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[quote author=Rich_S link=topic=32898.msg375280#msg375280 date=1400271084In my opinion, model railroading is all about illusion and compromise. If it looks like a house and the doors and windows are not horribly over sized, then it's good. When it comes right down to it, you can critique anything in model railroading and find fault. An example; I have yet to find any prototype locomotive that has a giant electric motor in the center of the carbody, with that motor connected to gear towers via drive shafts. Knuckle couplers don't split in the middle on the prototype and when you push them to one side, they stay in that position, i.e. there is not a centering spring in prototype coupler boxes. We all approach the hobby differently, I enjoy the operation aspect of the hobby, others enjoy creating realistic scenes. While some folks might think that FSM makes the greatest structure kits in the world, I would never pay that kind of money for something that for me is just scenery. Again just my two cents worth and your mileage may vary. Well said.Mark in Oregon
I have to disagree with your quoted statement: "...model railroading is all about illusion and compromise." IMO model railroading is more about recreation of reality in miniature. Illusion and compromise are just some of the realities we face as we attempt to accomplish the task. Unlike the quote: "...something that for me is just scenery," I look at scenery as an equally important aspect of what I'm doing in miniature. Every element helps tie it together in a believable environment for my trains to do their thing. And to others, if plopping a prebuilt structure down does it for you, then you have accomplished this task in your little world. Some of us are not that easily convinced.I realize that some of you are content to run trains and the rest is just "fluff" but some of us see model railroading as an art form. Some like running bright, cheerfully colored, 200MPH trains, some model their memories of childhood or idealistic worlds. There is nothing wrong with havn' it your way--we all have different pursuits. But I like think that (as a forum), we are all striving to better our modeling skills by learning from one another and bouncing ideas off each other in order to do so.
I have to disagree with your quoted statement: "...model railroading is all about illusion and compromise." I realize that some of you are content to run trains and the rest is just "fluff" but some of us see model railroading as an art form. Some like running bright, cheerfully colored, 200MPH trains, some model their memories of childhood or idealistic worlds. There is nothing wrong with havn' it your way--we all have different pursuits. But I like think that (as a forum), we are all striving to better our modeling skills by learning from one another and bouncing ideas off each other in order to do so.
I have to disagree with your quoted statement: "...model railroading is all about illusion and compromise." IMO model railroading is more about recreation of reality in miniature. Illusion and compromise are just some of the realities we face as we attempt to accomplish the task. Unlike the quote: "...something that for me is just scenery," I look at scenery as an equally important aspect of what I'm doing in miniature. Every element helps tie it together in a believable environment for my trains to do their thing.
You're disagreeing with me but at the same time you're agreeing with me?
I believe Frank Ellison stated best, the layout is the stage, the trains are the actors and the timetable is the plot.
Agreed, I'm not too impressed with the commercial/industrial buildings, but IMHO the the gas station, cottage and the subject of this thread, the second empire-ish Victorian make very good fodder for respectable structures. There is a strikingly similar Victorian here in Etiwanda, Ca., built around 1884 and recently restored, near the Santa Fe mainline into Los Angeles. Take off the flower pots and some of the curlicues, fix the misaligned dormers, and you have a very well proportioned modest house appropriate for many locations all over the country. Calling it an embarrassment seems a bit strong...Otto K.
I am totally with Otto on this one. I don't see why people think this thing is so wretched. The bright colors, and the cluttery appearance are not very different at all from many Victorian houses I've seen. The flower boxes and flower pots look too fake to save. But these are minor things that one can take off if you don't like them. A little weathering to tone down the overall bright "clean-ness" (which you would do to any model), and it looks perfectly acceptable.
Apparently Rich, you missed my point entirely. Maybe I should have said, I disagree with the notion that model railroading is all about illusion and compromise. Then you might have spared us the lengthy explanation of what you thought I didn't understand. I disagree that model railroading is all about illusion and compromise but (I think I stated that) illusion and compromise are some of the realities we face in our task to recreate reality in miniature--however we go about it. Whether it's just running trains and not giving a hoot about the scenery or spending inordinate amounts of time detailing everything in sight--there is no right or wrong in your basement or garage (or office in my case). But as manufacturers, you have to realize (and I'm thinking that most of us on the forum agree) that we strive to be as accurate and believable as humanly possible with the products we expect you guys to buy from us. If some of us think that one of our fellow manufacturers is compromising too much, chances are we not going to keep quiet--after all isn't that what a forum is all about?
OK, you're going to split hairs over two words. One question for you, why don't your "N" scale vehicles have interiors? In your zest to recreate reality in miniature, I'd think this would be important. I'm done with this silly argument.