It is interesting to see, having been on this forum for a year or two, the influx of new folks every holiday season.
Traditionally, new people get into model railroading around the holidays–the “model train as Christmas present” tradition is still around, and MR reflects this by having “new to the hobby” features in winter months.
I’m no exception–I got into the hobby as a kid, gave it up in college, and then rediscovered it when I borrowed one of my dad’s old model-railroad books on a whim when visiting for the holidays a couple of years ago. I discovered this forum a while later.
Some of these new folks, it seems, are new to the hobby as a whole: either adults who got a trainset for their kids or discovered the hobby as an adult, or kids who got a trainset for Christmas. In either case it behooves us to show a little tolerance for people’s lack of knowledge and resulting curiosity. I’ve been online since the early nineties, when the online community was a much wilder and woolier place, and sometimes have to resist the urge to flame people–I have to remind myself that this isn’t the Old West of USENET, and, frankly, the MR forum is a lot nicer place to post than an old-fashioned board partially because the moderators encourage civility, and, frankly, model railroaders tend to be pretty good sorts.
Some, like me, are folks returning to the hobby after an absence of years or decades. They, like I was, may be amazed or confused by the big changes that have occurred in the hobby: I was pretty mind-boggled by DCC, laser-cut kits, home-laser-printed decals, and the much wider selection of high-quality RTR equipment available since my teens.
And some are folks who are old-hand model railroaders who may have got a computer or set-top box or other means of getting online for Christmas. They know the hobby, but might not know the Internet.
To those of you who are new: Please don’t take offense if some of us bombard you with knowledge, tell yo