So, I am relatively new to the world of pre-ordering trains. I started in the model train hobby when I was about 12 years old. Most of my trains in those days were Christmas presents or as I got a little older, spur of the moment purchases during visits to local hobby shop (Northeast Trains in Peabody, MA.). But I now live in Tennessee and there is not much around for local hobby shops. So most of my train purchases are now made online based on catalogs and posts on this forum, rather than seeing items in a shop. Now with the new build-to-order policies, I have begun pre-ordering some items, both MTH and Lionel, that I don't want to miss out on. But along with this brings one issue I have yet to determine a great solution for. Generally speaking I won't pre-order an item that I don't already have money for. But sometimes the wait for pre-orders can be very long. I have on more than one occasion now forgotten about the pre-order or at least it has slipped my mind long enough that I spend the money allotted for the item on something else. Does this ever happen to anyone else? Any tips or tricks for making sure the money gets set aside and then is not spent on something else. Just curious as to how others handle pre-ordering items since the money is not due until the item is in stock, which can take months to happen.
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I sold other items to pay for my last pre order, so I put the cash in an envelope and set it aside until the order came in.
I have an account I only use for trains. I put the money in it as soon as I preorder and leave it until payment due. You'll thank yourself for having self discipline later...
Another good bit of advice-don't preorder what you can't afford.
Do a search, this has been discussed many times and there are lots of opinions on this subject.
The train hobby is a bit like the used car world. Many of us have to sell what we are driving to buy something else we want. In trains, most people do the same thing. Trains on the secondary market can be a great buy for someone. Used trains and used cars are alike. You better know what you are buying. I have purchased many used trains and sold many used trains. I would never sell a used train that has not been fully checked out.
After you plan your pre orders and are sure you can afford them, start by buying USPS Money orders, I start with about 20% of the total pre order, write the name/s of the hobby shop you ordered from on the USPS MO, that way you kind of mentally say this money is for the trains. Every two weeks, month, or what ever you want, continue buying MO's to finally satisfy the full amount of the order or close to it....Some times I even over bought MO's which is great since now I can either save for later purchases on or even buy a car or two....This way, you are sure of buying with cash you "HAVE"....It worked for me so far for a few VL items with my new addition to Legacy steam effects....Darn it!!!
The problem for me is when several items come in at the same time.
I have a feeling several big-ticket tinplate items that I pre-ordered will be arriving this month or next.
Odd to say there is relief when a pre-order is delayed!
I have a local train store and pre-order 90-95% of my train purchases from them. I visit there just about every week. They do a pretty good job of letting me know which orders I have coming in and when so I am able to keep up with my orders pretty well. I also have an Excel spreadsheet that lists all my pre-orders, when the item was ordered, item cost, and the expected ship date so I sometimes double check there as well.
You could get a savings account or similar and set the funds aside there until your orders come in. While working, before retirement, I had a savings plan at work that I put money in for large purchases. That served us very well for a long time, haven't made a car payment in many years thanks to that savings plan. Years ago they used to even pay interest on your average balance on those accounts.
Then there is the old cash in the envelope trick when saving for something, no special accounts required there. Like the old Christmas funds or homemade layaway plans. One other thing in your favor is the items are never ahead of their shipping schedule, usually always ship later than stated.
A pre-order is an order, and I order only if the money is there to pay for it even if it may be months from now. There have been times in my life when I had to get creative with "financing" to get by. But these are just toys. I figure just do without if there is any worry at all about the cash.
What is the correct etiquette when you have pre-ordered an item and it has gone well beyond it's "due date", perhaps even after that date was extended more than twice by the manufacturer? Shouldn't it be OK to cancel an order after an importer has not produced the item in the time frame quoted, or should you be required to lose any deposit and suffer the bad will of canceling the order even if the manufacturer has not lived up to their end of of the bargain? What is the reasonable time window to wait for an overdue item, 30 days, 90 days, 180 days, a year, or even longer?
Pre-orders and build-to-orders are only OK as long as the vendor/importer lives up to their end of the agreement, but really, how often does that happen? And what does the consumer do when the item finally arrives, and it is found not to be up to expected (or promised) quality, or parts are not available?
Bill in FtL
If you don't have the money NOW, don't fool your self and think you can save FOR IT.
don't buy"toys" NO MATTER HOW EXPENSIVE OR CHEAP, if you don't have the money to spend.
Brent
What is the correct etiquette when you have pre-ordered an item and it has gone well beyond it's "due date", perhaps even after that date was extended more than twice by the manufacturer? Shouldn't it be OK to cancel an order after an importer has not produced the item in the time frame quoted, or should you be required to lose any deposit and suffer the bad will of canceling the order even if the manufacturer has not lived up to their end of of the bargain? What is the reasonable time window to wait for an overdue item, 30 days, 90 days, 180 days, a year, or even longer?
Pre-orders and build-to-orders are only OK as long as the vendor/importer lives up to their end of the agreement, but really, how often does that happen? And what does the consumer do when the item finally arrives, and it is found not to be up to expected (or promised) quality, or parts are not available?
Bill in FtL
I think most dealers will only refund your deposit if the item is cancelled by the manufacturer. It is not the dealers fault the product delivery from the manufacturer takes too long. I'm sure they want to have the cash flow as much as anyone wants to have their ordered items. If there is no deposit then you are leaving the dealer stuck with trying to get rid of the item. Small dealers can't afford a lot of things happening like this. My LHS now requires a deposit because of this happening to them in the past.
So far I have not had this problem. Although almost nothing ever arrives on it's first scheduled date, it usually does arrive within a few months of the scheduled date. I am in no hurry for any of this stuff, so it really does not bother me when it arrives and it gives me something to look forward to. If it isn't cancelled it will arrive sooner or later and I will get it when it gets here.
I keep a record on an Excel spreadsheet, looking at what trains I have and about current value for them. When I sell a train to get money for another, I also estimate the money I will get before it's predicted to ship from my job, as well as keep jot down what I have on pre-order, and if it has or hasn't shipped yet.
If the item is in red, it means I haven't bought it.
If it's in yellow, it is on order waiting to be shipped.
If it's in green, it has been paid and is on its way.
If you have the money, and you don't want to forget and spend it on something else, put it in a CD in a bank (be sure of the terms so that you can withdraw it without penalty when needed). That way, it is not easily accessible for impulse purchases.
I keep a record of my preorders and estimated ship dates on a spreadsheet to keep track of my preorders. It does help me to plan ahead and keep from spending on impulse train purchases.
Andy
I will not buy anything without the means to pay for it at the time of ordering. That being said though, typically I put a deposit down (not required but I do) and then pay during the course of the pre-order. The nice thing is, if the item comes in early I have the money to pay it off full. So I am not leaving my LHS with the goods any longer than it takes for me to find time to get out there.
My big purchases are winding down as I anticipate a move into a new house this summer. So I only have a few things ordered and have less than a couple hundred bucks to pay when they come in.
So, I am relatively new to the world of pre-ordering trains. I started in the model train hobby when I was about 12 years old. Most of my trains in those days were Christmas presents or as I got a little older, spur of the moment purchases during visits to local hobby shop (Northeast Trains in Peabody, MA.). But I now live in Tennessee and there is not much around for local hobby shops. So most of my train purchases are now made online based on catalogs and posts on this forum, rather than seeing items in a shop. Now with the new build-to-order policies, I have begun pre-ordering some items, both MTH and Lionel, that I don't want to miss out on. But along with this brings one issue I have yet to determine a great solution for. Generally speaking I won't pre-order an item that I don't already have money for. But sometimes the wait for pre-orders can be very long. I have on more than one occasion now forgotten about the pre-order or at least it has slipped my mind long enough that I spend the money allotted for the item on something else. Does this ever happen to anyone else? Any tips or tricks for making sure the money gets set aside and then is not spent on something else. Just curious as to how others handle pre-ordering items since the money is not due until the item is in stock, which can take months to happen.
I understand where you are coming from. In my 45 plus years in the hobby I made my first pre-order before Christmas. I am assuming it will be a while until it comes in, and I'm fine with that. I agree you have to find a way to set the money aside. However, financial problems can come into play. In my case, I am wondering if it was the best idea. My wife will very likely lose her job come summer or at least be cut back and lose her attractive medical plan. My company's plan is very expensive, and considering our health problems, I could see my wife no longer being employable plus we could run our deductible to the max. I have got to keep that money set aside at all costs. I don't think I will pre-order again. It takes too long from a financial planning standpoint.
As most here have said, discipline is the key. Financial discipline is hard regardless of one's endeavor, but model trains are especially challenging because of the missed delivery dates. i've had items not show up, I've had items show up a year after their stated date, etc. Personally, I'm done with pre-orders for the most part; I find that often by the time they do get here, I no longer have that much of an interest in the item and I have already changed things up on my layout. I'm not one to back out of a pre-order unless their are extenuating circumstances, so moving forward I plan to avoid the experience entirely. the exception might be less expensive items - $50.00 for a piece of rolling stock isn't the budget shocker that a $1000 train is It's frustrating sometimes, but lately I'm finding that the things I want aren't even on my radar until I see them in person - case in point, I just picked up an MTH C30-7 at a real sweetheart price. I would have never pre-ordered something like this, but when I saw it "in the flesh" I snagged it.
As far as "tricks" for setting it aside; get it out of your wallet as fast as possible and into someplace that does not provide easy access. If it's in the wallet or in the nightstand you will spend it... or someone else will
My credit union makes it easy to have several sub-accounts. I have a separate account just for train stuff. The credit union allows me to have some money automatically transferred to my "trains" each payday. (I also have direct deposit)
I have several other similar accounts.
Been doing this for many years, its worked well for me.
Start a train fund (some kind of bank account) and deposit to it on a schedule that will coincide with the amount you need and the estimated delivery date.
I "pre-ordered" (that is the same as saying irregardless, not really a word) from my LHS. Payment due on delivery of item to store. It was VERY late but I was not on the hook for anything.
... Odd to say there is relief when a pre-order is delayed!
I think there's a TON of truth to that statement.
I was particularly glad to hear the LCT Lionel Lines "uncatalog'd" standard gauge 400E was delayed a few months! Needed a huge breather after all the stuff from 2014 arrived in November/December!!!
Of course, all these great "clearance" sales in January/February sure haven't helped either!!!
David
I make payments on my pre-orders. That way I know I can't spend it elsewhere, and that the item will be paid for by the time it comes out. If the item gets cancelled I simply get a credit, and use it for something else.
Bill
I only preorder when I know that funds will be available when the item is scheduled. I have had to "re-budget" multiple times for the same item when the delivery gets extended and extended and....
Gilly
I am heartened to see so many here share my view, which BReece put so well: "If you don't have the money NOW, don't fool your self and think you can save FOR IT." Apparently model railroaders are, whatever else they may be, prudent and wise people.
I am not against pushing your finances for a good and necessary cause. We've all done it, I'm sure. But model railroading is supposed to be fun and relaxing, and I would think worrying about paying for something would take the edge off that.
I've always figured you don't even push the envelope on finances when buying toys. A number of years ago I bought an exotic Italian sports car - red, mid-engine, 200 mph - the whole nine yards. An acquaintance looked at it and asked, "If you don't mind, what are the payments on something like this?" I told him I didn't mind, but I had no idea: it had never even occurred to me to ask - or to finance so utterly foolish a toy purchase. The guy is in bankruptcy again, at age 66, for the second time in his life now (that, I understand, is rather hard to do because it takes so long to get out the first time and then get that far in problems again). He is not a model railroader..
Remember what Dickens said. Best to be the guy who only spends nineteen pounds six, not twenty pounds six.
I make payments on my pre-orders. That way I know I can't spend it elsewhere, and that the item will be paid for by the time it comes out. If the item gets cancelled I simply get a credit, and use it for something else.
Bill
I think everyone's methods posted here are good. However, Bill's method is one I never thought of, but would solve the problem I stated last night of my concern of a loss of job. The money would be spent like anything else, and I wouldn't feel guilty being obliged to pay for a $400 locomotive.
Bill, thanks. I will have to contact my hobby shop owner in regards to this.
If you don't have the money NOW, don't fool your self and think you can save FOR IT.
don't buy"toys" NO MATTER HOW EXPENSIVE OR CHEAP, if you don't have the money to spend.
Brent
+1. My folks were raised in the Depression. We never bought anything other than a house on credit. I have followed that philosophy all my life. If you don't have the money in hand don't buy it.
Pete
I make payments on my pre-orders. That way I know I can't spend it elsewhere, and that the item will be paid for by the time it comes out. If the item gets cancelled I simply get a credit, and use it for something else.
Bill
I think everyone's methods posted here are good. However, Bill's method is one I never thought of, but would solve the problem I stated last night of my concern of a loss of job. The money would be spent like anything else, and I wouldn't feel guilty being obliged to pay for a $400 locomotive.
Bill, thanks. I will have to contact my hobby shop owner in regards to this.
Your welcome Mark. I have been doing it that way for quite a while now. It works for me for the same reasons you had mentioned in your post.
Bill
If you don't have the money NOW, don't fool your self and think you can save FOR IT.
don't buy"toys" NO MATTER HOW EXPENSIVE OR CHEAP, if you don't have the money to spend.
Brent
BAD ADVICE
Dicipline, is much better and it will build character. Not too many of us have the cash on hand for everything we want. So we sacrafice and save.
When GGD announced the El Capitan last February I wanted it more than any other O guage item I have ever seen. Slight problem... the 12-car set list for $3,000. I did not have the cash on-hand.
Well these cars should be on-shore in May and I am happy to report that I have saved enough allowance to reward myself.
Where there is a will, there IS a way. If you want it bad enough, you'll find a way.
If the item is in red, it means I haven't bought it.
If it's in yellow, it is on order waiting to be shipped.
If it's in green, it has been paid and is on its way.
Good idea about the colors, I will have to try that with mine. I have a few other spreadsheets that use color, but for some reason I never thought of doing that for my train SS.
I will not buy anything without the means to pay for it at the time of ordering. That being said though, typically I put a deposit down (not required but I do) and then pay during the course of the pre-order. The nice thing is, if the item comes in early I have the money to pay it off full. So I am not leaving my LHS with the goods any longer than it takes for me to find time to get out there.
I also do as you do here, and sometimes pay things off before shipment as well. Helps out my LHS as they are a small shop and it helps their cash flow. I also always pick things up within a day or two of their arrival at my LHS. They give me a little more of a price break for pre-ordering too, so we both come out better.
I have a Lionel ceramic Locomotive "piggy bank"
quote:Dicipline, is much better and it will build character. Not too many of us have the cash on hand for everything we want. So we sacrafice and save.
Not purchasing something you want because don't have the cash is a form of discipline too.
If you don't have the money NOW, don't fool your self and think you can save FOR IT.
don't buy"toys" NO MATTER HOW EXPENSIVE OR CHEAP, if you don't have the money to spend.
Brent
This how I do it. Just remember they're only toys! There's no such thing as an emergency here. One last thing - never ever put it on a credit card. Put it on a debit card.
I make payments on my pre-orders. That way I know I can't spend it elsewhere,
Bill, thanks. I will have to contact my hobby shop owner in regards to this.
Mark,
I am sure they will appreciate this, my LHS does and I do the same thing fairly often with them. They might possibly even give you a little extra discount.
don't buy"toys" NO MATTER HOW EXPENSIVE OR CHEAP, if you don't have the money to spend.
Brent
This how I do it. Just remember they're only toys! There's no such thing as an emergency here. One last thing - never ever put it on a credit card. Put it on a debit card.
Good advice on making train purchases, however we use our credit card for every purchase we make, except Costco (they don't take Visa). We get a 1%-5% rebate on every purchase make with it and also get to use their money for a month to earn it. That's better than bank interest these days. The key is to NOT charge more than you can pay for each month, which we watch pretty carefully. That's where the discipline comes in and the great advice above - 'if you don't have the cash on hand, don't buy the item'.
Purchasing this way, we usually get a check from the credit card company about every six months for between $150-$200. Nice little bonus to put toward another train or other purchase when you are on a fixed income. When used properly, credit cards can be used to your advantage and a pretty good one too. Just don't over do the charges to where you can't pay it off monthly. If you do that you will go in the hole pretty quickly.
Then there is the old cash in the envelope trick when saving for something, no special accounts required there. Like the old Christmas funds or homemade layaway plans.
That's my method. As for "pre-ordering," well, I don't like it and don't do it.
As mentioned many times above, I'll look at my RR-envelope before I order. It is
out of the way. I will feed it with left-over cash at the end of the month, plus any
money I get from the occasional RR show sale.
But, my favorite trick is that I essentially do not order a big-buck item that is not
"in the Envelope", but when it comes in, if possible, I just pay for it out of current
cash flow - leaving the Envelope untouched - ready to slowly grow and to do more financial "backup" in the future.
Compared to many, my life is pretty simple, financially, and I use my CC as a short-term interest-free loan - I treat it like a debit card. I never pay interest. If I don't have the
money, I don't buy it. Anything.
However, I am approaching a crunch where The Envelope might actually take a major hit.
I spent a bit while forgetting the Lionel USRA Heavy Mike (L&N) that is due in March.
Hopefully there will be another delay. Delays can be your friends.
Thanks for all the replies. I appreciate the advice. I've have never pre-ordered an item without having the money for it when I place the order. My issue is more about making sure I still have the money when the item arrives. I keep a monthly budget that covers mortgage, utilities, food, gas, etc. All the necessities, but not the hobbies, savings, etc. After bills are paid, I usually try to put half of the monthly "extra" money into savings and the rest goes to fun stuff. So when I order an item, I do so knowing my account has the money in it for the purchase. But what happens to me sometimes is I forget the money is already allotted for that purchase and months later I will see something I want to buy. I check my account and there is money to make the purchase, so I do. Then the pre-ordered item arrives and I've spent the money originally allotted for it. I always keep enough in savings that paying for the pre-ordered item is not a problem, but its just a pain in the butt because now I need to replace the savings. I like the idea of a separate train account either through the bank or keeping money put aside. I hadn't really thought about the separate account idea before. I guess I also need to keep better track of the pre-orders I have made.
I have to admit it... I'm a huge Dave Ramsey fan. Unless I have the cash, I don't buy it.
I have an account I only use for trains.
I also have a dedicated train account. All money from my part time job goes into this account.
Jeff Davis
I'd just move out of TN, like I did. It will be a win / win on many levels.
Pre-ordering from a established dealer is fine and most feel ok with a deposit of not more than 10%. When their is a small deposit both parties feel obligated to honor it. I do know of some dealers who have not honored a pre-order without a deposit because the item got hot. The upcoming Vision Reefers are sold out everywhere and I can see this happening. What really gets me is a manufacturer who wants you to pay in full for a item and use YOUR money to produce that item. That to me is insane and a recipe for disaster.
There are many fine dealers here besides us and I urge you to support them!