This Hobby is Expensive!!

Started by scottmitchell74, March 20, 2026, 02:57:34 PM

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PaulCheffus and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

The Q

Model railways expensive?

I sail..

Admittedly I'm on the cheap end of the market, per year..
Sailing club membership family £180
Broads tax sailing boat £74.22, paid that yesterday..
Insurance £96
Crane club membership ( to lift boat in and out) £75
Average cost of Maintenance £350
Mooring fee should be £320.

But costs are rapidly increasing, before Tango man's current adventures a 2 litre tin of antifouling £187... As the antifouling is made from oil based products.....
Then paint, varnishes, sailcloth, lifejackets, waterproofs are all made from oil...

Richard Taylor

Quote from: The Q on March 22, 2026, 09:56:16 PMThen paint, varnishes, sailcloth, lifejackets, waterproofs are all made from oil...

As, of course, are 90% of model railway items. If the current situation continues I suspect many of our suppliers will be reassessing how many new items it's prudent for them to produce and at what price points.


Greygreaser

Buying a train-set might be seen as expensive versus other toys!

putting hundreds of hours into railway modelling without charging for labour might be seen as unrealistic!

making one-off scale replicas of scenic items by 3D printing might be seen as costly though they would be unique!

acquiring specific rolling stock to match a period could be seen as extravagant but it complements the layout!

Gathering materials 'which might come in useful' only to be seen as Steptoe!

Saving unused quantities of anything you liked the look of, for the layout, then getting more storage!

Buying an expensive item you liked, which didn't quite fit the layout scenario, but was a bargain!

Now ask yourself if you've given a second thought to the cost of doing any/all the above in order to enjoy railway modelling?
A jack of all trades is a master of none, but often times better than a master of one.

JulianO

Many good points already made.
Yes, expensive if you set out to build a large layout from scratch with all new stock.
But generally models last.
In my case I can go right back to the age of 4, which is now 65 years ago, to my first Tri-ang Princess Victoria train set. I built up a large 00 collection which I sold off in 1977 to fund N Gauge, which I have continued with ever since.
So, although it would cost a considerable amount now to replace my current collection with all new models, the cost has been spread over 65 years.
Over the last 25 or so years I have probably spent more on guitar lessons than trains.
And it's easy to spend lots of money on other hobbies. Sailing has already been mentioned, how about Hi-Fi, Classic Cars, travel, Stamp and Coin Collecting, etc.

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