Hornby 2010 Catalogue Pdf

The new 2011 range is on thier website.

I have to say there getting really cheapskates with whats in the train sets these days.

The Flying Scotsman now only includes 2 coaches, at one time it had 4. And the little starter sets now only have 2 wagon where they used to have 3.

When i was little i remember getting a starter set with about 8 wagons in it.
 
The new 2011 range is on thier website.

I have to say there getting really cheapskates with whats in the train sets these days.

When i was little i remember getting a starter set with about 8 wagons in it.

When I was little - Hornby trains weren't made in China ;) And from what I remember Humbrol Paints / Airfix went belly up a few years back.... so not sure what's going to happen there now that they are owned by Hornby - and not really making too much money.

All thanks to the proliferation of consoles and computers.
 
Last edited:
Cant believe i cannot download a Hornby 2010 Catalogue in Pdf format , gosh most companies you can download for free on their web-site , how tight :mad::mad:

Can you blame them? You have a website for shopping, they have a niche product with many hobbyist/collector customers prepared to pay for a “collectable” book with some nice colour pictures. So why bother with a free pdf.
 
someone bought me railworks 2 on steam for a xmas laugh and ive spent about 1h on it so far speeding about Germany trying to crash at 220 kph, its very hard but actually mildly amusing.
 
I've always wanted a big train set but I just cant bring myself to doing it in case of ridicule.

Get on with it, seriously :D
I've got ~£14,000 worth of model railway stuff, still working on the loft though to actually set it all up properly in.


Wrt to the original question, find yourself a decent independant (NOT chain or everything under the sun) local model shop or model railway club, and there will be someone willing to lend you a paper copy :)

-Leezer-
 
Sounds about right for Hornby, charge a ridiculous £8.50 for a catalogue. Great! Well worth it for freaking sheets of printed paper.

No wonder not many take up the hobby.

As above leezer, it about sums it up! You need not only space but serious money.. being able with crafts can help but even then for most people it is the space factor.

I say Google Trainz and have virtual creation fun without needing the space or mega amount of money.
 
Get on with it, seriously :D
I've got ~£14,000 worth of model railway stuff, still working on the loft though to actually set it all up properly in.


Wrt to the original question, find yourself a decent independant (NOT chain or everything under the sun) local model shop or model railway club, and there will be someone willing to lend you a paper copy :)

-Leezer-

This railway sounds like it needs a thread of its own?
 
Not really, nothing too special TBQH, just the results of acquisitions over the past 9 years :)


Most of my stuff is diesels covering the ~1970-1990 period.
A quick non-exhaustive major locos rundown:
1x Hornby HST
Couple of elderly Triang DMU sets
8x Lima Class 47, various liveries.
2x Heljan Class 47, one BR Blue, one Intercity Swallow
1x Bachmann Class 47, BR two-tone green (Was a mistake TBQH, the chassis is all wrong and the model doesn't look quite right)
1x Joeuf Class 40 (Awful model, but runs round the track)
6x Lima Class 37, various liveries.
1x Bachmann Class 37, BR Blue
2x Triang Class 37
2x Lima Class 31
1x Airfix Class 31 body on a modded Lima chassis
2x Hornby Class 25, BR Blue
3x Lima Class 20, one blue & two green
1x Heljan Class 14, BR Blue
Several (4 I think, would have to check precisely) Class 08 shunters of varying vintage.
1x Hornby Class 04 (I think, again would have to fish out and check)
Also a couple of ex GWR panniers, and a Hornby Duchess which needs a new motor, which I acquired from somewhere.


Add to that ~300 wagons, four 8 coach rakes, the sundy locos I've forgotten (I know there are more, these are just the ones off the top of my head), a large box of track, a box of scenic buildings and other junk, the electronics and all sorts of other bits and bobs and you start to see where the money goes :p
Also remember that most of this stuff has been modded to one degree or another, which wacks up the cost.
Mostly stored over 3 chests of drawers and some boxes at the moment, only fish out any major amount of stuff when somethings actually going on down the model club :)

Just as a random FWIW, a decent showpiece exhibition layout with stock etc. is probably looking at a ~£50,000 value.

-Leezer-
 
Not really, nothing too special TBQH, just the results of acquisitions over the past 9 years :)


Most of my stuff is diesels covering the ~1970-1990 period.
A quick non-exhaustive major locos rundown:
1x Hornby HST
Couple of elderly Triang DMU sets
8x Lima Class 47, various liveries.
2x Heljan Class 47, one BR Blue, one Intercity Swallow
1x Bachmann Class 47, BR two-tone green (Was a mistake TBQH, the chassis is all wrong and the model doesn't look quite right)
1x Joeuf Class 40 (Awful model, but runs round the track)
6x Lima Class 37, various liveries.
1x Bachmann Class 37, BR Blue
2x Triang Class 37
2x Lima Class 31
1x Airfix Class 31 body on a modded Lima chassis
2x Hornby Class 25, BR Blue
3x Lima Class 20, one blue & two green
1x Heljan Class 14, BR Blue
Several (4 I think, would have to check precisely) Class 08 shunters of varying vintage.
1x Hornby Class 04 (I think, again would have to fish out and check)
Also a couple of ex GWR panniers, and a Hornby Duchess which needs a new motor, which I acquired from somewhere.


Add to that ~300 wagons, four 8 coach rakes, the sundy locos I've forgotten (I know there are more, these are just the ones off the top of my head), a large box of track, a box of scenic buildings and other junk, the electronics and all sorts of other bits and bobs and you start to see where the money goes :p
Also remember that most of this stuff has been modded to one degree or another, which wacks up the cost.

Just as a random FWIW, a decent showpiece exhibition layout with stock etc. is probably looking at a ~£50,000 value.

-Leezer-

Now we are talking , Class 47`s my Favorite locomotive , not many around now , most of them been withdrawn from service :D :D
 
Not really, nothing too special TBQH, just the results of acquisitions over the past 9 years :)


Most of my stuff is diesels covering the ~1970-1990 period.
A quick non-exhaustive major locos rundown:
1x Hornby HST
Couple of elderly Triang DMU sets
8x Lima Class 47, various liveries.
2x Heljan Class 47, one BR Blue, one Intercity Swallow
1x Bachmann Class 47, BR two-tone green (Was a mistake TBQH, the chassis is all wrong and the model doesn't look quite right)
1x Joeuf Class 40 (Awful model, but runs round the track)
6x Lima Class 37, various liveries.
1x Bachmann Class 37, BR Blue
2x Triang Class 37
2x Lima Class 31
1x Airfix Class 31 body on a modded Lima chassis
2x Hornby Class 25, BR Blue
3x Lima Class 20, one blue & two green
1x Heljan Class 14, BR Blue
Several (4 I think, would have to check precisely) Class 08 shunters of varying vintage.
1x Hornby Class 04 (I think, again would have to fish out and check)
Also a couple of ex GWR panniers, and a Hornby Duchess which needs a new motor, which I acquired from somewhere.


Add to that ~300 wagons, four 8 coach rakes, the sundy locos I've forgotten (I know there are more, these are just the ones off the top of my head), a large box of track, a box of scenic buildings and other junk, the electronics and all sorts of other bits and bobs and you start to see where the money goes :p
Also remember that most of this stuff has been modded to one degree or another, which wacks up the cost.
Mostly stored over 3 chests of drawers and some boxes at the moment, only fish out any major amount of stuff when somethings actually going on down the model club :)

Just as a random FWIW, a decent showpiece exhibition layout with stock etc. is probably looking at a ~£50,000 value.

-Leezer-

Any photos you could post ? :cool:
 
Back
Top Bottom