Skip to main content

Having been out of the hobby for 8 years, I was really surprised when I found Menards had a train selection in O gauge.  What's more its affordable. I located the store in Belton, Missouri went there and bought the American POWER plant and the fire damaged engine house. I was taken back by the price, quality and unique variety they offered. 

Haven't ordered any cars yet but at their prices I will.

Where did they come from and is their manufacturing someone else's that went south?  Has their line grown since introduction, and what do the established manufacturers think?

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Don't forget to visit the web-site at Menard's. It's easy to order on-line and have it shipped for free to your nearby store. If you watch closely, the O-gauge Mystery box will show up periodically. It's items that might need a little TLC but usually at about 20 to 25 % lower price. This time of year the retail stores inventory is getting low, and it's usually up on the upper floor in most standard stores. It will come down as they prep for Halloween.

This is the main link to the dedicated train page.

https://www.menards.com/main/h...-menards/c-14331.htm

 

Yes, search the archives. This question has been asked almost verbatim repeatedly.

Short answer as to the origin of these cars: Most are clones of Williams models, but not produced with Williams tooling. Menards' Chinese manufacturer apparently created new molds from existing cars, so very little design work was necessary. (Note, Williams pretty much did the same thing with Lionel postwar cars decades earlier.)

The MDF buildings, on the other hand, are all original, since there no molds when using MDF as a building material. I'm not sure about the source of the resin buildings, like the massive and heavy Menards Seed & Feed building, which obviously required designs for molds.

Add Reply

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.
×
×