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This is my first time over here, so bear with me please.

Just got the 2015 Lionel Tinplate catalog that MTH published.  Not being a tinplate collector, as I scanned pages, I assume some locos and cars are exact reproductions that have the AC motors and buzzing E units and enameled paint.  Have these repros seriously affected the old stuff, or are collectors still searching for originals and paying top dollar?

 

I know, a lot of "that depends who you're asking".

 

Just curious.

Last edited by rrman
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The presence of reproductions usually divides the values of original stuff. The best condition original stuff maintains its value, while the original stuff in poorer condition sees its value go down.

 

It also depends on the going price of operator grade originals versus the price of the reproduction pieces.

 

Then there are the operators who like can motors and cruise control in pristine appearing reproduction stuff.

I also concur with Roy, the less that perfect or mint in the box examples go down in value.  Mint/boxed anything train wise will hold value over time, might go up and down but will hold its own.  But for the most part, trains have not recovered value wise to thier pre recession levels.  Its very much a buyers market right now and probably will be for awhile to come.  As more of the generation that grew up with these trains pass on, more will come onto the market that has less interested buyers.  I see less modelers interested in tinplate, or older Lionel/AF in general.  I hope that changes.  I was born in 1973, so I grew up with the MPC and LTI era of Lionel.  But my taste as always been in late prewar and early postwar Lionel.  I am only now dipping my toes in Standard Gauge, buying a 8e to restore and some track from the LHS to run it on.   Mike

Sam,

I also agree with Roy, to a certain degree. I own none of the modern stuff. Everything is pre-1934. The newbies are interested in the pretty new tinplate. This just makes more vintage trains available for parts.(in most cases)In other cases more trains for restoration. We must always consider the fact that our trains are only worth what the next buyer is willing to pay.

Originally Posted by Prewar Pappy:

... The newbies are interested in the pretty new tinplate. ...

That pretty much describes my venture into Standard Gauge tinplate a couple of years ago.  So all of my purchases have been newly manufactured product with sounds and modern electronics.  Will I regret opting to pass on the traditional locomotive motors in favor of PS3?  Only time will tell.  But coming into this from O-Gauge Hi-Rail, it seemed a natural choice.

 

I am an operator in this game, and I have no interest in paying premium dollar for original pre-war trains -- regardless of condition.  The word "original" does nothing for me, since I'm not motivated to build a roster of Standard Gauge "original trains" in the way that a traditional collector would build a huge wall display.

 

MTH sure isn't giving away the new tinplate stuff either.  When they re-ran the Ives trains last year, there was an approximate $400+ premium over the products produced nearly 10 years earlier.  So from that perspective, MTH isn't undercutting existing "modern" tinplate product with their latest re-issues.

 

However, the effect on original pre-war trains?  That's a collectors' niche all onto its own, but I wonder how long that market can sustain a "collector culture" that's gotten wrapped up with stratospheric prices for mint/LN-condition equipment.  I'm more than happy to purchase new tinplate trains at a fraction of the price compared to what "established" Standard Gauge enthusiasts would want for similar pieces in their prized pre-war collections.

 

So I'm very glad MTH is re-issuing LCT Standard Gauge tinplate at somewhat "reasonable" prices.  If they didn't, I wouldn't have ventured into Standard Gauge in the first place.  

 

David

Last edited by Rocky Mountaineer

I'm not convinced that reproductions have effected the middle range value of original trains all that much. I think the biggest factor in the lower prices for operator grade trains is that of the internet. In the old days, you only saw what came to a train show. These days, anyone who finds a train puts it on the internet which has caused there to be more available than people once imagined. Case in point, the Lionel 219 crane. Years ago, these were the car to have. You would need to fork over a few hundred dollars to get a decent one. In fact you can look in some older price guides and see the rarity of these cars being quite high. Today, you can buy a decent runner for around $80. Is that because of the reproductions? I think not, it is more the fact that there are a lot more of them out there than our forefathers thought.

 

On the reproduction market, the appeal for these is that they are bright and shiny. Plus you don't need to feel bad about operating it. If you look at the values of the reproductions, they are in worse shape than the originals by far. You can easily buy a repro piece just a few years after its release for less than 50% of its original cost.

 

These are just my observations of the market over the last bunch of years. Everyone has their own opinions of why they would want an original or reproduction. Whatever the case, don't buy a train you don't like and most importantly, don't buy a train for monetary reasons.... it's never a good thing.

 

ARNO

Gentlemen,

    I own the Lionel original Tin and the MTH Repro P2 Tin, we run our trains every Christmas season around the Christmas Tree, never worried about collecting or investment, it's part of our family tradition that has been passed down for generations now.  The only cost I worry about is paying for the O Gauge goodies that I want to add to our current layout.  The memories of my family are wrapped around our incredible Christmas's and our O Gauge Train layouts, especially my Tin Plate stuff.  Make a real investment and purchase a child his 1st O gauge train layout, you might create a Professional Engineer, who will send men into Space to touch the hand of God.  Now that is the kind of investment, important to our O gauge hobby and our country.

PCRR/Dave 

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FYI: Prices for original very early tinplate are skyrocketing, that is 1900-1918 era tinplate.

Any early Lionel in most any condition is now selling for more than it ever has, whether that particular toy train has been reproduced or not. The "big boy" collectors want the originals. A lot these early collectors are not operators so much, and in fact do buy toy trains as an investment.

Last edited by MrNabisco
Originally Posted by MrNabisco:

... that is 1900-1918 era tinplate. ...

there is something special about reaching the century mark that more and more prewar pieces will achieve over the next few decades.  add to that, most of the cast iron and lithographed tinplate trains of this era will likely never be reproduced.

 

cheers...gary

Originally Posted by moderneraSG:

Today, you can buy a decent runner for around $80. Is that because of the reproductions? I think not, it is more the fact that there are a lot more of them out there than our forefathers thought.

ARNO

Your comments address a prior misconception of supply and I don't disagree.  However, we also need to consider the current level of demand.

Without meaning to be indelicate, I think an equally big if not bigger reason for the drop in price is that there are a lot fewer of our forefathers around (i.e., demand has fallen and will continue to fall).

 

Steven J. Serenska

Originally Posted by Serenska:

Your comments address a prior misconception of supply and I don't disagree.  However, we also need to consider the current level of demand.

Without meaning to be indelicate, I think an equally big if not bigger reason for the drop in price is that there are a lot fewer of our forefathers around (i.e., demand has fallen and will continue to fall).

 

Steven J. Serenska

i'm pretty sure people like you are vastly underestimating the impact the internet has had on collecting.

 

in college, the local Burger King was giving out Warner Bros cartoon glasses with the purchase of a Pepsi (1972).  without too much trouble i managed to collect 8-10 different characters, but over the next few years of use/ breakage, i remember the day when i was just down to Bugs Bunny.

 

for about the next 10 - 12 years i occasionally dropped into some local antique shops and for a few $$ apiece, i managed to regain my complete set.

 

then came the internet/ eBay...  i still have my character glass collection it took me more than a decade to piece together, but just for laughs, i recently visited eBay and did a search,  what originally took me a dozen years of collecting can now be done online in a weekend.

 

 

before 1980 i had no idea Marx made tin lithographed trains or that Hafner even existed.  i never played with these trains when i was a kid, but as an adult they fascinate me.  and i'm almost sure i'm not unique in coming out of left field as a collector/ operator who has used the internet to obtain 99.9% of my collection.

 

maybe the internet has made more collections and attic finds available, but i believe there are even more people who have joined the ranks of collectors who likely wouldn't have if not for the internet.

 

cheers...gary

Good point Gary. One thing I have noticed in the Standard Gauge world, is there seem to be more people getting into it. Yes, there is a large population that is leaving us daily, but many of those collectors were of the hoarder mentality and not very open to sharing. Newer collectors/operators seem to want to share more than previous generations. I think the internet has had a lot to do with that as well.

 

Operation of all these trains is important, whether repro or original. In the earlier days of collecting, say the 1950's & 60's, people were careful about what they operated as there was not a large market for replacement parts and they were worried about wheel fatigue and such. So, many of the old timers just became vertical collectors because of that. The advent of replacement parts has helped bring trains back to the track and also launched the reproduction train market.

 

Collecting and operating are both important aspects of this hobby, but not as important as sharing.

 

ARNO

 

 

Originally Posted by moderneraSG:

... One thing I have noticed in the Standard Gauge world, is there seem to be more people getting into it. ...

 

And a segment of us coming into Standard Gauge nowadays has lived through the rise-and-fall of 1980's/1990's O-Gauge "collecting".  Nearly EVERYTHING O-Gauge that was once valued dearly at premiums can be had today for pennies on the dollar... of course, due in large part, to a continuing treadmill of newer trains being offered year after year.

 

Point being... the mentality of watching formerly "prized" pieces now fetch ho-hum values today makes this group of enthusiasts much less inclined to care about highly prized pieces (or variations) in ANY part of this hobby.  I could be 100% wrong on this hunch.  But based on the small number of folks I've talked with about this subject, we feel the same.  While we appreciate the fact that some folks have enjoyed building huge museum-caliber collections of toy trains and their many variations over the years/decades, there's only a significantly small number of enthusiasts who are willing to pay premiums for "rare variations" in these collections.  And I don't see the size of that group increasing at all.  In fact, it's not even staying steady... It's declining.  Generally speaking, most new entrants don't care... or perhaps more accurately speaking, just aren't "in the hobby" to purely collect (at least not in the tradition sense of the word) but rather operate.  So huge collections and variations of similar locomotives and rolling stock have become much less relevant.

 

Admittedly, we're hearing two sides of the story here.  Namely, some folks who have no intention of paying premium prices for original tinplate trains... and then other folks saying demand and prices continue to be high for original Standard Gauge tinplate in excellent condition.   Could it be possible that we're simply developing very small niches of Standard Gauge interest in what was already very much a niche market to begin with?

 

David 

Last edited by Rocky Mountaineer

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