Toy Trains?

Another Johnson

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Jan 13, 2022
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Tis the season. Is this hobby incompatible with audio?
I have an animated G scale Christmas train that died a few years ago. The grandson saw it at age 2, and asks for it every year. I spent this afternoon bringing it back to life. Deoxit played a major role. He’ll be excited tomorrow when he comes for our weekly Sunday night dinner.
 
Tis the season. Is this hobby incompatible with audio?
I have an animated G scale Christmas train that died a few years ago. The grandson saw it at age 2, and asks for it every year. I spent this afternoon bringing it back to life. Deoxit played a major role. He’ll be excited tomorrow when he comes for our weekly Sunday night dinner.

It is expensive, time- and space-consuming, requires great attention to detail, and often some technical ability to dial it in and fix things. Plus there is always some other (new or old) thing you want to add, more track to buy, more scenery, etc. In other words, compared to audio hobbies, they are basically the same... :)

I have my old Lionel (O gauge) sets around someplace. I always thought I'd get into that or HO with DCC and all that jazz, but have so many other hobbies fitting the description above that I just never got around to it.
 
I envied my older brother's O' gauge train set when I was young. I wanted a train to put around the Christmas tree, but never pulled the trigger until this year. Guess it's my bucket list item, along with a nativity set (just got this year) and my high-end audio chains
 
The Lionel animated G-Scale Christmas train was a hit with the five year old. But after we’d played with it for a while, he wanted to set up the O-Scale Thomas the Tank Engine train (bought in 2022 when the G-Scale had failed). Train aficionados will know that O and G can’t run on the same track. I will set Thomas up and take him down “on demand.”

FWIW, if you have one of these 2010ish Chinese made G-Scale Lionel Christmas Trains, they’re actually not difficult to get into.

The gear train is plastic, but it still had grease present. All the teeth looked good.
In the end, the thing that was causing the trouble was the electrical coupling plug from the tender to the locomotive. That was surprisingly resistant to cleaning … like a tube and socket, it eventually responded to reseating, but it took several reseatings before it was reliably working again.

In 2022 when I called various toy train repair gurus to troubleshoot, the advice was always “send it to me and I’ll fix it in January.” So maybe this hobby has even more in common with audio than I thought. :p
 
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The Lionel animated G-Scale Christmas train was a hit with the five year old. But after we’d played with it for a while, he wanted to set up the O-Scale Thomas the Tank Engine train (bought in 2022 when the G-Scale had failed). Train aficionados will know that O and G can’t run on the same track. I will set Thomas up and take him down “on demand.”

FWIW, if you have one of these 2010ish Chinese made G-Scale Lionel Christmas Trains, they’re actually not difficult to get into.

The gear train is plastic, but it still had grease present. All the teeth looked good.
In the end, the thing that was causing the trouble was the electrical coupling plug from the tender to the locomotive. That was surprisingly resistant to cleaning … like a tube and socket, it eventually responded to reseating, but it took several reseatings before it was reliably working again.

In 2022 when I called various toy train repair gurus to troubleshoot, the advice was always “send it to me and I’ll fix it in January.” So maybe this hobby has even more in common with audio than I thought. :p
I've had to deal with similar connectors over the years. Often enough the receptacle (female, jack) end contacts have spread enough that they no longer reliably capture the plug (male) end. Compounded by cheap and/or soft metal that loses it's "spring". I have had some success using a (or a pair of) very fine (e.g. jewelers) flat screwdriver or file to sneak between the contact and holder (often a molded housing) to gently squeeze the the contacts together. Then some contact cleaner and a couple of insertion cycles usually gets things going again.
 
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I kept all the LGB gear we had growing up, pulled it out a couple years ago for my kids and almost all of it still works. Some of it is 35 years old and the lights still turn on. Lots of fun, but it takes a lot of space.

Dave
 
Slot cars.

My childhood friend had 4 sisters 10yrs older than him, so he got the great toys. Extensive hot wheels and slot cars.

For years I wanted to get a slot car set. When I finally got one, it was a bit fidgety and now wireless model cars were the norm. Not sure if to keep the “deluxe” slot car set (4 lanes) or get rid of dinosaur tech. Nowadays they’re racing drones via video cameras
 
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I have a lot of trains .what started me on collecting them was a Lionel trainset I use to play with as a kid.
It a 1948 freight train set my mother bought for my Father as a first anniversary gift.
I still had some pieces left and restored the set and found the cars I was missing to complete the set
I still have the set.
I also got into slot cars when they where popular
 
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At the moment I am watching an LGB Swiss Furka Oberalp run CCW on an R1 oval. I’ve just finished the lubrication maintenance on all my G scale sets. The Bachmann 4-6-0 Christmas train is running CW and on the R2 outer loop, fire box brightly flickering and smoke pouring out of the stack. They’re passing Johnson’s Hardware and Dry Goods on every lap.

I ran the Lionel Pennsy earlier. I’m waiting for some bulbs (from eBay) to fix the two passenger cars. I do have the cars apart … no mean feat. Plenty of freight cars to run with that engine (thanks to my Mother’s having bought a new car every year for my Dad.
 
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The five year old announced the other day that “Grandpa has four trains running for Christmas.” I told him there were at least 12 here, from Z to G.
 
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Rod Stewart is also into toy trains
Neil Young too.


It can be mesmerizing to watch the loops and listen to the clickity clack, much like turntables.

The grandson wanted to know where the other trains were (he could only see four). I told him they were in my secret storage room. So now the quest is on … where is the secret room. As Roseanne Roseannadanna used to say, “It’s always something.”
 
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I had trains. Prefer the AFX cars. As a kid i had 3 or 4 car sets. I made a giant layout in the attic. Had to have jumpers to get power to the whole track. I nailed that thing to the floor. My parents must have been very tolerance.
 
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I’ve gotten the bite again, and have now set out 70+ feet of G scale track in a three loop (R1, R2, and R3) 9’x14’ layout. The 5 year old has analog control of the inner R1 and R2 loops via two “transformers.”. He likes to run “Inspector Gustav” around on his hand car to make stops at various buildings, including Johnson’s Hardware and Dry Goods.

The R3 based oval runs the periphery in digital.

When my boys were in late elementary school, we made an HO layout with lots of switches, and two cab block control. The 5 year old’s level of play is not sophisticated enough to warrant complications. He can put Gustav and a FO diesel on the track reliably, and he’s learning about reversing directions, and good control. I’ve ordered some flat cars with LEGO style platforms so that he can “make his own” cars. The Furka Oberalp loco will haul them around.

Meanwhile, on the outer R3 based oval, I’m running a couple of new DCC locomotives and some very nice cars. I have to admit, there is something soothing about 3 trains and a hand car running around a 9’x14’ layout. I wish I had more room. The solution is HO, but he’s too little.

When he gets old enough I’ve got everything needed to model the run over the glacier from Bergen to Oslo in HO scale, including the glacier, and a Roco DCC NSB livery EL16 as I rode with my grandfather in 1989.
 
Seeing that I'm a third generation railroader (retired for the past 4 years) Model railroading is in the 'genes', given my age and arthritic hands Gauge 1(also know as G gauge) is my go-to. I operate live steam engines on my outdoor RR............

consoldations meet.JPG

cosol side view copy.jpg
 
Seeing that I'm a third generation railroader (retired for the past 4 years) Model railroading is in the 'genes', given my age and arthritic hands Gauge 1(also know as G gauge) is my go-to. I operate live steam engines on my outdoor RR............
Looks better than great! I’ve thought about doing live steam. I used to serve on our state’s Board of Boiler Rules.

Don’t get me started :D:D
 
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