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Not really.... If they get major details wrong on a loco, Like the side rods/running gear or the wrong steam dome/sand dome placement wrong or smoke stack or placement of the headlight or marker lights, Even the shape of the tender used on the model isn't close to the prototype....that really bugs me. It didn't before but it has in the last few years. If I am paying a lot of money for a model I would want it to be as close to the prototype as they can make it. Instead of a paint job. I'm seriously considering 2/3 rail Brass Models now.

Last edited by Bruk

I think you can't me a "model Railroader" without being a "rivet counter" to some degree.      The term can refer to both actually counting modeled rivets to more generally referring to accuracy to prototype in the model.  

A collector who wants to gather in each catalogued number of something, may not be a rivet counter.     but someone who wants to get the most accurate F7 model, or most accurate PRR K4 pacific is.

Rivets on my Prewar TinPlate?
Sometimes I see them and sometimes they were never put in.
Best is to leave my glasses off and to just see a blurred loco in standoff scale (looking at it 20 feet away and it looks like a train).
Just kidding.
I personally I m not a rivet counter, but think that the rivet counters are good for this hobby as the manufactures will put good and almost exact replicas out to please everyone with a quality products.

Scrambler81 posted:
prrjim posted:

I think you can't me a "model Railroader" without being a "rivet counter" to some degree."

 

 

 That's why I never call myself a model railroader, just like I don't consider myself a "biker". I'm just an old, fat guy that likes playing with trains and riding motorcycles, I don't want any titles.

Wait, isn't "old fat guy" a title too? It's one I've used for myself as well. 

handyandy posted:
Scrambler81 posted:
prrjim posted:

I think you can't me a "model Railroader" without being a "rivet counter" to some degree."

 

 

 That's why I never call myself a model railroader, just like I don't consider myself a "biker". I'm just an old, fat guy that likes playing with trains and riding motorcycles, I don't want any titles.

Wait, isn't "old fat guy" a title too? It's one I've used for myself as well. 

Old and fat are not perceptions. You is, or you ain't. I is.

I enjoy highly detailed and skillfully crafted historical accurate models.  I also like a Christmas Train under my tree every year.  So I guess I'd say I'm from one end of the spectrum to the other.  LOL.  On my "real" layout, we are depicting Glacier National Park; specifically the Marias Pass run.  There is no way, rivet by rivet, anyone could do a realistic model of this area; less taking a shovel of dirt and placing it on a surface and saying: this is my "model" of "earth" of Marias Pass.  Please lock me up in the looney bin.

I try to give a general "sense of place" and "feel" to the Glacier Line.  There is no mistaking where or what it is supposed to be, but it is NOT remotely close to a rivet by rivet accounting.

As a means of controlling the extent of my motive power and rolling stock, I limit myself to my favorite roads (see my sig) and only scale-size.  I have NO problem with less-than-scale, but I jut chose that method to restrain myself.

so I insist upon scale dimensions (or something reasonably close) but do not insist on elusive fidelity to prototype.  One example:  I won a 6-18031 Frisco 2-8-2 #4100.  Now this engine is a redecorated Southern Mike, and so it looks very little like the real #4100, but it is scale sized (and pulls like a bulldozer), so I am happy.  Others would reject its lack of fidelity.

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

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