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As a collector I have had several locos sitting in glass cases never to be run. This may be the fate of my Visionline Big Boy as well. I was just wondering what locos, if any, people have "under glass"? And,do you make your own display cases as I do?

 

Bob C.

Last edited by Robert Coniglio
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Robert,

 

I lucky and  won it in an auction at the first LCCA Red Carpet Event and  Lionel Open House in Concord NC in 2013.The folks at Lionel pulled several pre-production, engineering samples and other goodies from the archives for auction. My wife really had fun and won two items, a pre-production Allis-Chalmers car and an engineering mock-up of the operating brakeman car.  Here are some photos of some of the items that were on the auction table. Mike Reagan was kind enough to provide me an e-mail documenting the provenance of the items.  

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Zilch.  They are toys, and toys are meant to be played with (Ever seen Toy Story?). So I play with all of mine.  And I'll keep playing with them until they die.  And if I can't fix them, then they'll probably get gutted to become dummies to still be run on the layout, or given to the kids to be "pusher" trains for the loop of FasTrack I keep on the living room floor.

I really don't have any "under glass" or covered in one of those plastic covers.  While I do have some trains that go back to before WWII only for display, none of them are in any kind of display case.  Rather, in the train room (basement) I keep a 20" X 20" "box" fan, under the train table, running constantly.  tightly taped to the back of it is a 20" X 20" funace filter that collects dust from the air, generally before it sits on any of my trains.  It seems to work pretty well because I only dust off my display trains about onve a year, if that often.  haven't experienced any damage from falling objects in all the years that the trains are down there, so I've never been too interested in display cases when I've seen them for sale.

 

The fan/filter combo also tends to keep the dust off of the layout, reducing the amount of track cleaning needed.

 

Paul Fischer

The majority of the trains I own are in cases or on display. These range from O Gauge sets or engines that may or may not run, LGB trains I don't have room to run, HO and N Gauge trains that haven't run in years. 

 

The only trains I regularly run are the following in O gauge:

-6 (soon to be 7) engines. 

-About a dozen freight cars

-8 passenger cars (two trains)

-One bump and go trolley. 

 

There are plenty more "non-runners" than the photos show! 

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Some of you guys are real kill joys.  This wasn't a post asking your opinion on collecting versus operating.  Instead it was meant to trigger a response on seeing trains for display, how they are displayed, etc...

 

Not to tell someone how best to handle THEIR trains.  Not a collector, skip the thread.

 

Frankly many here have more trains than you can ever run.  Do you run every train you have every day, week, month how about year?

 

Too many of mine were collection dust in boxes so I now get to display them and show them to guest.  Point out the history, or the difference, or compare the PW to the PWC.

 

All of mine have been run too, but some sit under glass waiting their turn.  G

Lots on shelves but they all run but one G-scale set (see later).  The one "under glass" train is a brass G-scale model of Walt Disney's backyard locomotive, the Lilly Belle.  It was produced for the Carolwood Pacific Railroad society a few years ago.  It's never been run.  The G-scale cars on the shelf are also CPRR replicas of all of the cars in Walt's backyard consist, including the Yellow Caboose.

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
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