Skip to main content

     If I doubt the wisdom of a train related purchase fearful it might be an emotional, impulse buy, I don’t make the purchase at that time but rather wait a few days and if at that later time I still think it would be a wise and useful purchase then I’ll buy it. This approach has always worked for me but recently it didn’t and I’m now experiencing buyer’s remorse.

     So I’m curious what’s the worst case of buyer’s remorse you fellow forumites ever experienced, how did you deal with it and do you still have the purchase that triggered it? What about recent purchases? Have you suffered feelings of remorse for any of those too? For those of you who have suffered from this self-imposed affliction would you say for recent purchases you experience it more than in the past, less than in the past, or about the same amount as in the past? What types of railroad purchase causes you the most buyer’s remorse and generally what do you do to sooth the horrid feeling it leaves you with?

     If you're predisposed to emotional or impulsive buying, what have you found is the best way to deal with it and overcome it? Or have you given up on trying to control it?

Kenn

Last edited by ogaugeguy
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I'm having it RIGHT NOW. Found a good -truly- deal on a small brass steamer that

I want (command, sound, etc); unexpected. Also had a bid in online for a sweet, almost-

new RK Reading Crusader (PS1). Got outbid. Should have let it go and gone for the

brass (it's a kinda rare piece). Didn't. Chased it a little. Got it for $175. Nice; good model (a bit small, but handsome). I care little about the Reading; I just like the machine.

 

Now, I regret buying the Crusader (got to take that lettering off) because I should

have put the $175 toward the brass steamer, which is also a very good price, but

more (more loco/features, too), and rare. The Crusaders (MTH and K-line)

do appear occasionally.

 

So, yeah - regrets all the time, and what makes them so intense is that I have more

things than I can ever really enjoy, and "wasting" the money on the Crusader will

now make me regret buying the brass - which I probably will actually purchase. Double whammy.

 

As Jim Carrey said in "The Mask": "Somebody STOP me!"

No buyer's remorse here because I don't buy expensive trains. I like to buy mostly cheap old fixer items that I can repair myself. I just wouldn't have got involved with another scale if it was going to cost a bundle. I find the older trains nostalgic and it's a kick to see them run again after years of neglect.

 

2012-2386-Marx-set=

 

"Before" picture. After cleaning and servicing and replacement of some missing parts, I recently got these metal Marx items operating.

Attachments

Images (1)
  • 2012-2386-Marx-set=

Yep - seller's remorse, too. Triple whammy. But I don't get that very often, because

I sell little, we don't have much in the way of train shows and I don't sell at online auction. 

 

Oh, BTW, the price of the item has nothing to do with the regret. I do have some

cheap stuff, and I am a big admirer of Marx 3/16" and Marx in general, but I don't have a bunch (have a few) of "old fixers" because I don't want the stuff. It is just what it is, and I'd much rather have the modern scale/scale-ish items.

 

Cheap items make sense only if that is what you want; $200 for something you want is

less wasteful that $50 for something you don't.

On the rare times I have had buyers remorse concerning my train purchases, I find that eBay will cure that immediately once the item sells.  Often I will only lose a little money or at best, break even, but I know that someone else will treasure it, and my remorse will be gone.

Luckily, this has only happened a few times.

Since my train budget is very small, most things I buy have been well thought out long in advance and it's just a matter of finding the item at a fair price.
Post

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

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×