I have been bugging (in a humorous and friendly way) the store manager of my LHS about no "O" Sale table. They always have an "N" and "HO" sale table. So he said to me, pick out any one item that you really want and I'll give a one time best "blow out" deal. I think he is serious. Now, I don't know whether to choose an expensive engine, a six pack of coal cars, or just a car or some really neat accessory to take him up on his offer. Decisions, decisions! Advice???
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What ever it is, do it quick before he changes his mind. I'd be basing my decision on available funds and items on my long term wish list. Don't buy just to be buying. Just my $0.02.
Gilly
Micheal he said an item you really want (key words) so go for it, get what you really want.
Thanks, Alex
My advice would be to not go for it. I'd tell him, in that same humorous and friendly way, that while you appreciate the offer, you figure someday you will need a favor from him badly - help with a warranty claim, or in diagnosing or fixing an annoying, recurrent problem - something you can't figure out yourself - and you'll simply call in the favor then.
My logic is this: the Internet is unbeatable with regard to bargains - go there when you want bargains. A good LHS provides support, camaraderie, and service you can't get over the Internet. Use each for what they are best at . . .
Interesting take Lee. I will ponder it.
Always tough to refuse a bargain, but I would agree with Lee. Sometimes I will buy something on the Internet on a "blow-out" sale, but more often I will go with bricks and mortar folks for stuff I really want. When I have had issues, my LHS (in the same region but different from Lee's) will help out, even repairing smoke units under warranty for stuff not bought at their shop.
I'm willing to pay an extra percentage for that type of service and advice. I'd like to keep them in business. I would politely decline the generous offer and take a favor later.
Bruce
Go big! And stay within your budget.
Lee has the right idea.
My logic is this: the Internet is unbeatable with regard to bargains - go there when you want bargains. A good LHS provides support, camaraderie, and service you can't get over the Internet. Use each for what they are best at . . .
No personal offense intended, but if everyone followed the line of thinking presented, there would be no LHS. If I only bought service and took the free support, expertise and camaraderie offered by my local shop, I would have no local shop.
Seems like a week can't go by without a thread about how sad it is that a storied local shop bit the dust. The same posters who lament not being able to go there and hang out and get their questions answered are many of the same who post "Who has the best price on "X?" and buy it from the cheapest internet retailer.
edited to fix a typo
Last I checked, support, camaraderie and service(meaning taking something out and test running or to look at so you can then go and buy it over the net) doesn't pay the rent or the employees.
Service(meaning repairs) might kick in a buck or two.
Rusty
Service(meaning repairs) might kick in a buck or two.
Rusty
Service(meaning repairs) might kick in a buck or two.
Rusty
That's why I said "might."
Rusty
No personal offense intended, but if everyone followed the line of thinking presented, there would be no LHS. If I only bought service and took the free support, expertise and camaraderie offered by my local shop, I would have no local shop.
No offense taken. I see your point and I am not saying to go so far as to not shop there a lot. I spend several hundred dollars a month on scratch building supplies, scenery stuff, glue and paint, repairs and parts and "stuff" at my LHS - that's not the type of purchases I try to try to save a few $ on by shopping on the internet - also the type of stuff I like to see and feel before buying so its pure LHS territory as far as I am concerned. I end up buying a few locos and rolling stock I see on their shelves, too, and lots of buildings, and . . .
I also make it a policy, even though it costs me about 10 versus the internet, of putting all my Lionel and MTH locomotive pre-orders -- usually about four Vision, Premier or Legacy locos a year -- through my LHS. I do this partly to make sure I am supporting them, but also because I much prefer to pre-order through someone I can look in the eye and know will treat me well.
But I do shop for internet bargains, too - I have four WBB Baldwin 10-wheelers, bought one at a time, and none from the LHS - I got seriously deep discounts on each, basically buying from whoever offered it cheapest on that day. Etc.