quote:
Originally posted by coloradohirailer:
Well, while I was seduced into HO in my early teens by the
discovery of all this product and different prototypes, and stuck
in a toe by buying a Varney flat car kit, I had some of the same problems with sensitive tracking, (no cat problem), and with a move, school, and discovering automobiles, I never finished the layout.
I really think the return of warriors after WWII, into the small houses of the time, led to the rise of HO. The proliferation of
apartments, too, led to the growing population of people interested in model railroading finding something they could fit into their available space. The low cost of some of the equipment at the time was a factor, too. Doesn't seem to that much cheaper in today's ads, than O. About that time came TT gauge, which never caught on. N scale, I think, is an import developed for European available space, so I have sorta wondered that LGB came from there, too.
When I go through the old MR's from the 40's and 50's I do envy
all the prototypes of rolling stock and even structure kits then
available in HO, and never yet found in O... All funny, never the less....
Thanks. It also didn't help that in the "housing boom" after the war that basements were hunted to near-extinction in many parts of the country. In all seriousness, I do envy the selection in H.O., but O gauge was initially a builder's scale. Going back to our roots shouldn't hurt too much.