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How long will it be before they show us how to add DCC to a tree?
But at the same time, I think it's unfair to say that the internet has been bad for this or any other hobby.
Quote from: inkaneer on March 27, 2008, 07:19:12 PM...The third is MR and their article on building the Clinchfield in N gauge. With out these three items N gauge would never be what it is today....and that's precisely the point. What MR was and what it is now are two different things. I long for the MR of the 70s and 80s (and even the 90s). Certainly N scale is in a far better place now than just 10 years ago, but alas, we cannot say that about MR which did, as we all acknowledge, once promote the scale so well.Granted, all three entities you mention have received actual "bashing," but with only a few exceptions I think we are expressing legitimate concerns regarding MR's current shortcomings. Not every negative comment is "bashing." If everything but accolades and back-patting constitutes bashing, then the terrorists have already won!Maybe its the other way around. Maybe we aren't what we used to be. I always viewed MR as aimed at the entry level modeler who needs to accumulate the knowledge that we have. But how many times do we want to read how to install flextrack, how to ballast or how to handlay a turnout? How many scenery articles do you want? Every now and then some new technique comes along and we all receive the benefit. But most things stay pretty much the same. We have and need MR to nurture those entry level people. What we need though is something devoted to the more advanced modeler, those who have more or less mastered the basics. Hundman, I think, attempted this but got bogged down doing trees probably because he was forced to rely on his own input when contributors did not contribute sufficiently to maintain the magazine.
...The third is MR and their article on building the Clinchfield in N gauge. With out these three items N gauge would never be what it is today.
Look at the MR project layout feature. Adding a pickup truck and a bulldozer to a dirt lot. If this had been the April issue, I'd have figured that was the joke.
Next month: "Learn How Cody Removes Products From Packaging."
I am so $#@$#@# sick and tired of the "uber- dorks" at Kalmbach I could switch to bead threading or another non Kalmbach hobby.
But... Okay, look at that engine terminal layout feature. The photographs are pretty dark and somewhat out-of-focus. But I think to myself "well, at least he did a nice job ballasting." No, he didn't. The layout was built by Custom Model Railroads.