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I know that by very nature of this forum and our love for trains pretty much everybody will say "Don't do it!"

 

Do I love model trains.   YES very much so.   I have great enjoyment from modeling the ATSF steam era and I also really enjoy messing with control systems, computer control, PS/2 upgrades and all the tech that goes along with it.   I'm a UNIX guy by trade so hacking and tinkering are in my very nature.

 

Reality check  - Wife, 2 sons and myself are moving.   We're moving overseas and will likely move many more times in the next 5-8 years.   We'll be in small apartments and likely other interim arrangements.  There's won't be a permanent layout for at least 10 years if ever.  Some of the cities that we will likely end up in just don't have the space at my price point to build anything unless it is a small carpet central.   Honestly, I don't see running 3rd Rail engines and GGD cars on a carpet central.

 

Next reality check - Where would all the trains GO?   Storage?   If storage where?   In the USA?   Seems a poor location as I'll be in Australia.  Ship and store in Australia for 10 years?   That doesn't seem like a good plan either.   Even after 10 years it won't be likely that I'll be building a new layout.

 

Taking a hard look at it....  Choices...  I don't see giving up on a great job opportunity and a really nice future for my family simply because I want a basement full of trains.   That just doesn't jive at all.  Also, it isn't like model trains are my only hobby.   Astronomy/Astro-Physics is also a big deal in my world.  I presently own a very nice telescope and while cumbersome all the telescope gear is portable and can by stored in a closet.   Astronomy, can travel with me where ever I end up.   That's a big plus!   

 

As, you can see I'm strongly leaning toward selling.   It just kills me tho.   I love model trains.   Will, I regret it?   No doubt, of course I will.   Is it the better choice?   I think so.   Storing trains for 10+ years doesn't exactly allow me to enjoy them.   I'd only be stressing over them, paying for storage and insurance for quite some time.   At present I figure sell it all, take the cash, invest it in some long term stocks and if in 10 years I'm someplace where I can do model trains again I will have made some money (hopefully) instead of spent money on storage and insurance, and I can start again.   I'd likely switch to 2-Rail and I've always had a desire to do On3.   On3 is great from a size and space issue.   I'd likely be in a much smaller space in the future anyway.

 

 

Last edited by OGR CEO-PUBLISHER
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Marty,

    I keep thinking that too.   I look at the gorgeous roster of 3rd Rail ATSF engines I have and I think oh the Y-3!   Oh wait the 2900!   But but the custom 3752 I had special painted!   Or the Texas that has a special smoke unit that gives steam from the cocks.   I can't find a place to draw the line.   The 3800 class 3rd Rail loco has some of the best details of any of them.  And so it goes...   Yes I certainly can see keeping 1 in a glass case on a display shelf.   Hard....  very hard choices.

Marty's suggestion is great.  Of my 12 engines and 60+ pieces of rolling stock I could easily narrow it down to 3 engines and a dozen pieces of rolling stock.

 

My daughter and her husband moved to Sicily last year and every time I talk to her she wonders why they took so much stuff with them.  The movers broke most of the furniture.  Her advice would be...take what you need and nothing else.

One thing's for certain, you're going to need a "mental" blindfold. Pretend they belong to someone else as you sell each one. The electronics more than likely will fail after prolonged storage if you decide to keep them. Even if you have a family member hold on to them. As for choices, it would seem that you do not have many. You could buy a nice display case for your favorite engine. Carefully protect both and take it with you as a,"shelf queen". It just might keep the feeling alive for a few years. 

Let it go as the popular song goes. Keep a few items that were produced in ultra low numbers that you really really like and might be able to use in a club in your destinations. Keep the cash or value in a mutual fund for a future hobby.

 

My wife wants us to move to cali and I'd let go most of my O scale except for a club I would join. Fortunately, I have a ton of n scale too just in case that scenario solidifies. Then that 10x10 bedroom becomes an n scale layout. hehehe.

 

For now still holding out for an east coast home and basement.

It sounds like you have your head on straight and your priorities well thought out.  I would sell all and you can easily get back in in 10 years if and when things are right.  Storing doesn't make much sense given your situation in my view.

 

Best of luck.  Sounds like an exciting future for you and your family.

 

Art

Do it 

 

10 years from now, who knows that the model train world will look like?   N scale is big overseas - perhaps focus on that.   I have a lot of N-scale stuff and upgraded most of it to DCC over the last couple years.   It's a blast, but in a different way.   N-scale is good at some things (cost, standardization, large trains/space, etc.).  I can put an N scale layout on my (admittedly large) dining room table that is more complex and interesting to run than my O-scale layout.    More variety, larger yards, less power.   With DCC, all I lose is sound, which you don't HAVE to give up but it's so weak I don't see the point.  

 

Storage seems like a joke to me.   You take a bunch of stuff thats currently not worth what you paid for it, lock it up for ten years where it will be worth considerably less, and pay for the privilege?  Not in my world!

 

And here's the thing - you may NOT regret it.  You never know.   You might get really into N scale, you might find other hobbies, etc.  Your world is expanding right now - let it expand and roll with it.   Don't let something like model trains slow you down - maximize this opportunity with NO regrets.  if you THINK you will regret it, you WILL regret it, and that's a bad way to live.   

 

SELL !!!  And good luck!!!

Putting things in storage for ten or so years makes little sense, and this is coming from someone that has everything in storage. Personal tastes evolve over ones lifetime. What was once considered an end-all may not hold interest years forward. Retain one or two as suggested, unload the rest. It's not as if there's a shortage of this stuff, or any stuff for that matter. Now, if I could only heed my own advise. Good luck on your journeys.

I was in the same spot as you, lots of HO trains and railroad books but moving to an apartment in Tehran.  And then what?  I took only a handful of books.  The company stored the rest.  Many of my books and trains were well damaged by the time we got back to the USA.  And then we did the overseas move two more times.  

 

My advise is sell the trains, taking one special loco and one special car with a display case and your best books.

 

ChipR

 

 

Looks like someone beat me to it. Check out Kato N scale. From what I have read, the Japanese have smaller houses, so they put trains up on the weekend and take them back down.

 

I have been checking it out, my wife says she wants to move to a condo at some point. I suppose I could join a three rail club though.

 

Oh oh oh - bonus - scale length N scale passenger cars don't get hit by the "dimensional weight" BS of UPS and Fedex shipping. And it only stands to reason that a passenger car that is 18 or 21" long will not fit inside the 17" limit of the drop box at USPS, so you have to wait at the counter to ship it. Just saying.

 

===============================

 

Maybe in 10 years when you come back the whole Legacy vs DCS/PS3 will be sorted out? There I go again, dreaming!

Last edited by illinoiscentral

Take a few pieces and sell the rest or convert some into a smaller scale if you need something to "run". If you are in a larger area, there are clubs to join too. Who knows, you may take a liking to Australian railroads...you can buy models of them there. There is nothing here that requires giving up anything...just creates a whole mess of new experiences and opportunities (trains first..scale second).

 

Peter

Last edited by pdx1955

Keep a loco and a caboose.  Get a rolling stand from $ from sale of items.   See the one JAK Tools makes.  Place loco and caboose on it.  Run when you want (will need a transformer too.

 

If you need to do quickly, contact an auction house as you don't want to deal with packing to move and playing delivery service for your items.

 

It is a liquidation.  Do it in an orderly manner to get $ out of it.  You will not get nearly what you paid for items, and that in itself is an indication of what they are worth today, surely to be worth much less at the point when you return.

 

 

Here's my take:

  1. Determine the cost of storage for your entire collection.  E.g., call three storage facilities and get the lowest quote for the total cubic feet you need to store.  Hold this number aside.
  2. Keep whatever pieces hold even an iota of sentimental value for you.  If these are just a handful, a relative, a train friend, or any number of people here would hold them for you.
  3. Sell the rest.  Put the money from the sale into an interest-bearing bank account segregated from your other accounts.
  4. Each month thereafter, while you're away and train-less, make a deposit to the bank account in the amount of the storage quote you got in Step 1.
  5. At the end of 10 years, you will have ten times twelve times [the monthly storage payment], PLUS whatever you were able to get for selling your trains.
  6. At that time, look at the bank balance and decide whether you want to:

    a) Buy replacement trains -- OR --

    b) Add the money to whatever you had been saving for a house ... except now with the train money, you can afford a nicer house -- OR --

    c) Send children to college, etc.

Those are my $0.02

 

SJS

 

P.S. During the entire 10-year period, refer to the sum in the bank account as "my train money".  This will give you a 0.002% chance of achieving 6a.  

 

Good advice already given.   If I were in your position, I would keep just enough to put on a bookshelf or run around a holiday tree each year and sell the rest.   Another idea might be to "donate" some of the items to a club or boy scout troop or similar.   You are paying it forward and might even get a writeoff on your taxes?

 

 

Originally Posted by ibrewtoo:

Let it go as the popular song goes. Keep a few items that were produced in ultra low numbers that you really really like and might be able to use in a club in your destinations. Keep the cash or value in a mutual fund for a future hobby.

 

My wife wants us to move to cali and I'd let go most of my O scale except for a club I would join. Fortunately, I have a ton of n scale too just in case that scenario solidifies. Then that 10x10 bedroom becomes an n scale layout. hehehe.

 

For now still holding out for an east coast home and basement.

My East Coast Home (Boston) 3 story house, 4 bedrooms, 3 bath, full basement with utilities and washer/dryer all moved to the 2nd floor will soon be for sale :-)  Also has 2 car garage.   I'm a 2 min walk to the train and a 10-15 min ride to downtown Boston.   Oh and I live 6 houses away from these guys:   http://www.bsmrm.org/    they are 2 Rail O however!

 

 

Thanks all!   Was hoping I wasn't off my rocker and missing something.   I keep telling myself...  ya I got this right it really is the best way.

 

To answer a few questions above...

 

As far as a family member storing it all.   I have my father.   My train hobby is HIS fault.  He is into HO and has a layout that has been in Model Railroader countless times.   He too models Santa Fe.   He lives in Colorado and well...   shipping and storing it all there....   just not really feasible.   His basement is really already very full of his HO trains.   It's a collection I will one day inherit and it rivals the imagination.   He's also already storing my 1966 GT350 Mustang and my wife's 1960 Austin Healey in his garage.   I can't imagine imposing further.

 

As for keeping a few.   I keep waffling on that...   As for N scale etc..   If it was just me sure.    However, my biggest fan is my 4 year old son.   He's got the train bug big time.   Much more then my 7 year old ever did.   Honestly, my biggest heartache is for my 4 year old and his love for it.   Sat and Sun I'll spend 6+ hours in the basement and my 4 year old is 110% into it.   My 7 year old (when he was 4) would watch for 30-40 min and be done.   My 4 year old has the train bug big time.   But here is the rub...   he's legally blind.   His vision is about 20/250.   I can't imagine going to N scale.   That's why I like the idea of On3.    O scale trains on HO track gives me the size and the ability to scale down to something that fits in a smaller space.  I love shays anyway :-).   Almost as much as big ATSF steam!

Last edited by Trevize

Can't really add much to what has already been stated except for a comment on this.

 





quote:
As, you can see I'm strongly leaning toward selling.   It just kills me tho.   I love model trains.   Will, I regret it?   No doubt, of course I will.  




 

I really, really like O gauge trains but I have not missed any of the trains I have sold.  It is possible that you won't either.

i'd sell the mustang (as you can tell by my name) seriously i'd sell most maybe keep that 1 favorite put it in the truck of the stang and buy a Lion Chief set for your son and build a under bed layout for him. i had 1 as a child and ran the wheels off my 675. and for dad i'd buy a on30 shay and take a look at Joey from trackside scenery did on a very tiny layout. this way you will still have your trains be able to enjoy a under bed layout with your son and really not miss anything.

So, your the new Bast%$! Operator from H*^%.

 

They are only trains and you can have them again when the time is right. Keep a setup for littleman. He won't understand if they are all gone. You can get 120v\60hz converters.

 

Good luck on your major life change! I respect your confidence. Just don't let them use you up without paying for it dearly.

Originally Posted by Serenska:

Here's my take:

  1. Determine the cost of storage for your entire collection.  E.g., call three storage facilities and get the lowest quote for the total cubic feet you need to store.  Hold this number aside.
  2. Keep whatever pieces hold even an iota of sentimental value for you.  If these are just a handful, a relative, a train friend, or any number of people here would hold them for you.
  3. Sell the rest.  Put the money from the sale into an interest-bearing bank account segregated from your other accounts.
  4. Each month thereafter, while you're away and train-less, make a deposit to the bank account in the amount of the storage quote you got in Step 1.
  5. At the end of 10 years, you will have ten times twelve times [the monthly storage payment], PLUS whatever you were able to get for selling your trains.
  6. At that time, look at the bank balance and decide whether you want to:

    a) Buy replacement trains -- OR --

    b) Add the money to whatever you had been saving for a house ... except now with the train money, you can afford a nicer house -- OR --

    c) Send children to college, etc.

Those are my $0.02

 

SJS

 

P.S. During the entire 10-year period, refer to the sum in the bank account as "my train money".  This will give you a 0.002% chance of achieving 6a.  

 

Very smart idea ,  Serenska !!

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