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Life-Like

Life Like N scale GP20 UP road 476 Union Pacific

Life Like N scale GP20 UP road 476 Union Pacific

$45.00 3h 30m
Life Like N scale GP20 UP road 493 Union Pacific

Life Like N scale GP20 UP road 493 Union Pacific

$45.00 3h 31m
Life-Like N Scale GP 38 LOCO D & H

Life-Like N Scale GP 38 LOCO D & H

$25.00 3h 56m
LifeLike,  N-scale,  GP18 Hi-Nose Diesel Loco,  N7W #920

LifeLike, N-scale, GP18 Hi-Nose Diesel Loco, N7W #920

- $12.99 4h 23m
LifeLike,  N-scale,  GP18 Hi-Nose Diesel Loco,  N7W #920

LifeLike, N-scale, GP18 Hi-Nose Diesel Loco, N7W #920

- $12.99 4h 24m
Life-Like N Scale ALCO #600,  #600, 601

Life-Like N Scale ALCO #600, #600, 601

$80.00 4h 27m
Life-Like set N Scale ALCO PB #4301,  #4300,  #4201 NYC

Life-Like set N Scale ALCO PB #4301, #4300, #4201 NYC

$80.00 4h 29m
Set of Life-Like N Scale ALCO PA UNDEC 7067,  7068,  7068

Set of Life-Like N Scale ALCO PA UNDEC 7067, 7068, 7068

$80.00 4h 31m
Life-Like N Scale Set of ALCO PB NYC #4301, #4300, #4200

Life-Like N Scale Set of ALCO PB NYC #4301, #4300, #4200

$80.00 4h 38m
Life-Like N-Scale New York Central RS2 Part # 75110

Life-Like N-Scale New York Central RS2 Part # 75110

$74.95 5h 39m
LIFE-LIKE VILLAGE CHURCH - MOLDED IN 6 COLORS - N-GAUGE

LIFE-LIKE VILLAGE CHURCH - MOLDED IN 6 COLORS - N-GAUGE

$4.50 6h 23m
LIFE-LIKE DELUXE STATION EASY TO ASSEMBLE KIT- N GAUGE

LIFE-LIKE DELUXE STATION EASY TO ASSEMBLE KIT- N GAUGE

$7.50 6h 37m
Engine Louisville & Nashville Locomotive  No Reserve

Engine Louisville & Nashville Locomotive No Reserve

4 $7.19 6h 38m
Engine NORFOLK AND WESTERN Locomotive  No Reserve

Engine NORFOLK AND WESTERN Locomotive No Reserve

4 $20.00 6h 41m
Engine BOSTON AND MAINE Locomotive  No Reserve

Engine BOSTON AND MAINE Locomotive No Reserve

14 $10.52 6h 51m
Fa1 & Fb1 POWERED  Locomotive  pair in Union Pacific

Fa1 & Fb1 POWERED Locomotive pair in Union Pacific

$129.95 7h 38m
LifeLike F7 powered  Locomotive  Union Pacific # 1400

LifeLike F7 powered Locomotive Union Pacific # 1400

$59.95 7h 38m
LifeLike GP 18  Locomotive  Northern Pacific # 378

LifeLike GP 18 Locomotive Northern Pacific # 378

$59.95 7h 39m
LifeLike GP 38  Locomotive  Burlington Northern  # 2098

LifeLike GP 38 Locomotive Burlington Northern # 2098

$59.95 7h 40m
N Scale Life-Like Item 7044 Southern Pacific E7A 6003

N Scale Life-Like Item 7044 Southern Pacific E7A 6003

5 $5.50 8h 26m
N Scale Life-Like Item# 7045 Southern Pacific E7B 5900

N Scale Life-Like Item# 7045 Southern Pacific E7B 5900

2 $2.92 8h 33m
N Scale Life-Like Item# 7046 Southern Pacific E7B 5903

N Scale Life-Like Item# 7046 Southern Pacific E7B 5903

1 $0.99 8h 37m
N Scale Life-Like Item# 7063 Southern Pacific PA 6005

N Scale Life-Like Item# 7063 Southern Pacific PA 6005

1 $0.99 8h 41m

Train news

  • TRAINS HISTORY

    Prehistory There have been models and toys of trains for as long as there have been real railways. Indeed some early models of locomotives were made first as sales promotional tools for the early railways, even if they later might have become playthings. During the Victorian period toy and model trains and locomotives fell into a number of categories there were the live steam engines, expensive and only for the wealthy, there were pull along trains in all shapes, sizes and materials, penny toys in lead and tin and latterly clockwork engines. The steam and clockwork engines might be intended to run on the floor, or a simple track assembled by the user, but there was no real sense of system about these trains. Most of these toys were made in Germany. Britain and France tended only to make the better class of steam engine. There was an indigenous US industry, with considerable use of cast iron rather than tinplate. The Real Beginning The defining event in toy train history was the launch by Marklin in 1891 of the first complete system of trains. While the first models were derived from earlier products, what Marklin introduced was a series of standard track gauges, ready to use track sections for those gauges, and a range of locomotives, rolling stock and accessories to match. Now you could have an initial train set, but continually add and expand till your miniature railroad empire was complete - which it never was.

     

    This was of course good for the toy manufacturer, indeed this is possibly the first example of the expanding range, with items at various price points Christmas, birthdays, parents and relations and pocket money sized, which is one of the basic features of most successful toys since.

     

    These first Marklin models were made in three gauges called 1, 2 and 3, logically enough. Painted and soldered tinplate was the main material, and clockwork the driving power. And they were crude. But the range was clearly a great success. So Marklin expanded and improved its range, after a few years adding a fourth, small gauge O. The range of accessories was greatly expanded. Other German toy makers introduced competitive products, most importantly Bing then probably Germanys, and hence the worlds, largest toy maker. Despite the odd divergence these makers generally adopted the same standards as to gauge as Marklin, while developing new production techniques, in particular the use of lithographed printed tinplate, allowing much cheaper and more colorful items, at the expense of some robustness.

     

    By the start of the 20th century other methods of propulsion were being applied too, in that live steam and electric powered models had taken to the toy train rails, though clockwork was still the prime mover. More importantly the first ranges of Marklin and Bing and others were growing and improving each year, and as with the rest of the German toy trade, was strongly export oriented, thus spreading toy trains world wide. The main markets were Britain, France and their empires and the US. Britain had no indigenous toy maker to compete with, nor really had France, but there was home based competition in America. Britain however had something else - model railways

     

    Model Railways

    The hobby of model railways can really be said to have been founded in the U.K. at the start of the Edwardian period. There were already active amateur model engineers, building live steam locomotives and with a keen interest in the real railways. One of the embryo suppliers to this group was a young man, W J Bassett Lowke. He saw the potential of using the German toy trains, particularly the track and mechanisms, with bodies rather more accurate as to prototype and selling not as a toy to children but rather to adult enthusiasts. And he used the services of another young man, Henry Greenly, as a designer of these models. Greenly, among other things, established a system of scales using the Marklin  gauges as the starting point. He also founded the first periodical devoted to model railways. And thus from the beginning the hobby of model railways was in part a toy, and in part the effort of amateur and professional model makers coexisting, sometimes comfortably and sometimes not.

    Bassett Lowke tended to use the services of Bing and Carrette for its own models, but of course once the idea of British outline models was established the German makers started to produce models for sale by other importers, for example Marklin for the Gamages store in London.