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The Monon Railroad served Indiana, Chicago, and Louisville from it’s founding in 1897 til it’s merger with the L&N in 1971. It’s main shops were located Lafayette Indiana, home to Purdue University. As local legend has it, some aspiring young railfans attending Purdue thought it would make a great practical joke to re-letter a Monon boxcar parked at the local Ralston Purina siding from “Monon” to “Moron” They enlisted the help of students in the art department to create accurate stencils and sneaked down late one Saturday night to accomplish their mission. With the repaint completed, the group waited just outside of town to photograph their handy work as it left town the next day.

With the XP Trains line, we work to capture moments in history. Whether it’s unusual cars with a unique story, or prototype cars that were considered by Lionel but never produced, you can be proud to add these cars to your collection.

This LionScale PS-1 boxcar features die cast trucks and can be easily converted to two rail operation with scale couplers.  Car operates on 0-31 curves and will perfectly compliment the 18110 Monon boxcar six pack cataloged in 2018. This 100% Lionel made and decorated boxcar is molded, decorated, and assembled in the USA..

Cars are in stock for immediate shipping! We have a handful left. Grab one while they last.

Thank you all, 

Derek

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Last edited by Notch 6
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Maxrailroad posted:

This is way cool. Not only is this a unique piece of rolling stock that is prototypical, it tells a story that not many people knew about. I love it! Ill probably order one soon. Bravo Derek!

I got my Degree at Purdue and this would make a great display in my office and maybe tell the story of it to friends.

 

     I have the schemes I like, one by MTH the other I made with Highball graphics decals on a Lionel PS-1.

 

HOOSIER SP Collection [1)

HOOSIER SP Collection [2)

monon 1

                              High speed scheme has never been made yet in O.

MORONS would be found in other places, not hard to locate these days. 

 

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  • HOOSIER SP Collection (2)
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Last edited by SIRT
Mallard4468 posted:
Jeff T posted:

So we're celebrating vandalism??

Surely you've seen the cars with graffiti decals.

I'll bet that even the guys who had to repaint it got a laugh out of it.

Which is also vandalism.

No doubt they did, but I'm sure the foremen who had to justify the expenditure viewed it more grimly.

I love it.  Nice and humorous for the one person in who will catch it running it on a club layout. 

Off this subject but reminds me of my one of a kind GGD car.  When I was helping Scott at my first York at the booth he was displaying the factory sample.  I asked him if I could buy it and he told me just to make it go away.

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While I'm a Ball State grad (architecture), leave it to the engineers at Purdue to pull off relettering a boxcar.  The best we managed was to rewire the architectural school elevator so that the floor buttons took you to the wrong floor one night.  Full disclosure, it was the class ahead of mine that did that!  Don't want that coming back 30 years later.

I like the car.  Have to see if finances will permit me to purchase one.

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colorado hirailer posted:

Wonder how long the car ran in service before repaint was caught and corrected?  Used to watch a Monon BL-2 switch a concrete plant in southern lndiana...

I'd like to know the same thing. I think it really depends on how far the car got away from Lafayette before someone noticed it and reported it to the shop. It's one of those things that you do a double take when you first see it, I would think it made it for at least a few weeks. 

PS. Thank you everyone for a GREAT first day of sales. 

palallin posted:
Mallard4468 posted:
Jeff T posted:

So we're celebrating vandalism??

Surely you've seen the cars with graffiti decals.

I'll bet that even the guys who had to repaint it got a laugh out of it.

Which is also vandalism.

No doubt they did, but I'm sure the foremen who had to justify the expenditure viewed it more grimly.

If you find it objectionable, then by all means don't order one.  By not ordering one, you will send a strong message of disapproval to all the would-be vandals out there, and I'm sure many of them will change their ways as a result.

Great job, Derek.  I'm in!  Wish I could afford more than one, but that wouldn't be prototypical, would it?

Things like this and more common graffiti are certainly breaking the law, and do not exist on my layout, but I can't help being amused by railroad modelers who are so offended by it that they seem to place such activities on the same level of someone breaking into the Louvre and painting a mustache on the Mona Lisa. Some guys need to get out of their basements more often! 

German posted:

Things like this and more common graffiti are certainly breaking the law, and do not exist on my layout, but I can't help being amused by railroad modelers who are so offended by it that they seem to place such activities on the same level of someone breaking into the Louvre and painting a mustache on the Mona Lisa. Some guys need to get out of their basements more often! 

That's something of a stretch, isn't it?

Just to clarify a few points, the car will have the Moron lettering on both sides. I can not confirm it was done that way, but judging the way the tracks were laid out it was certainly doable if they had enough time. 

Also, I spoke with Lionel this morning. We will be including a sheet with the car that shows the prototype photo and tells the story. This will be folded and in the orange box. 

For all the Purdue alum reading, "Boiler up and Hammer Down" 

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