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Here's a new layout video showing the Fulgarex/Twerenbold reproduction Rheinuferbahn ("White Train",) from about 1980. Maerklin originally made the set in 1930.  The video also shows an original Maerklin No. 2108 goods shed with stairs in the base and crane from 1919-1925 with a selection of lead "Britains" flat lead figures, a Wolfgang Bauer reproduction No. 2825 English-style station stop, and an original Maerklin No. 13733/4 interlocking tower from 1927-1932.

 

Last edited by Jim Kelly-Evans

Here's a new layout video showing the Fulgarex/Twerenbold reproduction Rheinuferbahn ("White Train",) from about 1980. Maerklin originally made the set in 1930.  The video also shows an original Maerklin No. 2108 goods shed with stairs in the base and crane from 1919-1925 with a selection of lead "Britains" flat lead figures, a Wolfgang Bauer reproduction No. 2825 English-style station stop, an original Maerklin No. 13733/4 interlocking tower from 1927-1932.

 

I love the elevated line. Is that original tinplate pieces? Can you enlighten us on the provenance of that? Also the newspaper kiosk. What a beautiful piece!

 

Will wrote: "I love the elevated line. Is that original tinplate pieces? Can you enlighten us on the provenance of that? Also the newspaper kiosk. What a beautiful piece!"

Thanks, Will. Both the elevated line and the newspaper kiosk are modern production by Santhion of Budapest. The elevated line design is after Carette for the upper track portion, and similar to Maerklin for the trestles. The newspaper kiosk may be a new creation by Santhion. I'm not sure Maerklin made something like that but they may have.  

Will wrote: "I love the elevated line. Is that original tinplate pieces? Can you enlighten us on the provenance of that? Also the newspaper kiosk. What a beautiful piece!"

Thanks, Will. Both the elevated line and the newspaper kiosk are modern production by Santhion of Budapest. The elevated line design is after Carette for the upper track portion, and similar to Maerklin for the trestles. The newspaper kiosk may be a new creation by Santhion. I'm not sure Maerklin made something like that but they may have.  

They don't seem to have a website. The only thing I can find is a photo album on the Maerklin FB page. 

OK fellows - here is something just for fun.  These three Tank locomotives are neither valuable nor rare except to folks like me who just like to watch them pull their cars and "go around" the layout.  These are three (partial) type 101 Hornby (I believe) former clockwork locomotives, 2 of which are repainted and all three are sans markings although the green/black one in front appears to have its original finish.  They have all been re-powered using Marx electric drive motor / drive assemblies installed in a way as to mimic the Hornby mechanism.  They all work GREAT (love that Marx system) including reverse.  So just for fun...here is their picture as they line up and say..."Tanks a Lot!"

 

Hornby Tank Engines  

Sorry for the awful pun ! 

Don McErlean

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I continued painting my buildings for my tinplate layout at the club.
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At this point I am coming to the end of my tinplate townhomes. I don't think my wife would put up with anymore painting.
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That brings the total number of the tinplate townhouses to 12. That about doubles the amount of tin buildings that I had on the layout prior to this.

Scott Smith

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@scott.smith posted:

I continued painting my buildings for my tinplate layout at the club.
IMG_E6706

At this point I am coming to the end of my tinplate townhomes. I don't think my wife would put up with anymore painting.
IMG_E6700 [2)

IMG_E6702 [2)

IMG_E6701 [2)

That brings the total number of the tinplate townhouses to 12. That about doubles the amount of tin buildings that I had on the layout prior to this.

Scott Smith

Looks great 

Steve

Every now and then I just have to have something ... "Just 'Cos"

This week in my scrounging thru the net up popped ...

A very blurry photograph .... LOL!!!

However just after it was ...

And for less than $25 USD , I thought " Am I ever gonna see another one? "

The loco it comes from is a fairly rare beastie as it was only made in limited numbers for a few years before Hornby was asked by the UK Parliament to "Make something a bit safer Old Chap ?"... which they did , rewiring it to firstly 4V specs , then because it could not perform very well , bumped it up to 6V for a few years until the 20V standard Hornby motor arrived

Yes folks when they said High Voltage , they meant it ... you plugged your controller into the 240V mains and it was dropped down by a 60Watt household bulb to about 110V which you then fed into the tracks !

I wonder how many cats or dogs fried on these things ??? ( let alone kiddies LOL) ...

It will probably never see a track in my lifetime, ...orrrr will it ( evil grin) ....but hey its a talking piece !

At least it had decent insulators on the brush covers ???

Fatman, good buy, but finding wheels will not be easy; brushes cap are not original ones. It is an excellent motor, much better than the models made after, you can run it a very long time without any problem. 

Many of them has been rewired to be used under 20 v. It is more easy to use if you mixed the Metropolitan with other trains of course but running an original one is so pleasing.  Just one condition, be careful and always use pieces in perfect condition. I am used to run HV trains and never had any problem, here is my original set, as it has also been sold in France during a longer time than in England in HV.....

I show it some years ago but maybe you didn't see it. 

DCP05833DCP05836DCP05842

I also have a spare motor I was thinking to rewired to 20 v. You can see the original brushes and the motor is complete.

20200426_081148

Very best,  Daniel

 

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Last edited by FRENCHTRAINS

Gorgeous set Daniel!

I am not sure if I am going to go down that rabbit hole , as you know we are talking pretty expensive , but I will keep my eye out regardless ...

I came from the era too when 240V and live steam were things you played with LOL

Our parents were very trusting I still remember one day putting out a methylated spirit fire on the carpet out with my hands when my sloppy filling of my treasured Mamod road roller leaked out a bit

@Fatman posted:

Ahhhh How much better life once was ...

From above

"Any boy can fit up the track and operate the train . Full instructions accompany each set, and there are no difficulties and dangers ."

Back when Darwin was still hard at work every day.

Probably purely coincidental that the boys of that era who reached adulthood all had a good understanding of electricity.

@Fatman posted:

 

I came from the era too when 240V and live steam were things you played with LOL

Our parents were very trusting I still remember one day putting out a methylated spirit fire on the carpet out with my hands when my sloppy filling of my treasured Mamod road roller leaked out a bit

Wow I often wondered if any of the early pioneers tried running 110v to the rails. Can't believe they were marketed that way to kids that's just nuts.

I remember how excited I was to get my Mamod Steam Wagon. I had stared at that catalog for a year beforehand pining for one. My grandfather walked me down to the local hardware store to buy a can of Wood Alcohol because they wouldn't sell it to a kid. When I asked him what it was he said " it's poison...bums drink it and it makes them go blind". That was 50 years ago and I remember that like it was yesterday (which is probably why he said it.) 

I set the steam wagon up in the driveway and got the fire going..it wouldn't run worth a **** !  Barely made enough steam to blow the whistle. Crestfallen I put it away until one rainy day I got bored and decided to try it again in the basement...ran like a champ! It was then that I realized the wind outside must have been blowing the flame around preventing it from building a good head of steam. And yeah I set the floor on fire many times, luckily it was concrete and I would just let it burn itself out. If only my parents knew. 

Last edited by G-Man24

Wow:  Daniel what a beautiful set.  However I am a safety guy (currently for NASA) and I just can't get my head around dealing with kids and 240 v electricity!!  I read about the Hornby 60 v motor but 240 V is something else.  Hard to believe anyone actually marketed toys that way.  I go back to prewar with Lionel and even in the 20's they came with a transformer, although some of them I have today (but would not dare to plug in ) have 2 prong non grounded plugs, unsealed connectors and silk wrapped wire which would give the consumer product safety committee fits .  However I do have a reproduction of a Lionel instruction sheet from about 1914 I think which was prior to widespread electrification especially in rural areas.  It instructed the child how to make DC batteries using sulfuric acid and glass jars from Mom's kitchen !!  I also know  that in the dim past they also advocated using a series of light bulbs to modify the current into the track for speed control.  My live steam experience was with a stationary power plant that drove a miniature machine shop with drills and saws etc.  However it burned solid "pellet" fuel so no spills, just flames. 

Miketg: excuse my lack of knowledge but you addressed two manufacturers today that I have not heard of before..."BLZ" and "LR".  Could you spell out who these are?  Thanks.

G-Man 24 :  Love the Dorfan cars with the "little people" in the windows.  While the condition may be a bit down at the moment, its amazing that it survives at all.  Great find. 

Justhavnfun and "Papa" Eastman- great loco's thanks for posting.  I have always been disappointed that the "new" Marx really did not succeed in the marketplace.  It may be that their prices, as I remember, did not really offer the "low price" alternative to the major brands that was the key market strategy of the original Marx company.  Perhaps the market just didn't want "toys" anymore. 

Here is my contribution today...nothing near as rare or exotic as others but just fun including the bg story.

In a rare postwar photo, dated about 1957, the Leonardtown and Savannah (L&S) is desperate to retain its commuter business from the suburbs to downtown and for workers to the Port of Savannah.  In a last ditch move, the normally frugal L&S management (read-CHEAP!) has leased a new motor car to lower the cost of running commuter service.  Today, it is undergoing trials on the line, and candidly it looks fairly crowded.  Unfortunately the surface railway, in the background, has just declared bankruptcy and will be withdrawn and replaced with buses in the very near future.  This will clearly create even more competition for the L&S as their relationship with the Savannah Trolley Corp. was always mutually supportive.  What no one really knows however is that Just around the corner is the opening of I-95 and Route 80 which will kill this traffic deader than a door nail by 1965. Unfortunately for the workforce what is also unknown is that by 2020 traffic on these major "EXPRESSWAYS" would be so dense that commuters on buses would make better time by walking! 

Subway Car 1

Have a good week everyone.  Keep healthy

Don McErlean

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This is the only other locomotive and set I own besides the 390E and cars handed down to me from my grandfather. I got this No 347 outfit years ago from a friend who ran an antique toy store. He had bought the outfit from the original owners.

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Paint is nice with just some tiny tick marks here and there. All the original boxes are solid. Even had the original track inside but I swiped it for use on my No 199 display. The 4 drive wheels were replaced at some time as well as the wiring to the reversing switch. 

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@Don McErlean

BLZand LBZ always confused me but I have it sorted now lol

LBZ= Lorenz Bolz Zinndorf made a few trains ( mainly an O guage sand truck thingy) Germany

https://www.binnsroad.co.uk/railways/lbz/index.html

BLZ= Messrs. Bourdeau Lheurre and Zedda A FrenchFirm making O and HO after WWII in France

https://www.binnsroad.co.uk/railways/blz/index.html

 

LR = Louis Roussy Great French manufacturer

http://www.tcawestern.org/lr.htm

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