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Hurricane IDA hit us in NJ and had all my trains neatly packed on shelves in the bsmt. We never had water in the basement. I heard a loud bang in the basement and the slop sink broke away from the plumbing from the high pressure of the sewage water. My daughter was a champ as I was trying to wrap a towel around the sewage pipe I could not stop it. My daughter walked in the 4 feet of sewage water and helped me save the trains on the upper shelves. Lost 2 big boys as well. I’m trying to dry some out and as soon as I get My water heater and furnace installed and clean this mess I hope those big boys will pull through

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So very sorry for all your damage, Merlin. I’ve had water in my basement a couple of times over the last 26 years, but fortunately haven’t had such a tragic loss - and I just had water, no sewage. I was really sweating out Ida, but fortunately I never lost power and the sump pumps handled the 8” of rain. I hope you are able to recover from this tragedy.

Sorry to hear about your loss.  Hope that you get something from the insurance.  Where I live, sewer backup costs extra, so many folks don't have it.

As has been mentioned in other damage threads, be sure to document everything as best you can, and keep track of the time and materials that you use during your cleanup efforts in case your insurance will pay anything.  (A local club had vandals break in and shoot off the fire extinguishers - the insurance company reimbursed them for cleaning supplies and each hour they spent cleaning stuff.)

Hoping for the best for you.

Hi Merlin, I am also sorry for your loss and must commend your daughter.

The advice offered above is spot on. Clean Fresh Water as soon as possible on the impacted items.

I'm afraid this will become more and more of an issue for our hobby community.

For the first time in my life, I now have Flood Insurance. This basement has never flooded (either in the last four years since we have been here or since built I was told) but the storms have never been this frequent and severe. We live a mile from Narragansett Bay but I decided I had to proactively protect all our belongings (read my trains) that are in the basement. I pray that is a policy I never have to file a claim.

Let us know how it goes Merlin, keep a undamaged train where you can see it to give you an occassional smile.

All the best,

Paul

Sorry to hear of your flooding problem. One thing it won't hurt to try. Go to your local Gov. office. Take pictures and dollar amounts of loss. I know where I worked, they took a kinder hearted look when it was their sewer water that did the damage. It is certainly worth the effort. At least if nothing comes out of it, you went on record with the city to what happened. Just in case God forbid it comes again. Ask the Waste Water Dept. to install a back flow preventer on your line. We had done that in different situations, and they worked well. Take Care, Dave

I agree with others that the first thing to do is take the engine apart and wish them with fresh water. After they are clean, use canned aerosol cleaners (like the ones they sell to clean keyboard) to get all the water out of electronics,  gears and any other nooks an crannies then set them in the sun to dry.  I have a friend who had  about 30 of his engines floating is water.  He used this method and saved all the engines.

Good luck with your recovery,

Don

Basement storage of trains is an often-cited place for them, although high humidity may be a constant problem. However, that can be mitigated with a dehumidifier. You didn't mention a TRAIN LAYOUT in your basement. That would be an additional disaster, depending on its height above the floor -- a vindication for those who set their layout at 40 inches, not 30 or 36 inches.

Comments by other hobbyists indicated your trains could be rescued by following proper procedures. I hope the BIG BOY locos can be resurrected as successfully as the UP prototype. Sad to say, the original boxes may be reduced to paper mache mush.

Mike Mottler     LCCA 12394

This is my "insurance" against flooding coming up farther than the carpets, which would be a PITA all in itself. The ground slopes away from the house, hopefully protecting me from any massive floods.

You must have a can of Flex Seal behind those boxes.

To the OP, this is a bummer but as a few others have said you can save these trains with soap and water. The sooner the better.

Pete

I feel your heartbreak as I was sick over my damage.  I'm sorry you are going through that. 

I went through that a few years back.  My warning:  have GOOD insurance that covers trains.  My agent told me an added jewelry policy would cover my trains and I paid that for years.  But then, when I called after my basement flooded, I was told it doesn't cover water damage.  Needless to say, I dumped my insurance company entirely (house, 2 cars, motorcycle) after 25 years.  My new insurance company, State Farm, covers basement flooding (with or without sump pump failure) and my hobby collection.  It's a separate policy and I was thorough in presenting what ifs to them.  This isn't a brand endorsement, just an example of a known company that seems to meet our unique hobby needs.

I am sorry for your loss it stinks. I used to have issues with water in my basement do to a leaky back door and bad grading up many night making sure the water drained properly one might we got 7 inches and lost dome stuff as well fixed that problem 2 ways got the basement door nd grading fixed. I also bought husky shelving from home depot keeps the trains 2 to 2 1/2 feet off the floor will take alot of water to get to them and if it does I got a bigger problem.

I am really sorry to hear about this. When I was in my first home 3 times I had water in the basement due to a leaking window but it only ruined boxes. However, that is nothing compared to what you have to deal with. I sincerely hope you can save those Big Boys and any other trains damaged by water. You will get through this and if I could help in any way let me know.

This is my "insurance" against flooding coming up farther than the carpets, which would be a PITA all in itself. The ground slopes away from the house, hopefully protecting me from any massive floods.

It is extremely helpful, but not fool proof. I've had 2" or so of water in our walk out basement when our water heater went. Put things on pallets, as it keeps everything from flooding (and only a few boxes showed water damage).



To the original poster, hopefully some of the items survived. Hopefully you only end up losing boxes.

I just wanted people to know that over the years (23) I have made my basement water proof from hearing about horror stories like this. I had French drains installed with 2 sump pumps. All appliances,furnace,water heater,washer and dryer are all installed on cinder block. As you can see in the pictures I put shelving all around the walls of the bsmt with 2 feet clearance. Anything placed on the floor had to be in plastic containers. The one thing Mother Nature got me was the sewage. You think you can plan for everything but you can’t. I am having a back flow preventer installed on the sewer line next friday but I have to say the pressure was so strong that I hope this will help if it happens again. In NJ Home Insurance does not cover flood. You must purchase flood Insurance which cost around 2 thousand a year. My mistake was not insuring them. I did look around last year and received a quote for a 125 a year. I felt confident that nothing would happen and it came back to bite me in the end. I do agree the storms are getting much stronger and will start affecting more of the communities unfortunately. Thank you for all your responses. I am following your directions and have 4 cans of air cleaner and some gallons of distilled water so hopefully I can post some videos of some running trains. Thank you everyone.

I honestly feel the pain many of you had due to sewage backups in the basement.

I had a home which would backup whenever it felt like it.  Mostly due to tree roots.

The sewer line was cleaned out TWICE yearly to prevent it from happening using 8" cutters.

Backups are so very bad and it is a major job to not only clean but disinfect.

Someone wrote that the TCA offers some form of insurance.

If so then it may be a good idea to have the trains insured through them.

Does anyone on this site use them for that purpose?  If so how is it structured and priced?

Last edited by Allegheny
@Allegheny posted:

Does anyone on this sight use them for that purpose?  If so how is it structured and priced?

I don't have insurance on the trains, but I do have a $25,000 rider on my insurance for sewer backups.  I'm not far from the community pumping station, and I figure if that ever goes south I may have a problem, and I'd like someone to foot the bill for the cleanup.

@Allegheny posted:

I honestly feel the pain many of you had due to sewage backups in the basement.

I had a home which would backup whenever it felt like it.  Mostly due to tree roots.

The sewer line was cleaned out TWICE yearly to prevent it from happening using 8" cutters.

Backups are so very bad and it is a major job to not only clean but disinfect.

Someone wrote that the TCA offers some form of insurance.

If so then it may be a good idea to have the trains insured through them.

Does anyone on this sight use them for that purpose?  If so how is it structured and priced?

http://www.jabash.com/tcaindex.htm

@NJCJOE posted:

Crunching the TCA's insurance numbers based on the application on this link and comparing it with my policy, the numbers are competitive.  Interesting.  The fact that they specialize in our hobby and cover everything makes it even more interesting.  Has anyone had any major claims using them? Care to share your experience?

@Allegheny posted:

I honestly feel the pain many of you had due to sewage backups in the basement.

I had a home which would backup whenever it felt like it.  Mostly due to tree roots.

The sewer line was cleaned out TWICE yearly to prevent it from happening using 8" cutters.

Backups are so very bad and it is a major job to not only clean but disinfect.

Someone wrote that the TCA offers some form of insurance.

If so then it may be a good idea to have the trains insured through them.

Does anyone on this sight use them for that purpose?  If so how is it structured and priced?

Joe

@NJCJOE posted:

Thanks Joe for the link.

Indeed as Iron Horse asked, it would be nice to know of anyone who may have had an experience with the TCA insurance claim - especially with flood or sewage backup.

This is my "insurance" against flooding coming up farther than the carpets, which would be a PITA all in itself. The ground slopes away from the house, hopefully protecting me from any massive floods.

What he said. About 15 years ago I block-paved our front yard and (being an engineer with construction experience) I know about ground levels and falls, so I made sure it all sloped away from the house to a run-away. We had the worst storm I can remember, a few months ago and it worked a treat. Same goes for the back garden, although that wasn't my doing. The sewers over-loaded and flooded: we had a stream of sewage running down the path and a wide, shallow puddle of it covering much of the lawn. Still, a couple of months of raking, mowing and general weather and all is well - "I am the grass; let me work"

Sorry for the flood.  I feel your pain to a degree.

After about 6 months in the house I had a toilet line break while I was at work.  My trains up until a week before were still at my fathers house on pallets.  I always put everything on pallets regardless of the situation.  Well some of the trains were on the floor because I still had stuff sitting on the needed pallets at dad's.  So I had all box damage fortunately but learned a valued lesson, have pallets at the destination before moving the trains. The only casualty was the VL Big Boy.  It was sat on end in the box when moved to safety and smoke fluid leaked all over the boards.

Needless to say again everything goes on a pallet now.  Unfortunately from the sounds of it, pallets would have been little help it your situation.  I hope everything works out for you. 

@MartyE posted:

Sorry for the flood.  I feel your pain to a degree.

After about 6 months in the house I had a toilet line break while I was at work.  My trains up until a week before were still at my fathers house on pallets.  I always put everything on pallets regardless of the situation.  Well some of the trains were on the floor because I still had stuff sitting on the needed pallets at dad's.  So I had all box damage fortunately but learned a valued lesson, have pallets at the destination before moving the trains. The only casualty was the VL Big Boy.  It was sat on end in the box when moved to safety and smoke fluid leaked all over the boards.

Needless to say again everything goes on a pallet now.  Unfortunately from the sounds of it, pallets would have been little help it your situation.  I hope everything works out for you.

Good advice.  When I finished my basement, I put all of my outlets 24" above the floor after reading that was code in parts of Canada.  It may look a little odd, but I'm glad I did.  I keep my train stuff now in plastic boxes and everything I store on the floor sits on top of 2 x 4s, which is the equivalent of pallets.  My only flood was about 1-2 inches, and pallets would have saved everything.

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