Originally Posted by Allan Miller:
Originally Posted by gmorlitz:
You buy more because you want to run different things at different times. Mike, Jerry, et al are counting on it. Otherwise their business model for high end buyers won't work.
Gerry
Gerry makes a good point, but I'm sure there are some among us who quite literally have reached something of a saturation point. I know that is pretty much the case with me. I'm virtually out of display spaces in my home, and definitely out of closet space (where trains don't belong in the first place). I have nearly complete rosters of all recent Alaska RR and U.S. Army Transportation Corps locomotives, and also have some 50 or more trolleys and PCC cars. And this, of course, doesn't even include the many On30 and Large Scale trains I have, or even the great many tinplate trains.
Valid business model or not, there truly is a point where some (many?) simply can't accommodate more trains. At that point it becomes a sell-to-buy situation, as it currently is for me.
My saturation point will come - I will reach it, when I complete buying my list - and acquisitions will slow as time passes: seven years ago when I got back into O I had about 80 locos on it, now l have less than a dozen: this year was very good as to the list - five locos on it were offered in the lastest catalogs. Some on my list I expect Mike, Jerry, or someone else to offer, new, sometime in the future - just a matter of time (Dreyfus Hudson, cast not tin-plate Gresley A3 and A4, ETAT Chapelon 242A) and some I expect never to get but will buy if and when (Russian Soviet-era A20-1 (4-14-4)). Until then I keep filling in but only on the list, unless something comes along that I have not previously heard of, which hasn't happened very often so far.
After that, I will buy only as replacements, like you do now. for example, it's conceivable that someday someone could offer a scale Big Boy that would motivate me to replace the JLC I have now, although what features it would have that would push me to do so, I haven't a clue.