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F7A
- charles
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- garthah
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Is the F7A Marklin is a good buy?
That depends what you are looking for.
If you are a Marklin collector then yes provided the price is in range
If you just wont something to run and are not too particular then maybe yes based on whether the price is a steal or not
If you want something North American that has close to scale trucks and pulls lots of cars and has Micro Trains couplers then probably NO
If all you have are Marklin cars and couplers then probably Yes
cheerz Garth
cheerz Garth
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- TailUK
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- charles
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For the moment I'm looking for a good runnerB) . I have some marklin steam loco and I want to be in the 1950 era. Is this a good choice?
Thank you
Charles
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- Socalz44
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- TailUK
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P.S. The 2 Marklin F7s I have run pretty good if a little nosily. They also run well coupled together without having to be connected electrically, this provides a lot more pulling power.
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- charles
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Do micro-train still built F7a? I look at the micro-train line and only saw the F7B unit.
thank you
Charles
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- Socalz44
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- David K. Smith
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- proud2bnokie
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Basically about the only thing Märklin got right is that it has four axles...
Amen! Preach it brother.
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- silentargus
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As far as realism goes... the Marklin unit doesn't look overly toylike, as long as the pilot is installed. It shouldn't have been called an F7, but it gets the point of "streamlined diesel locomotive" across well enough. I can't honestly say I understand why a made-up locomotive should be any more difficult to believe than a made-up railroad... but my other hobby is writing fiction, so that might just be me.
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- David K. Smith
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Your point about fiction and making up railroads is an excellent one. But it brings to mind this situation: even fiction (except for some science fiction and fantasy) will be grounded in some aspects of the real world—a Los Angles or New York setting, for instance; or, even if it's a non-existent little coastal town, there are still going to be other connections to reality, such as a historical setting for period fiction. The thing is, when something in a work of fiction does not ring true, such as mangled historical details or locales that aren't right, the story quickly loses credibility. The best fiction is usually based on some factual aspect of the real world, and the more accurate the details, the more credible the story will be.I can't honestly say I understand why a made-up locomotive should be any more difficult to believe than a made-up railroad... but my other hobby is writing fiction, so that might just be me.
This is the parallel I draw with model railroading: even a made-up railroad needs to be populated by reality-based rolling stock, buildings and so forth, or it loses credibility. (Unless the builder was intending it to be pure fantasy—in which case the literary equivalent of their creation is fantasy, not fiction.) And here's where the Märklin F7 just falls apart. If they had done a little more homework, they may have been able to pull off an FP7 (which is longer). Or perhaps they should have gone for an E8. But they bastardized an F7 to fit their own chassis design, and the result is like really bad fiction.
I know it doesn't bother a lot of folks, which is fine, and it's probably a good thing since it helps support the hobby. I'm just sorry to see a wasted opportunity on Märklin's part, especially considering the good effort they put into many of their other products.
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- silentargus
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Just to be clear, I do agree that they really could have done better in just about every way. It's only a model of one of the most ubiquitous diesels ever made, after all. Even when Marklin first started coming out with their American line, I bet there were plenty of reference materials to work off of. Again, it shouldn't have been called an F7- but it wouldn't necessarily stick out like a sore thumb in the right setting. Not to me, anyway. I am a bit of a collector, though; I've made train-related purchases in the past that had far less connection to reality than anything that's ever come out in Z. When I finally get around to building that layout, I do plan to make it as realistic as I can, but I'll still run all my little oddballs on it from time to time.
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- David K. Smith
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Actually, you've already explained what makes it bad fiction:It's not necessarily bad fiction- just a difference in taste...
silentargus wrote:
Märklin is doing a disservice to the people who don't know what an F7 really looks like. IMO, it really is closer to a toy than a model, unlike the Micro-Trains GP9, GP35, etc. I may bitch and moan about them being too "fat," but they're infinitely closer to the real deal than most of Märklin's American stuff, and I'd be the last to accuse Micro-Trains of making toys. It's along the same lines as the manufacturers who have people convinced this toy is a real bridge:It shouldn't have been called an F7...
Again, all IMO.
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- andyjbj
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- Kelley
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This time the timing of the little voice coincided with money in my pocket, so I lucked out. Good Luck with your hunt.
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- Mattias
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Mattias
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