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Because of the quality of their recent structural offerings, I was excited about their recent offering of the O scale depot. The pictures looked great and I was onboard to order one. That is, until I was able to see one at the local hobbie shop. Somehow it was much smaller then I expected, and although it had some very nice details the overall look seemed plastic and not up to the standards of their other models, IMO.

 

Maybe My expectations were too high for this offering. I would be interested in what others think. Also, is there a medium size depot out there that you all love??

 

Thanks,

Johnjr

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Whats nice about it is that it is small and can fit nicely along the way for an on the line depot. Most other offerings are much deeper. MTH has a building that was a nice on line depot but it had not been offered for a while. Think its in the current catalog. The Semaphore is fragile. The one I saw at a dealer had the flag broken off. It is nicely detailed. I would have liked some figures with it other than the station agent who is there for the price.

Sorry you are disappointed. I think it's a beautiful piece, with the detailed interior and that shoe shine stand. At just over 11 by 7, it will fit in about anywhere. We're selling them for $119.96 which I think is a fair price. One could easily weather it, but I think it looks fine once you get it out of the plastic box. 

Originally Posted by AMCDave:

If you know their line of HO kits......it's about the size I figured it would be. The photo above installed on a layout look GREAT! 

I've seen them in person.  To me, the size is appropriate for the style of building, and the detail is amazing.  Relative to other stuff on the market, the price seems to be in line.  I'd love to have one, but unfortunately it doesn't fit my "needs".  (I just can't bring myself to say that I need anything related to toy trains.)

 When first mentioned this Depot would be coming out, was overjoyed. Plus it would fit in several places on my layout.

But then I took a second look and it looked to me "Pixie, or   cartoonish" like. Something out of a Saturday cartoon. I thought about making a new roof profile, and may still consider later.

Roger,

your pictures are wonderful and have me reconsidering my position about buying this depot. Maybe I should have never seen Harry Heike's train station (which I have neither the space or budget for). He set the bar pretty high for me. But I think the responses are on target; this is a product that is designed to fit almost anywhere and can be weathered nicely.

thanks for the responses!

JohnJr

Always better to go smaller than bigger. You can use a small depot on a big layout, but not often the other way around (which would be the more likely scenario)

I got to see the pilot model for this at the NMRA show in Portland last weekend and was quite impressed:

If it weren't for the following, I'd have one already:

  1. I already built the depots I needed for my layout (2 kits and one scratchbuilt, my website has photos if you're curious)
  2. I'd have to find a way to re-paint it with my RR's colors that they painted everything in
  3. These pre-built structures are hard to personalize to your layout

Could we assume they'll make a kit version of this like they have the other structure in that line? If so, I'd bet that it would be a popular kit. I haven't seen too many small town depot kits like this in O scale before this one.

Now, the detractors have said that this structure is very toy-like and looks like a depot at an amusement park. I can sort of get their point there, especially the second point. The semaphore isn't really what I'd have on one of these (maybe a train order board would have been better) but it's still a great looking building. as for it looking like it should be at Disneyland, yeah, I can't argue that point. It does have that look. If you layout takes place in the 40s or earlier, it'll be fine. Anytime after WW2, it'd look too cartoonish and probably should be modeled as a boarded-up structure instead for a modern era layout.

Originally Posted by p51:
as for it looking like it should be at Disneyland,

Actually, the station at Disneyland was based on a circa 1890 flagstop somewhere on the Lehigh Valley's Pottsville Branch.

 

More on that here: (not mine)

http://1stclass.mylargescale.c...zzlyFlats/index.html

 

This structure is similar in style would probably have been built sometime around the turn of the century. I think its a very nice station for a small town setting.

Last edited by spwills
Great photography Roger,  it really catches the warmth and overall feel this structure would add.   May have to find a place for one.........  you need to contact Woodland Scenic for your ongoing commission check.........  smile
 
Originally Posted by Roger Wasson:

I love mine, yes it is smaller, but it will fit about any where. I added a few figures to mine.

 

 

SAM_1934

SAM_1935

 

I can't think of anywhere I have seen a station with an open waiting room, except for

the few that were like schoolbus stops on the Ma and Pa.  The style looks northeastern, but the open waiting area makes you think of a warmer climate.  I would IMMEDIATELY enclose the open waiting room as a baggage room, and then might be

more comfortable with it.  However, I have no place to put some stations I have.....

We will have these in stock by Wednesday next week. We have the best price anywhere at $117.99.

Thanks

Pat

WWW.PATSTRAINS.COM

WOODLAND SCENICS The Depot - O Scale BR5852

http://www.patstrains.com/View...Details=View+Details

 
 
 
WOODLAND SCENICS The Depot - O Scale BR5852

PREORDER DUE JULY 2015 The Depot - O Scale BR5852 The Depot is a classic whistle stop depot suitable for any layout. It features clapboard siding, a weathered cedar shake roof, covered outside passenger waiting area and a modeled interior that includes a ticket clerk figure standing before an open ticket window. Scene-setting details include a lamppost, posted train schedule, luggage carts, benches, semaphore, pigeons sitting on the roof, signage, decals and many more. The Depot also includes three LED lights - a warm white interior light, a yellow exterior light located under the overhang in the passenger waiting area and a yellow exterior light in the light pole. Installed lights are compatible with the Just Plug Lighting System. Voltage:16-20VAC/Current: 75mA. RoHS Compliant. See photos for footprint. Colors may vary from actual product.
Stock Number:
BR5852
Gauge:
O/O-27 Gauge
Manufacturer:
Woodland Scenics
Product Type:
Buildings & Accessories
Price:
$119.99
Availability:
Pre-order [2]
Last edited by PATSTRAINS

From the looks of it in the photos, I think it looks like a very nice, small town station.  I'd be tempted to get one myself, except that I just don't have any room for it. 

 

If you are looking for something a bit larger, you might consider Lionel's Rico station.  It's been around a long time, and while it doesn't have the amount of detail on it that seems apparent on the WS's depot, you can add detail to your heart's content, along with lighting, people,  baggage carts, etc.  You can also paint it for any color that your RR considers as "standard".  Costs a lot less, too.

 

Paul Fischer

Originally Posted by p51:

 

 

If it weren't for the following, I'd have one already:

  1. I'd have to find a way to re-paint it with my RR's colors that they painted everything in

You could very easily have it as the station of another railroad near or crossing yours so no need to worry about re-painting in home road colors.

It looks like the stations on the Mainline out of Philadelphia - we lived in Wayne, PA for awhile..... Pat's got me beat by nearly $2..... Ours are $119.96 plus $12 shipping..... I can wait to sell the rest of mine until Pat's are all gone..... I'll just stand over here by the shoe shine stand..... LOL....

These were my thoughts in an earlier thread at the time of the announcement of this new WS offering...

 


Yepper, she be small.

 

But for most O3R layouts, small is good.

 

In fact, I look at this latest WS offering as an '-esque'....it's 'stationesque'.

 

IOW, when space is limited, we tend to need items that are more suggestive than accurate scale models, fully proportioned.

 

I believe the WS offering embodies all the elements of....a depot.  Ergo, the viewer will understand that this justifies the ubiquitous station-stop, the town's steel-ribbon connection to the outside world. 

 

That said, the common passion in this forum for  2-10-10-2's, 4-8-8-4's, 2-8-8-8-2's, and 2-4-6-8's...et alia...puts this diminutive stop at a disadvantage.  In fact, it almost becomes the 'fire hydrant' for the passing behemoths, does it not?

 

Too bad. 

 

I like it's 'stationesque' qualities, and I give it a standing ovation!  it WILL find a place on my layout...proudly. 

---------------------------------------------------------------

And now that I've seen it at our store...'up close and personal'...I stand by that assessment!

 

Yet another run-of-the-bases by the folks at Woodland Scenics! 

 

Bring on the paint shop!!!!

 

And, as Oliver said....."More!?"

 

KD

 

 

Last edited by dkdkrd

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