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@Kelunaboy posted:

I back shelved my second level plans and decided to go BIG with the Atlas turntable.

It dominates the whole right side of my layout, but I think there is great operating and urban scenery options.

Atlas TT

Have to see the rest of the layout, but one suggest  would be  take your lead track off the curve, move the table  back down the loop and you engine tracks toward the  other side of the loop and then go back and double track the main. put  you station where  your power pack is

Last week while I was visiting family in Western Pennsylvania I stopped into a train store in my home town of Jeannette. Niedzalkoski’s is a small shop specializing mainly in HO but with reasonable amount of O gauge on the shelves. I picked up this refer at a great price after the 10% discount they were offering on roiling stock.

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Last edited by ncdave
@ncdave posted:

Last week while I was visiting family in Western Pennsylvania I stopped into a train store in my home town of Jeannette. Niedzalkoski’s is a small shop specializing mainly in HO but with reasonable amount of O gauge on the shelves. I picked up this refer at a great price after the 10% discount they were offering on roiling stock.

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The pale stale ale with the foam at the bottom!  Ah, memories!   

Mitch

@ncdave posted:

Last week while I was visiting family in Western Pennsylvania I …

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I always learn something new on this forum. My late mother (originally from Pittsburgh) used to jokingly refer to her boss as Frothingslosh. (The surname was actually quite close.)  Now I know where it came from.

This reefer is fantastic; the graphic is terrific. The details even include the (clever) instructions for returning when empty.

However, it looks like whomever lettered the left side was sampling the product.  It says FLothingslosh, with an “L”, not an “R”.  I wonder whether they all are like this?

NCdave, who was the manufacturer of this great item? Thanks.

TRRR

Last edited by TomlinsonRunRR
@ncdave posted:

Last week while I was visiting family in Western Pennsylvania I stopped into a train store in my home town of Jeannette. Niedzalkoski’s is a small shop specializing mainly in HO but with reasonable amount of O gauge on the shelves. I picked up this refer at a great price after the 10% discount they were offering on roiling stock.

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say that name 3 times fast after having a few.......

Great looking car, love the graphics.

Bob

Some of my recent purchases.

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The U.S. SPACE MISSLES is an Atlantis kit from Hobby Lobby.  I eyed it many times but at a scale of 1:128 I just didn't figure it would fit.  When they put the $33 kit on clearance for $8.25 it had to come home.  It'll make a nic Rocket Garden for the Visitor's Center when I display my Cape Notcanaveral.  I remember someone putting one of these Nike Hercules Missile launchers on a flat car.  I believe it was ScaleRail and he had some Speedy Gonzales decals on it.  I thought that was cool so when I came across the kit at Ollie's I grabbed two.

The Bud Dry tank car is a K-Line.  I always liked K-Line's single dome with the platform and handrail and with my early penchant for Budweiser and AB's strong marketing combined with a very attractive price on eBay this Bud Dry  tanker has taking a spot on my AB roster.

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@ncdave posted:

Last week while I was visiting family in Western Pennsylvania I stopped into a train store in my home town of Jeannette. Niedzalkoski’s is a small shop specializing mainly in HO but with reasonable amount of O gauge on the shelves. I picked up this refer at a great price after the 10% discount they were offering on roiling stock.

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I remember the TV ads in home town Youngstown Ohio!

Ron

Not completely train related, but I have moved to the next stage of my life, and bought a new house.  Now I have to determine what exactly I want to do.  This will be my second layout move, and either I can start completely over, or utilize parts of my existing layout and build from there.  The existing layout is 20 years old, so I am thinking of mostly starting over.  The big advantage of mostly starting over would be to use a wider radius curve.  Current layout has 0-54 which while great to run pretty much everything, but doesn't let me run some of the really big steam engines that I find so attractive.

Decisions, decisions decisions.  Stay tuned.

John

Some new additions.  The Lionel 6812 Track Maintenance car is from the original train my brothers and I had as kids.  The men, top platform and crank are all replacement parts so I'm not worried about value.  I thought about making it a fire fighting car.  I've got the seat and monitor to replace the worker on the upper level, still need the seated fireman, and the spray arms to wet down the right of way once I fabricate brackets.  Such a mighty fire fighting tool would need a water supply;

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so  here it is.  I figure some Walther's flanges, valves and piping on the pump and some of Pat's spring hoses to connect to the track maintenance car.

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I have several of these Lionel spine car sets, NYC, Southern, SP.  When they first came out they catalogs said they were usually used as 5 car articulated units.  I thought I needed one more to give two 5 car units when I spied  this SeaLand set on eBay for a good price so I pulled the trigger.  Well it wasn't my 5th set it was my 4th so I guess I'll run them as one 5 car unit and one 3 car unit.  When running hotshot intermodal the different trailers will suffice but I believe I have enough NYC containers that I can run the 5 unit on the Water Level Route to Albany.

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Recently added two new locomotives that in the word of Star Wars character "General Grievous", would be "fine additions to my collection!"
A Lionel Warhorse J #600 with tmcc, sound, and smoke and the recently released Atlas F7 in a Southern Pacific "Bloody Nose" paintjob. Both have been pretty cool additions but the Warhorse J with it's TMCC is my favorite of the two since I now finally have an N&W J class with some form of command control!

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@coach joe posted:

Some new additions.  The Lionel 6812 Track Maintenance car is from the original train my brothers and I had as kids.  The men, top platform and crank are all replacement parts so I'm not worried about value.  I thought about making it a fire fighting car.  I've got the seat and monitor to replace the worker on the upper level, still need the seated fireman, and the spray arms to wet down the right of way once I fabricate brackets.  Such a mighty fire fighting tool would need a water supply;

IMG_2315

so  here it is.  I figure some Walther's flanges, valves and piping on the pump and some of Pat's spring hoses to connect to the track maintenance car.

IMG_3118IMG_3119

I have several of these Lionel spine car sets, NYC, Southern, SP.  When they first came out they catalogs said they were usually used as 5 car articulated units.  I thought I needed one more to give two 5 car units when I spied  this SeaLand set on eBay for a good price so I pulled the trigger.  Well it wasn't my 5th set it was my 4th so I guess I'll run them as one 5 car unit and one 3 car unit.  When running hotshot intermodal the different trailers will suffice but I believe I have enough NYC containers that I can run the 5 unit on the Water Level Route to Albany.

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  Coach Joe, could you elaborate on
“Pat's spring hoses”?

https://ogrforum.ogaugerr.com/...3#175850073710090703

I don't know if I did that correctly.  That's actually the link to one of my replies in that thread, just scroll to the top to see Pat's incredible handiwork.  Pat, @harmonyards, wrote that thread about using springs as water hoses between locomotives and tenders.  Here's one I added between an auxiliary tender and tender for a Y6b.  I wish I had a better pic but Pat has some good ones in his post.

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Last edited by coach joe
@coach joe posted:

https://ogrforum.ogaugerr.com/...3#175850073710090703

I don't know if I did that correctly.  That's actually the link to one of my replies in that thread, just scroll to the top to see Pat's incredible handiwork. Pat, @harmonyards, wrote that thread about using springs as water hoses between locomotives and tenders.  Here's one I added between an auxiliary tender and tender for a Y6b.  I wish I had a better pic but Pat has some good ones in his post.

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@Coach Joe

Got it thanks.

These Nashville, Chattanooga and. St Louis Railway boxcars just arrived today. I was attracted to them because my Grandson Nick is in the music business in Nashville. He graduated as a sound engineer and is working as a sound engineer in Nashville; where he is following his dream of making music. https://youtube.com/playlist?l...;si=z5LknepLR87Rusp4
I bought both cars and I had picked up the flatcar with Martin guitars earlier; on the way to building a train for him. The boxcars are custom runs for Berwyns Toys and Trains
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Last edited by pennsyfan
@pennsyfan posted:

These Nashville, Chattanooga and. St Louis Railway boxcars just arrived today. I was attracted to them because my Grandson Nick is in the music business in Nashville. He graduated as a sound engineer and is working as a sound engineer in Nashville; where he is following his dream of making music. https://youtube.com/playlist?l...;si=z5LknepLR87Rusp4
I bought both cars and I had picked up the flatcar with Martin guitars earlier; on the way to building a train for him. The boxcars are custom runs for Berwyns Toys and Trains
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Great looking cars!

Well, whadaya know? I was missing my now hard-to-find Williams Santa Fe ALCO ABA Fs (although the Santa Fe never operated Alco Fs, only  Ps), only to run onto them for sale on eBay, and all NIB, never run! The Williams Santa Fe ALCO FB units are extremely scarce now. But I was able to spot one, along with a couple of FAs from a different seller. Both were Buy it Now, so I counter-offered at an even lower price and won both for a song!

Oh, the simplicity of Williams diesels! 4 screws pop off the shell, then 1 motor mount screw releases each motor. Amazingly enough, there was still fresh, wet grease in the worm gear. But I added a little more and greased the external gears, along with oiling the axles and pickup rollers. Then added engineer and fireman figures to the cab of the lead unit and good to go. I had to switch back to conventional. But what a treat to see it run again, only this time pulling more modern Lionel cars.

This was my old set pulling Williams aluminum SF cars taken in 2018. Then I sold this train after I switched to all command control and ended up missing it when it sold. It was an all Williams train back then.

Here's the new engine set pulling a longer string of Lionel aluminum Santa Fe cars (except for the MTH Santa Fe express reefer). A Lionel TMCC Santa Fe F7 ABA set, with the lead A and B behind it both powered, since it's a longer train are what usually pulls my Super Chief. But the 2-motored conventional FA pulled the whole train without a whimper, just like in the old days. In fact, I had to slow it down so it wouldn't come off at the curves! I love the efficiency of Williams's bullet proof, stump-puller diesels!

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So, it's nice to have the good old Williams ALCO Fs back. 😀

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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