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I've been into model railroads for sixty years (since age four) and back into O gauge for the past six or so years. 

 

I have very little knowledge of tinplate, and few tinplate locos, other than some old Marx, including a windup set my father had, and a Darstead 2-6-2 that I bought last year our of curiousity, which I think is gorgeous, if also the noisiest running loco I have.

 

Anyway, I know there are modern tinplate locos made, most reproductions of, or patterned after, toy trains of long ago.  I was thinking of getting the Baby Blue Comet, purely and only selected because it looks quite nice, but without the brass trim I think.  Is this a good set?  any suggestions or tips?  I may be the only tinplate locos I have for quite some time but it seems it would be fun.  

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Lee,

 

This is like some of those open-ended questions we see on the O gauge side (you know the ones  ) and you’ll likely get answers all over the map. And there’s no right or wrong answer.

 

One question, though:  Standard or O gauge? I assume O but that’s my own bias.

 

When I got back into trains (the last time around) it was because I got bitten by the tinplate bug. For my own reasons, I prefer the modern reproductions by Lionel Tinplate Corporation (joint venture between Lionel and MTH) and they have some really great offerings. RTR sets, individual locos you can pair with different passenger sets or freight cars, and plenty of accessories, signals, and structures. Many are offered in either traditional or PS-3 versions.

 

The Blue Comet is a classic, of course, and is a great one to pick up as an intro to tin (you’ll get advice, I’m sure, to get the Standard gauge version). In the latest LCT catalog, they also have  a Red Comet set and some others with Vanderbilt locos. Most of the electrics are Standard, although there are a few in O. Take a look at the 2012 LCT catalog for more. Probably won’t see the 2013 ‘til April York.

 

Again, can’t go wrong with a Blue Comet set, but I’ll let the lobbying begin.

Originally Posted by Lee Willis:

I've been into model railroads for sixty years (since age four) and back into O gauge for the past six or so years. 

 

I have very little knowledge of tinplate, and few tinplate locos, other than some old Marx, including a windup set my father had, and a Darstead 2-6-2 that I bought last year our of curiousity, which I think is gorgeous, if also the noisiest running loco I have.

 

Anyway, I know there are modern tinplate locos made, most reproductions of, or patterned after, toy trains of long ago.  I was thinking of getting the Baby Blue Comet, purely and only selected because it looks quite nice, but without the brass trim I think.  Is this a good set?  any suggestions or tips?  I may be the only tinplate locos I have for quite some time but it seems it would be fun.  

Welcome to the "Lighter" side, Lee!  BTW, the Baby Blue Comet is stunning, but I believe it has only been made with nickle trim, so you can't go wrong. 

I was at Nicholas Smith in Broomall, PA last week, he had an original on the wall with 4 cars, I didn't ask the price, as I have no buyer's resistance when it comes to prewar steam locos, i.e., 238E, 260, 262, 263, 259 and 258 in the train room. Looked pretty good, but it was from ten feet away. I do know that N.S. tests all of their second hand locos, and fixes what needs fixing. FWIW. 

Lee,

   As you probably know I like Tin Plate better than any other trains, to me the trains are the classic form of running.  The Blue Comet is a timeless classic, whether you pick O Guage or Standard means little, remember if you do pick the O Gauge that

only certain switches will accommodate Tin Plate trains.  I run my O guage Tin Plate on Lionel Fastrack using old Lionel 711 & 072 switches, because Tin Plate trains run so well on it, ofcourse I still have the old Tubular tracks also.   The Lionel 711 switches are the original O Gauge Tin Plate tubular switches, that came in the early Lionel Tin Plate Train sets, and they upped the cost of the trains sets considerabbly.  Most middle income families in that era, could not afford to purchase them.  The switches that came with my Fathers 263E work train set, still work perfectly even today.  As does the rest of the train.   Yep Lionels life time warranty on their original product really did work, it was made with pride in the USA.

Due to my memories, you don't own a real Lionel train until you own a Tin Plate.

The Blue Comet would be a great start.

PCRR/Dave

 

The original 711 Lionel Switches & Controllers

 

The MTH Reproduction of the original Lionel 263E

 

 

Me and my Grandpa in 1949, running my Tin Plate Train on the original O Gauge tracks.

 

   

 

  

Last edited by Pine Creek Railroad
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