Originally Posted by daveb:
"That's as likely as all the 3-rail O guys disappearing"
There's less AF guys so they should become extinct before the 3 rail crowd. But both don't make much sense in a modern world where 50's trains are pretty much irrelevant. It's not the same world that we old fossils grew up in so we gotta view it thru younger eyes if we wanna remain in the game.There's plenty of prototype railroading going on but the younger generation is seeing a lot different stuff than the old toy trains we saw. If the hobby has a future it needs to move forward with stuff that can attract today's kids thru the scenes they see.Railroading is still interesting, just harder to find since it's moved out of the cities and residential areas to farther out industrial areas and large unit train facilities. But go up on Donner or Tehachapi and neat stuff is still climbing the hill and creating the summit, stuff that the younger guys will want to model. S scale can just write off the future and dies or it can embrace it with new product and move forward. In the worst case scenario we are forced to model in HO or N scale and in the best we can model in S scale. It's up to the manufacturers to decide who get's our money, we are the customers and are right, they serve at our pleasure.....DaveB
All that pre-owned Flyer's gonna have to go somewhere and I'd bet most of it wouldn't be to a landfill.
And, don't forget... A lot of the scale guys are getting up there, too.
When I got into S in 1985, I had zero interest in Flyer. As far as I was concerned, Flyer could've dried up and blown away. I wanted S to be all scale, all the time.
Somewhere along the line, I became interested in American Flyer, first the stuff offered by Lionel, then Postwar Gilbert Flyer. All the while I was still building my S Scale code 100, Kadee equipped 12v DC plywood empire.
While I have thinned the heard of the Flyonel recently, I now have a more focused collection of it, along with the modest collection of Postwar Gilbert I've accumulated.
Both collections may still go though some further fine tuning, but I have no intention of disposing of them.
Being involved with Flyer and Scale (plus Hirail S) has made me understand the symbiotic relationship that exists between these are three legs of an S stool. They all feed off of and couldn't exist in today's world without each other.
Sure, I grumble about some of Lionel's recent decisions, but even if they decide to lean towards upgraded traditional, it still keeps S out there.
To think that S Scale would grow by leaps and bounds if Flyer disappeared off the face of the earth is unrealistic. If the 85% disappeared, you'd have 100% of the 15%.
You'd still would have to convince dealers to give up precious shelf or warehouse space to carry "pure" S scale. The folks that have "too much invested" in their present scale will still have "too much invested." It takes a certain state of mind to dispose of a scale that one has been in for a long time.
I've made my peace with Flyer some time ago. Somebody that buys a Polar Express set or picks up some used Gilbert Flyer today just may be interested in upgrading to Scale in the future.
Rusty