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By the NumbersI'll take this break in the action (...wow!...) to post refreshed stats:Responses: 68No direct experience of modeling period: 62%Transition (1945-1959): 37%Decline (1960-1980): 34%Influenced by childhood memories: 18%Modern: 16%Average/Median Age: 52/54Average/Median Era: 1970/1965Notes:For the several of you expressing multiple eras, I took the middle weighted by your indicated strongest preference.For the few who might not know the difference between "average" and "median", "average" is the total divided by the number of entries, kinda "just a number". Take two 80-year-olds and a 20-year-old as a group, you get an average age of 60, which means nothing, there are no 60-year-olds in the cohort. Median is the middle of the pack - half are above, half are below. That the median birth year and median era are both 1965 blows my mind.Back to "conventional wisdom"... first, the reliving childhood theory is mostly bunk. <20% is not significant. And then there's modern, which is now down to just 1/6 of the sample. So, explain to me why so many manufacturers are pursuing this market.The best observation so far came from my wife Robyn today, over lunch. Telling her about the survey, without prompting she said, "Well, duh, they're reliving their childhood experiences." At that point I laughed and said, "Not so fast!", explaining the responses didn't support this conclusion. After some back-and-forth, she offered, "OK, they are modeling periods when railroads were interesting, with lots of variety." Bingo.
Regarding the "median" and "mean" (average) values of the modeling periods of interest: I don't think those have any significance or useful meaning.
You're also right about partitioning the responses into modeling eras. There is lots of discussion among European modelers, especially Germans, trying to establish "epochs" roughly corresponding to the periods you suggest. Aside from the Teutonic tendency to quantize along strict lines, their job is easy because the railroads were government-run for most of their existence, where the entry and exit of administrations were opportunities to overhaul things.
, I wonder if the sampling is too small or TRW is just not a reliable sampling for the model railroading market in general,DFF
I wonder if some of the guys doing the trend analysis are insurance actuaries.
I would honestly like to know what is driving the mostly new companies to produce "modern".
I wonder if the sampling is too small or TRW is just not a reliable sampling...
Does Mike break out the market into segments....serious modelers...like TRW people; Ntrak people who will make purchases to run long trains (Kato passenger car sets of a dozen or more, ... u.s.w.
Likely due to the tendency of modelers to model what they see--not a universal given, but a strong tendency nonetheless, especially for younger modelers. I also see the distinct possibility that there probably won't be much in the way of new steam-era locos or rolling stock on the horizon, and at some point soon may stop altogether.
Nope. Just a retired technology middle manager who made a career out of noticing trends and fabricating data to match the observations.