of European trains. As to the doghouse on the engine/tender, most of the American ones I'm familiar with had the doghouse somewhere toward the center of the tender.
Your explanation for the doghouse seems plausible to me. As to the job of the brakeman, what a boring job that must have been. Much safer than American brakemen, but I wonder if the engineer had a "wake up the brakemen" whistle followed by a "brake the car signal". :-)
I don't follow N or HO, but you are probably aware of a number of O manufacturers here introducing European steam engines for purchase. The ACE Trains incursion seems to be traceable to this recent phenomenon. I have always been a fan of certain European trains; examples being the Mallard and the the Swiss Crocodile, the latter of course being of American design, but much nicer than engines of similar function designed for use here. An example of pure ugly would be the Milwaukee Road EP-2. I have a picture of it pulling two steam engines at full throttle heading the opposite way.

Charlie
#5
On30 / Re: 26118 DRG&W Spectrum Combine car
December 03, 2008, 09:43:36 AM
Hi Dieter,

Well, I've been busy with other stuff and just saw your reply. Thank you very much for the tip. I have discovered a wealth of pictures but most have added to my confusion. In my limited knowledge I am mainly aware of a doghouse on the tender of a steam engine. This was caused by a redesign that allowed room for the engineer and fireman, but not the brakeman. So he rode in a doghouse on the tender. I have also heard that the size of the tender, blocking the view of the train, was the purpose for the doghouse. As I understand it, some were heated and some were bitterly cold (and no doubt lonely).
This is where my questions come in. These German cars had a brake-doghouse on every car? Some cars? Few cars? Did a brakeman stay in there and then cover several cars when called upon? I don't see many roof walks on these cars and the sharply rounded or steeply pitched roofs apparently common to European rolling stock don't seem to lend themselves to traversing several cars by a brakeman. Maybe a mountain goat!
And why were some brakeman-doghouses perched high and some were lower than the roof line of the car itself?

Many questions, I know, but I can honestly say it's foreign to me.

Charlie
#6
On30 / Re: 26118 DRG&W Spectrum Combine car
November 24, 2008, 06:21:44 AM
Dear Bach-man and Dieter,

Thanks to both of you. You were a big help. Dieter, the info on the doghouse was quite a revelation to me. A friend from the Netherlands also provided the same information. Just for fun, you can go here: http://images.google.com/hosted/life then on the very bottom left, click on "railroads" and see lots of old pictures from LIFE magazine. The picture I saw is presently on page 9, although I understand Google is adding lots more pictures all the time.
If you see the picture, you might think that it is indeed a passenger car as it has an entry door that sure looks like a passenger car door. If you take a look I would appreciate your comments and observations.

Charlie
#7
On30 / 26118 DRG&W Spectrum Combine car
November 23, 2008, 12:21:22 PM
Does anybody know the manufacturing time frame of this car? I saw a German passenger car turned into a yard shack from a 1948 photo, and thought if I did that, with an American made car, it would look great on my transitional layout. So I was thinking something from the 1890s to 1910s might be a suitable candidate. The German picture had what appears to be a doghouse added to the end. Or maybe that was where the conductor sat while underway, and this car was always at the end. Anyway, clerestories and all, it looked really neat, so I'm looking for a suitable donor to be saved from the scrapyard.
Charlie Easton