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FlyPlanes-PlayTrains posted:

Love the CTA set... And my kids & I are still loving the Amtrak set I picked up at ORD from your wife!

cheers!

 

Tom

Hi Tom, So glad to hear you all continue to enjoy the Amtrak set!! We still talk about the ORD curbside exchange as the coolest train deal of all time!! I can only imagine what the TSA guy was thinking as he saw the trains on the screen!

A.J. posted:

Apples55 where did you get those building flats from?  They look great!

A.J.;

Thanks... Technically, those are shadow boxes (app. 1” deep). They all came from Forum Sponsor Todd Architectural Models. The one with the NYC sign on top was a one-off special run Doug did a couple of years ago, but I believe a shorter version is still available (and you can get signs that say whatever you want). I have to get around to adding some lighting to several of the boxes as well as installing a few others I have still in boxes!!!

Decided to take a chance in an auction recently.  (No, not *that* auction place, another online auction place).  It looked like a MTH repair shop / distributor recently went out of business, and I'm wondering if someone on this board knows anything about it. 

Tthere were several locos that were shown in a disassembled state, almost all PS1 with a couple PS2.  They had little note cards that the repair tech left with them, so there were at least some clues on where to start looking if anything was wrong.  Most of the cards read something like "Customer says engine doesn't work after storing for 10 years" and things like that.  After reading this forum for the past couple weeks, I've seen the PS1 issues and it seems that many of the "doesn't operate" issues can be fixed with reset, new BCR or fairly minor procedures.  

Also Included in the auction were a TON of PS1 boards, with little indication if they worked or not.  I'm guessing that if they were actually fried and beyond a simple repair, the shop would have tossed them.  No reason to save them, right?  So I put a bet on the boards being good PS1 Boards that were removed when the tech upgraded various engines to PS2 or PS3 and then kept the boards "just in case".  At the very least, maybe components could be combined to make a few decent PS1 Boards.

So...knowing a *little* bit about electronics, and not being afraid of doing some minor to medium surgery, I took a swing on several of the locos and then, figuring if the PS1 boards were bad on the engines themselves, I'd buy a bunch of the available PS1 spare boards and maybe I'd get lucky and find a couple in the mix that work.  I don't run DCS or TMCC (I actually don't run *ANYTHING* right now, but dad's got the bug and has me all excited about getting back into the trains after a few decades), so I don't care if it's all PS1.  I do have a couple MTH PS1 locos already so what the ****, right?

Here's my haul (photos attached):

  • MTH #3166 Santa Fe Dash-8 , mechanic's note says "Replaced the original PS1 upgraded to a GP30 PS2 board."  It appears complete. $40.00
  • MTH 20-2078-1 #1686 Northwestern FM H10-44.  attached mechanic's note says only "Intermittent Sound". $5.00
  • MTH #1641 cab 4449 Southern Pacific GS-4 With Tender and PS2.  Mechanic's note says "Stored for 10 years, will not run. No output voltage from bottom board. Burnt up 2nd board, diodes shorting out.  Center rail pickpus short to chassis" $15.00
  • MTH #1394 cab 4449.  Mechanics note says "Tender is mismatched Williams chassis to MTH shell. Engine renumbered to 1687. LocoSound runs without tender. Works well with loco tender.  Needs major tuneup. Rough Shape." $5.00

So that's $65.00 for 4 locos of questionable shape.  I don't even care if I can't get two of them to run.  And maybe I can cobble together one working Daylight GS-4 out of the two lots.  Or maybe I can make them all work and I got a steal!

Then, for the boards (have no idea if they work, but photos don't show any obvious damage). $15.00 for the entire lot of 13 boards:

  • (1) QSI ACRU-LP Reverse Unit.
  • (1) QSI PS1 Board for SD70MAC
  • (1) QSI PS1 Board for Genesis
  • (1) QSI PS1 Board for F3 
  • (1) QSI PS1 Board for Doodlebug (lol, I will never own a doodlebug)
  • (1) QSI PS1 Board for Scale Centipede
  • (1) QSI PS1 Board for SW-9 (I can use this in an old K-Line SW unit I have from the 80's if it works!)
  • (2) QSI PS1 Boards for EP5-GN (Yes! I have a Lionel Pennsy EP5 that could use these)
  • (4) QSI PS1 Boards for Dash-8's (could one of these be a good Dash-8 board that was removed from the Santa Fe Dash-8 I bought? Hmmm...)

 

If these actually work, and I get out of them what I need, if I'm left with stuff afterwards I'll probably donate to folks on the forum.  But that'll be a couple years from now, and maybe it's all garbage anyway! But for $80.00 for everything (just over $145 shipped with auctioneer fees) I really don't mind if it IS all garbage!

H21381-L198165906_originalH21381-L198165911_originalH21381-L198165938_originalH21381-L198165965_originalH21381-L198181063_originalH21381-L198181144_originalH21381-L198181492_originalH21381-L198247324_original

Attachments

Images (8)
  • QSI PS1 Boards - A: All Dash-8
  • QSI PS1 Boards - B: EP5
  • QSI PS1 Boards - C: F3, SD70MAC, Genesis, Doodlebug, Scale Centipede, SW-9
  • QSI ACRU-LP Reversing Board
  • Daylight #1
  • Daylight #2
  • Santa Fe Dash-8
  • FM-H10
Last edited by Jeff_the_Coaster_Guy

1949 Ford F1 pick-up truck! Walmart! $1! How could I say "No"?

The "F" series was Ford's first line of pick-up trucks that did not use a car chassis. Although the F1 was the lightest of the series, it was still a successful vehicle, and many of them have been preserved. And it was somewhat of a "hot rod," often purchased new with pinstripes.

Last edited by OGR CEO-PUBLISHER

Been trying to stay off the auction sites lately. 2019 was a productive year for adding to the fleet but now it's time to slow down a bit.
Not that I've completely stopped buying, just a little more selective now.
To that end I found a nice MTH SW-8 in Penn Central livery yesterday. Now many would say what's so special about a PC diesel? Well this one is labeled for the Despatch Shops Inc., and has a nicer paint job then most of the PC fleet did back in the day. MTH released this in the 2001 catalog.

Merchants Despatch has an interesting history intertwined with the early days of the NYC.

Prototype here

(seller's photos)

ca3fd873a02748bba3926cf6777fb26604f0299c-20160427-121426-C1-Trainz-3879017-STILL-01ef5c9f544acce383e79b01711907edfcb14fd367-20160427-121424-C1-Trainz-3879017-06

Attachments

Images (2)
  • ca3fd873a02748bba3926cf6777fb26604f0299c-20160427-121426-C1-Trainz-3879017-STILL-01
  • ef5c9f544acce383e79b01711907edfcb14fd367-20160427-121424-C1-Trainz-3879017-06
Last edited by RSJB18
Mark Boyce posted:

Bob, that is a very unique and great looking switcher.  I certainly never saw anything like it in this end of PC country.

Carl, I wonder myself how they do some of these great deals!!

Those types of things come from China.  To make most of the animated cars and so forth for my large scale trains, I have purchased all sorts of electronic devices on Ebay.  99% came from China.  Since the packages are small, shipping is usually free on minimal.  

Don't forget, we don't really know where in China they're being made, if at all.  Even China outsources manufacturing.  The original makers of this items could be earning a dollar a week for all we know.  

That's how they do it.

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