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There used to be and maybe still is a pretty cool show called "How It's Made" where they walk you through the end to end process for manufacturing all kinds of different products, often starting from raw materials. For our products, who created the molds for all of the great engines and rolling stock we buy? Where did they get the dimensions and details. I know we can go straight from CAD to the machine shop to create molds today but I would think that some of what we are buying of have bought was done by hand. Is there a video or other resource that shows how this was done? And who were the artists that did all the hard work?

Thanks!

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I recall one of the mid or late 90's Lionel catalogs showed some of the tooling and manufacturing process that went into building trains in Michigan at the time. There was a recent episode of 'How It's Made' that showed an injection-molded O-scale boxcar being produced and decorated. Looked like it was the former Weaver factory as the employees looked American and the car was an American-style boxcar.

@harmonyards posted:

There was a “How it’s Made” episode where they did visit a model train factory. We had a TV in the lunchroom at work, and it was one of the only programs worth watching at the noon hour,…

Pat

If it was the one I saw, that was the Weaver factory, and Gary (the main service guy) - with whom I spoke several times on the phone - was doing some painting. Hoppers, I think. I spoke to him later on some subject and congratulated him on his celebrity status. Never got an autograph, though....

@FuzzyD posted:

In 2005 TM Productions made a VHS on the "Lionel Hudson".  Was put on a DVD a year or so later with new footage.  I think you can find it on U tube now.  Still see it for sale around at train shows.  Shows the making of the scale Hudson in the Dick Kughn's era.  118 minutes long.

Dave

I still think this video is the best source to look at if you want to learn about the making of model trains, despite the original release being almost 35 years old.

Truly from a bygone era.

Well, this thread piqued my interest and went looking on youtube and found a ton of very interesting videos.  Some old Lionel, and a more modern ROCO showing the modern way it is done, but still amazingly labor intensive if you want a detailed model.  If you go a looking, bring some coffee and snacks, you could be hooked for hours.  In one of the Lionel videos by CTT, wonder if the skill set building Lionel track started with the guy placing the tie, and working up to the guy that put the last rail in place.  Perhaps they had some good conversations sitting around that track building station.

Last edited by CALNNC

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