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Well hello Tinplate fans, it is some time since I have had anything new to post here but I thought I might be able to contribute today.  At a local train show yesterday , full of Lionel and HO gauge I found, sitting all by itself a Karl Bub tinplate station.  It is what I believe their catalog called a "Wayside Station".  It is clearly marked K.B.N, and "Made in Germany" and that was all the information the seller could give me, he had apparently acquired it as part of a package of miscellaneous trains.  I looked in my only Bub reference, the Michael Bowes book, "Issmayer & Bub Trains, the Secret History" and on pg 169 found some pictures from the 1931 Bub catalog with buildings that are similar to this especially as regards the "house" structure.  So I know the maker but not the exact year...I was hoping perhaps someone else on this thread (Arne?) might have better information.

So here is my new Wayside Station:  The door, although hard to see in the picture, is functional and opens.  The mast to the right is the manual semaphore signal (better view in next picture).  It is all tinplate and enamel construction.

KBN station front side

Here is a better view showing the position of the semaphore mast

KBN station front end with signal shown

Here is the rear, showing a hole likely for a lighting fixture perhaps a Christmas bulb holder.

KBN station reverse side

Here is a better view of the semaphore, manually operated of course via a lever at the base.  You can see some unfortunate writing on the side of the house.  I have to try and figure out how to remove that without harming the finish.  I tried just a damp cloth and it did not work.  I am somewhat afraid of chemicals as they might remove the enamel.  Suggestions are MOST WELCOME.  Note at the very base of this side just in the second row of foundation bricks you can see the mark..."K.B.N" and then "Made in Germany" underneath those letters in smaller print.  It is the only manufacturers mark on the item.

KBN station signal end

The opposite end from the semaphore mast.

KBN station non signal end



Well there you are, my newest "tinplate" acquisition apart from a Lionel #821 stock car from 1925 I posted in last weeks "Box Car Sunday".

Best wishes for a great week to all

Don

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  • KBN station front side
  • KBN station front end with signal shown
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  • KBN station non signal end

Well everyone, for some reason postings on this thread have fallen way off.  So I thought I might keep going to see if I can stir up any interest.  Fatman posted a wonderful video of a Hornby train race and the little M1 loco's were doing quite well.  So I thought I might post some pictures of what an M1 loco might have looked like when purchased for that all important Christmas gift to a youngster.  The M1 locomotive was available from 1926 and was originally copied from Bing.  In 1930 it was changed to a different pressing and a reversing mechanism was added. Except for color changes it remained this way until WWII stopped production. After the war the M1 loco was the first back in production.  The lithography was new and the mechanism received some post war improvements. Lithography / color changes went on but the loco remained remarkably stable.  It went out of production in 1956 but remained for sale (presumably with left over stock) till about 1958.  The version shown in the pictures below dates from about 1948 (the dating feature is the "Hornby" under the cab windows in black).  This was part of the M1 goods set which was supplied with a tender, track, and two open wagons labeled "LMS & LNE".

Here is the entire M1 Goods Train set in the original box. By the way, the red little stick on label at the bottom of the box lid says: "Made in England for Sale in the United States by H.HUDSON DOBSON  200 Fifth Avenue, New York"

Hornby M1 Goods Train set box

The Meccano Limited Guarantee and test verification.  It is interesting that the M1 series was the lowest price line that included the Meccano Guarantee.  There was an even smaller line ( O gauge but a smaller scale) called M0 and one of the differentiating features was that it did NOT carry the Guarantee and like Lionel "Scout" trains had a coupler that was incompatible with the rest of the line.

Hornby M1 Goods Train guarantee slip

If you wished, you could fill out this form and become a member of the Hornby Railway Company

Hornby M1 Goods Train set pamphlet for Hornby RR Company

Here are the "extra's" that came with the set.  The key and two lithographed pieces of luggage, I guess these were the "goods" the train was to carry.  Note the small green one says "Hornby Series" on the top.

Hornby M1 Goods Train set key, track and luggage

Here is the Hornby Type M1 locomotive as it would have been from about 1948 to 1954.

Hornby M1 locomotive front w tender

Here she is pulling her LNE gondola out of the tunnel on my layout.

Hornby M1 Goods train leaving tunnel

Here is the entire "Goods Train" including the two gondolas and the tender.

Hornby M1 Goods Train full train

For those of you who follow railroading in the UK you might wonder why, since nationalization of the railroads took place in 1948, this train set still carries the names of the individual lines.  Well Hornby was quite a ways behind the time, it did not bring out a train set in 0 gauge that carried the post nationalization livery until about 1953.  OBTW, since I had this fellow out of the box, I wound her up and put her on her way.  The M1 handled this little train with no problem and easily made it around my entire loop plus.

Well that's it for me.  I hope we can get a few more "tinplater's" to sign on.  Best wishes

Don

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  • Hornby M1 Goods Train set box
  • Hornby M1 Goods Train guarantee slip
  • Hornby M1 Goods Train set pamphlet for Hornby RR Company
  • Hornby M1 Goods Train set key, track and luggage
  • Hornby M1 locomotive front w tender
  • Hornby M1 Goods train leaving tunnel
  • Hornby M1 Goods Train full train

...

Here is the entire M1 Goods Train set in the original box. By the way, the red little stick on label at the bottom of the box lid says: "Made in England for Sale in the United States by H.HUDSON DOBSON  200 Fifth Avenue, New York"

Hornby M1 Goods Train set box



...

Beautiful set and the box is very crisp.  Really unusual to see a low-end set in that kind of condition.  And it's a bit sad, as it means that it wasn't played with.

Fabulous little set, Don. I'm a great fan of the low-end sets, as so few of them seem to have survived intact.

Here's a little Hafner Overland Flyer acquired in the last year:

A shelf queen for now, as the spring is broken. I bought a copy of James Pekarek's book on windup repair, so hopefully I can sort it out (although I hear Hafner is not easy). A partially broken pilot, but otherwise in nice cosmetic condition.

Last edited by pd

@Mallard4468- thank you for your compliment and your comments.  I agree us collectors sometimes sit on the fence...looking for something in great shape but knowing that if we find it that way it means it likely never fulfilled its purpose. Well I can tell you its loved now (by me!).

@pd - thanks for you comment and compliment.  I just recently got a book that has a full chapter on Hafner so I am finally learning some detail about the line.  It looked like your loco is a #100 with a #1181 tender.  This would have been offered in the 1920's up to the early 1930's.  Its really beautiful.  OBTW I share your love for the low end sets mostly because I think that more children got to play with them than the very expensive high end, especially in the pre war period.

Best wishes

Don

Hello Don, excellent presentation of your Hornby set; always a pleasure to see something from Hornby.

The thread is quite since some time and good idea to resurect it, we need more new trains !!!!

Since I have retired, less money for trains, sad, but much more time to classify all the mess I have done with trains since many years. So new display case and presentation is on the way, not too fast I will do more during winter and after all there is no urgency at all.

So a new display of French Hornby locos, there is more but not for here, it is full...

IMG_2493

And some better pictures of the French passenger and freight station, 1937 models. 20 years since last time I saw them ....

IMG_2583IMG_2586

All my best wishes, Daniel

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@FRENCHTRAINS- Wow Daniel, first thanks for the compliment on my Hornby set. Next the very best of luck in your retirement.  I am not sure about less money for trains, less money for sure but now you have more time to buy them !  The trains you showed are beautiful and the station especially "Lyon" is wonderful.  Who made them?  (JEP?)  Glad you are still posting.  Love seeing your trains and hearing from you.

Best Wishes

Don

I posted my most recent buildings & accessories in the “buy anything new/cool lately(tinplate edition)” thread- so I’ll post the rolling stock or motive power here:

Starting off with German-made trains:

This pair of Marklin 2942/0 PRR 4-wheel wood litho coaches arrived today. First American Market Marklin items I’ve acquired!

645B13CC-263A-4F1E-A54A-9661C4202C25

The axles are knurled at the end, wheels have embossed spokes, Marklin logo at lower right corner of each end.2824933C-62CF-4A72-9254-29C054FA5D58

One is in better shape. That same one also has a stamped logo on the bottom.

Bing 4 wheel PRR boxcar & PRR Lakewood Observation(steel litho Coach)

99F25DEB-A440-4B1E-8B12-975F748B470F
Moving stateside:

I know these Marx GE 70-ton switchers are plastic, but they have near honorary tin status. WP 702 and ICG(needs a coupler). Both run F-R and do it well!

CCBACFA7-03DB-4F39-9083-8A7E895944A0

Flyer 1096 box cab electric! This guy has been on my list of prewar electric outlines. Has original wheels, body is in pretty good shape

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Back to rolling stock:

Ives 1811(pre-Winner-ized) Pullman and Ives 1504 Pullman. Trying to acquire different makes of passenger cars to see which ones look good together!

84F98D7B-1C36-4359-9414-72C28A4657A3

A I love the look of these Hafner streamliner passenger cars! I Can’t believe I didn’t get into these sooner!

538FCDC6-41EC-41D5-8299-0723CDA9B638

Can anyone tell me when Hafner made these types of passenger cars? I know the history of the rare, early Hafner Overland Flyer cars. TCA website has the same coaches(diff litho scheme) from a 1941 set.

And just a pic of each building/acc:

Hornby Plate Layer’s Hut(came with box) to the right of an also new Lionel black #56 street lamp:

CA98D119-9813-4BB8-A349-6E7645AEBF7F

Skyline Yard Tower is serving as an apartment on the RA&P(Richmond, Allentown & Philadelphia) RR5E7A49BC-2A25-481C-AF94-FED0C5898608

some newer tin: Modern Marx Queen’s cafe. Love it!66EA7F84-7CEC-4BA2-9BC4-246E7478B364

Modern Marx by Ameritrains Union Oil Co.” Oil Depot08C18E5C-8B10-4065-9E18-704FA51E69F1

enjoy! Help regarding the Hafner question is appreciated!

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@StevefromPA - Steve thank you for your comment on my Gatekeeper's House.  I really liked the/ tinplate you posted.  The American Market Marklin passenger cars and box car are really neat.  Personally, after pre-war stuff I am partial to Marx and the GE 70 tonners you posted are neat, the WP from '72-'74 and the ICG from '74-'75. OBTW in case you didn't know the ICG is pretty much a single variation (reverse or non reversing) but the WP came in 2 or 3 other color schemes (Green / yellow and Green/cream for instance) which are quite scarce and very collectable.

OK now to your question...IAW Greenberg's Early American Toy Trains reference, the passenger coaches you show seem to be No 405 (no number appears on the car) from the period 1940's -1951.  There is a variation in the circular logo that helps date them.  Early cars say "HAFNER'S / STREAMLINERS/RAILWAYS"  and then at some point production dropped the " 'S" and it became "HAFNER/STREAMLINERS/RAILWAYS"  .  The reference maintains that the logo with out the apostrophe is the later cars.

Great finds. thanks for posting

Don

Last edited by Don McErlean

Well Tinplater's we don't seem to be doing so well in keeping this post populated.  So I will try by posting a little item that I just acquired.  Its a Japanese lithographed tin plate floor toy (TN is the maker).  It came with no tender but one passenger coach.  I really just love the Japanese lithograph work of the late 50's and 60's it was really spectacular (then it all moved to Korea and China ).  Anyway here  is my little train (locomotive 6" and Pullman 5" in length).  The coach is missing one wheel set but that should not be too hard to replace .

TN train side view

The power for this toy is one D battery that goes inside the boiler via the boiler front which should open like a door.  At the moment it appears stuck and I have not decided whether I will try to force it or not, as I am unlikely to operate the toy anyway.

TN train loco top view

The boiler front view (should post on Front End Friday!) The lithographed details are quite elaborate.

TN train loco front view

The passenger coach - no interior details just a shell.

TN train pass car top view

The coach from the  rear view.  I did note that there is no provision for a coupler on the rear end.  Hence, I am assuming the toy is complete and never had any additional coaches.

TN train pass car rear view

Well here's hoping that some of you tinplate fans will post to our thread.

Best wishes

Don

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A nicely refurbished Marlines Jubilee found at York for just a few bucks:

The loco looked familiar, but I couldn't place it. My wife said, "Hey, that's the train under the Christmas tree in the last scene of The Polar Express" and, after a quick watch, so it is. Not sure which Marx tender goes with this, but looking.

PD

Last edited by pd

@pd- Unlike Lionel or American Flyer, Marx mainly sold tenders as separate items from locomotives.  So you could really run almost any tender with this loco (which is really nice by the way) and be "correct" .  The type 451 especially "Canadian Pacific" tenders would be more common or type 951 (called the "wedge type" ) tender was also used commonly with this locomotive.

Don

Well Tinplater's we don't seem to be doing so well in keeping this post populated.  So I will try by posting a little item that I just acquired.  Its a Japanese lithographed tin plate floor toy (TN is the maker).  It came with no tender but one passenger coach.  I really just love the Japanese lithograph work of the late 50's and 60's it was really spectacular (then it all moved to Korea and China ).  Anyway here  is my little train (locomotive 6" and Pullman 5" in length).  The coach is missing one wheel set but that should not be too hard to replace .

TN train side view

The power for this toy is one D battery that goes inside the boiler via the boiler front which should open like a door.  At the moment it appears stuck and I have not decided whether I will try to force it or not, as I am unlikely to operate the toy anyway.

TN train loco top view

The boiler front view (should post on Front End Friday!) The lithographed details are quite elaborate.

TN train loco front view

The passenger coach - no interior details just a shell.

TN train pass car top view

The coach from the  rear view.  I did note that there is no provision for a coupler on the rear end.  Hence, I am assuming the toy is complete and never had any additional coaches.

TN train pass car rear view

Well here's hoping that some of you tinplate fans will post to our thread.

Best wishes

Don

This is a cable train was offered as just the 2-car set and designed to run around the floor following a rubber tube track. Acceptable tenders that were similar in size include the Northwestern tender from their C62 set or the 20th Ex Press tender. TN made several of these trains that run over "cable". They also produced a mine car set in conjunction with Biller that used the same battery motor in a diesel switcher-type loco. I use standard 3/16-ths ID rubber vacuum tubing which can be purchased at any auto parts store to replace the original green rubber tubing track, just superglue the ends together. Instructions included in the original box showed various layout options (bends in the tubing).

central line 55022 pass car w 2 tenders 5.00c62 northwestern tender 3.59central line set w 55022 box car 18.75central line instructionscentral line cable train boxboxed central line set 20.00 BIN

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Last edited by Jim O'C

Hello Gentlemen (and Ladies):

It has been some time since posting. We (my good wife and I) have just returned to "the land down-under" from a two month driving holiday in Europe. While we were in Switzerland I went to the new Buco tinplate train factory in Bauma (a small town to the north-east of Zurich), and saw how they still manufacture tinplate wagons, passenger cars, and electric locomotives for 3 rail "O" gauge.  (buco-gmbh.ch)

They had just released their latest passenger carriage - a replica of a 2 axle restaurant car that has been restored by volunteers and added to a small tourist railway (DVZO -  Dampfbahn-Verein Zürcher Oberland) that operates in the same area.

I was fortunate enough to be allowed a tour of the Buco Spur O GmbH factory, and see how they still make tinplate trains using the original machines, presses, and dies from the old Buco/Bucherer company when they started making tinplate trains back in the late 1940's and up to the mid 1950's, when they went into receivership.

We also attended a model train exhibition called "The Platform Der Kleinserie" also at Bauma (a yearly event but cancelled for the past three years due to COVID), where Buco Spur O GmbH had a display of their products, and had a large double track set-up on tables, with two trains running continuously - one freight and one passenger.

Here are some photos of the new carriage on my layout back home. I just had to purchase two of them - they are all individually numbered, and I got #10 & #11.

Tinplate trains are still alive and well, and I just love my Buco!!!!!!

DSC02978DSC02980DSC02981DSC02975DSC02976DSC02977

Peter - Buco Australia.

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@pd- Unlike Lionel or American Flyer, Marx mainly sold tenders as separate items from locomotives.  So you could really run almost any tender with this loco (which is really nice by the way) and be "correct" .  The type 451 especially "Canadian Pacific" tenders would be more common or type 951 (called the "wedge type" ) tender was also used commonly with this locomotive.

Don

Thanks for the info, Don. I wasn't aware that Marx sold locos and tenders separately. I most frequently see this loco mated to a 4-wheel wedge tender, which I have one of. Until I find something that looks better, I'll use that.

Hello everyone,

It’s been a long while since I posted on here. Anyway, how many of us have gotten the chance to see a Dorfan in operation? Let alone a rare piece such as the 417 position signal? While I don’t technically have the signal hooked up as it was originally intended (middle light should illuminate), you should get the idea. I’ll post a picture of the whole signal when I can.



                                              Trainfam

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trim.8CE686F2-9FC1-46B9-A5BF-5513A98426AD

Today, I offer up the American Flyer O gauge 3019 locomotive.  This item was cataloged from 1923 to 1924 and appears to have been sold through 1925.  It is simply a cheapened variation of the 3020 as it is an 0-4-0 engine (in most cases) as opposed to the 3020 that was a 4-4-4 engine.

The earliest version was likely painted black, as this color has been reported in the Greenberg's Guide to American Flyer O Gauge.  I do not have a black 3019.

The 2nd version appears to be the dark green with red window trim, as shown below.

Then there is a later lighter green version with yellow windows.  Mine is even more unusual in that it is a boxed item and came on a 3020 frame.  This is a 1924 or possibly 1925 item (as the dark green lithographed Illini cars transitioned to a lighter green colored lithograph, apparently in 1925).  Not sure as to why this 3019 cab ended up on a 3020 frame, but my guess would be either poor quality control, or simply a lack of 3019 frames and too many 3019 cabs.

The Greenbergs Guide lists a 3019 in brown, which would likely be a 1924 item.  I do not have one of those.

As the Columbia cars transitioned from brown lithography to maroon lithography c. 1925, as evidenced by the brown Columbia cars not having an observation car and the maroon Columbia cars having observation cars, with 1925 being the first year that observation cars are cataloged, it would appear that the maroon 3020 and, if it exists, the maroon 3019 both date to 1925.

Here is the maroon 3020

And the maroon 3019 c. 1925

NWL

Arnie - what a great piece, thanks for posting!  Its fascinating to me that in the early days, concern for relative scale was not a driving function to the designers.  Your newspaper kiosk is about the same size as the Victoria Switch Tower, which I expect would not be the case in real life.  However the charm and color of the toy does not depend on scale size but on the beautiful detail lithographed into the decoration.  Beautiful !  Thank you.

Don

@Arne nice finds of H Fischer!! They are difficult to come by! Love how the bridge & the track on it arched. Most prewar bridges with ramps/approaches are just flat and simulate an arch with the underlying structure- interesting engineering. Also love that footbridge! Have been seeking a pedestrian footbridge for my layout that works with how my track is configured near the stations.

nice finds Arne- thanks for posting!

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

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