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My vote is a NO on dimming lights. Prototypical headlights are FAR brighter than any model I've seen so far and most models are way too dull as it is.Russ
When I was young, we lived right next to an overpass over the boston line. At night, you could see the headlights light up the bridge while the train was at least 1/4 mile away. Nothing in N scale even comes close. Thats not the whole story though. Our engines have no reflectors, so the headlights are very diffuse. The models may be brighter than 1/160th of a real headlight overall, but not within the prototype's focal zone. It would be awsome if we could get headlight inserts that were able to focus the light straght ahead like the prototype.
I thought you weren't supposed to reuse condoms.
If you think that is annoying go over to the TRAINBOARD forum and read the first post on the topic entitled Hiawatha packaging opinion. Here while Pennsy people are literally begging for a K4 or an M1 and this guy gets a whole freakin passenger train and what does he complain about? THE BOX! He complains about the freakin box it came in!!! Is it April or did my calendar stop?Here is the URL:http://www.trainboard.com/grapevine/showthread.php?t=130033
I Hope that everyone remembers that during the transition era trains steam and diesel ran with their headlights off during the day ,passing trains flashed them at each other and Mars/Gyralights were turned on and used as needed during daylight hours. By the late 60's I believe lights were left on all the time,don't know when ditchlights on Canadian Diesels first came into use ,but I would bet during the headlight off era,some Canadian trains might have run with ditch lights lighted on F Units,but headlight out in day time. Can anyone confirm this. My Canadian train rides were in 1968/69,the all lights on in daytime era. Nate Goodman (Nato).
17. The headlight must be displayed to the front of every train by day and by night. It must be extinguished when a train turns out to meet another and has stopped clear of the main track, or is standing to meet trains at the end of two or more tracks, or at junctions with switches properly lined for the approaching train. It should be left extinguished until the rear of the expected train has passed.
17D. On engines so equipped, oscillating white headlight must be displayed to the front by day and by night. It must be extinguished when the headlight is dimmed or extinguished.
Who the F buys a model train to keep it in a box?
"...similar to rule about oscillating Mars or Gyra lights..."I remember roughly 25 years ago Southern Pacific units were regularly running through Asheville and Salisbury and had become fairly rutine until one night a freight had a brace of Espee units on it behind a NS engine with the last one having its read light flashing on the end facing the rear. Will never forget how neat it was to see this, especially since I always was under the impression that it usually wasn't lit except during an emergency application, but there it was, flashing red light on, around and over the adjacent boxcar end... a really bright light on a moonless night!!!
Inadvertanly me as well. Only beacuse I'm still in college; and don't have the space for an HO scale layout.
But the stuff I've collected is all with the _intention_ of use on a layout someday, not to gawk at how pretty the box is.