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I bought a Lionel "O-Scale" Gateman accessory a couple of weeks ago, for a real fair price.   Didn't take it out of the box until today.

Geez,    it must have been made when Lionel was on the verge of bankruptcy.   The Gateman himself isn't O-Scale at all, unless he is suppose to be a 12 foot giant.  His body is cheap blue plastic, unpainted, with his right arm (lantern arm), swinging back and forth on a plastic peg, like his arm is broken.

Not the quality I expected from a Lionel product.

Is there any true O-Scale figure that is routinely substituted for this Frankenstein creature?

Mannyrock

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MTH and K-Line have gateman shacks that are close to scale and look pretty good.

With that being said I love my Lionel 45n gateman shack.  It’s tinplate and the lantern is lit from below.

Also the Lionel gateman is not O scale, it is O gauge and meant to be a toy, not a realistic part of a scale layout.  I have always appreciated the smile on a child’s face when the little blue man pops out of the building and waves his lantern at the passing train.                  
                 
                                                               “ Priceless “

Last edited by Keith k

Piffle.  This is like complaining that the Mickey Mouse handcar isn't scale.

The Gateman was designed in the era of Standard Gauge trains, and no one gave a hoot about scale.  It was designed to keep children interested and occupied, not earn someone a MMR badge.  As to quality, quite a few of those 85-year-old toys continue to work well today.  That, my friend, is quality, quality that few modern products will ever equal.

A good friend of mine once complained that the taco salad he was served at a restaurant had lettuce in it.

@Mannyrock posted:

Pallalin,

If the Gateman was designed in the era of Standard Gauge, then they need to take "O" Scale off of the box.

You train guys are an interesting crew.  You get outraged if a certain model Locomotive has a bell glued on it, instead of a whistle like the original, but if a product says its "O" Scale, and it isn't, then you are fine with that.   :-)

Mannyrock

It was also sold as an O Scale accessory because scale was not only fluid but relatively unimportant at the time, Manny.  That obsession is contemporary (and I do not happen to share it).  I happen to appreciate all the various kinds of toy trains (they are all toys unless they are 1:1 scale AND generate revenue).  I appreciate a well-detailed scale model for what it is; I appreciate the Gateman for what it is.  I have no problem with lettuce in my taco salad, but I don't want it on my burrito

I do not happen to share the obsession with electronic gimcrakery, either.

Charlie,

That's the thing.  This one doesn't have a flag!   His left arm is molded tightly to his body, with nothing in the hand.  His right are is a dangling plastic arm, hanging on a thin plastic pin, and holding a lantern.  I guess that when the figure is thrust outside and through the little door, then that hanging arm is suppose to momentarily shake back and forth from momentum, and that's about it. 

I saw some pictures of old ones, where I think the guy's right hand is holding a flag, but this one is nothing like that.  :-(

If I keep it, I'm going to drill a hole in his left hand, and stick a real thin flexible spring in it, like the spring from a ball point pen, and put a flag on the end of it.  Hopefully, when he comes out, the spring willwag back and forth from hitting the door, and waive the flag.

Mannyrock

Manny

A search of eBay shows the original Lionel 145 Automatic Gateman box does not  say O scale as well as the reissue from 1987 which does say " LIONEL Big, Rugged Trains & Tradition since 1900, O and O27 Gauge Automatic Gateman.  A search of eBay Gateman items with pictures would show the Gateman was a giant as well as his shack.

The Gateman is one of Lionel's most popular accessory.  Lionel trains almost never said any of their trains were scale models with 700E scale Hudson locomotive and later 773 Hudson being exceptions.  Most Lionel trains sold were 3 rail O27 which is about 20% small than 1/4 inch to the foot O scale.  These and 3 rail O gauge were TOY trains with no pretense to be scale model trains or accessories.

This forum is Hi-rail, O27 and Traditional 3-Rail O GAUGE.

There is a forum for 3-Rail SCALE.

Charlie

Sorry Charlie,

I am holding the box in my hand.  The front of the box says:  "O" Scale, LIONEL AUTOMATIC GATEMAN.

It does not say model 145 Gateman.  The Product number on the side of the box is 6-2145.

So, this is not the 145 Gateman.  It was built under a license by Lionel to use its name and gateman engineering  design.  The license was granted to General Mills.

In small print, on the back of the box, at the very bottom, it says:  Lionel of Fundimensions, A Division of General Mills Fun Group, Inc.

Obviously, Lionel allowed General Mills to create and sell cheaper copies of the Gateman using the Lionel trade name.

Mannyrock

Doing a quick Google search, the Gateman (the one we are talking about with the shack and man that comes out) seems to consistently come with a lantern on the end of the arm (may not always have a lighting effect for the lantern though, IIRC).

The Flagman (no shack, generally some sort of cross-bucks on the platform) has (wait for it....!) a Flag on the end of his arm!.   Link to Lionel instructions.  Do a Google search on Lionel 6-12892.  I don't have a picture I own to paste the actual photo.

The Flagman is just as out of scale as the Gateman.  But he does have the flag on the end of his arm.

And yeah, as Rusty mentioned, it's not that Lionel "allowed" the MPC division of General Mills to make the trains.  MPC/General Mills were Lionel as it existed as a company at that time.

-Dave

Last edited by Dave45681

Mannyrock,  I think your best bet would be to acquire a MTH or K-Line watchman. ( They do not use the term gateman ) They are both close to scale although I think the MTH model looks a little better.  They generally sell for about the same price as a 145 however some road specific names sell for a little more. E-bay has several on their site for you to look at and this will give you an idea of what I am talking about.  As far as boxes I have looked through the archives and am unable to find a box that says O scale so your box must be an early MPC box when the “ new Lionel “ licensing agreement took place. They were in their infancy and made some mistakes but I think most people will agree that if it were not for General Mills, we might not be playing with our trains right now.  

There are generally three camps in model railroading.

1 ) Those that build and operate scale or close to it

2 ) Those that consider their trains toys and have no problem with a gateman being taller than the trains they operate

3 ) Those who can appreciate both.

I am in the third camp.

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