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  Where you can learn to repair your Lionel trains. 

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Short Biography of Jim Weatherford

 I received my first Lionel train set for Christmas in 1953 when I was eight years old. (I’ll let you figure out how old I am now!) It was revered and played with for several years until higher priority things held my interest; like school, cars, etc. Fortunately, my train was kept in the family and I regained possession when I married.

1982 came along and we gave our son my train for his seventh birthday.
I was interested in doing some minor repair on the locomotive and was introduced to some very knowledgeable people through the local train club here in San Diego (the All Gauge Toy Train Association) where I learned about model trains.

 
   I started buying used items that needed repair and found I enjoyed taking things apart to see how they worked
(undoubtedly a personality trait carried over from childhood. My father never did forgive me for disassembling his electric drill.). I thought I should start documenting the repairs and that progressed to writing helpful repair hints for the club’s newsletter. I became friends with the owner of the local hobby shop where I would buy old cabooses and used 0-27 track. I offered to be their repairman; it worked out well for all parties.

Since I was a member of the Toy Train Operating Society, Southern Pacific Division, in Los Angeles, I began writing repair hints for their newsletter, the Daylighter. Soon, I was writing longer and more detailed articles for maintenance and repair of different operating cars, accessories, transformers, locomotives, and tenders.

I met Dave Otth through the TTOS and found we had a mutual interest in the production of videos for the repair of Lionel model trains. A partnership was formed where Dave produced the videos and I repaired trains in the studio. Together, we produced four videos from 1989 to 1991, volumes 1-3 are 60 minutes each and volume 4 is 30 minutes.

My writing and the videos attracted the interest of Dick Christianson, then the editor of the Classic Toy Trains magazine. He offered me the opportunity to take over the Questions and Answers column for the magazine which I did from 1993 to July of 1999.

I’ve been working on the internet since it first became practical in the early 1980’s. It finally evolved to a technology that offered unlimited opportunities for information dissemination and that interested me since I’ve always liked to share my hobby. That led to creating this site for those interested in fixing and maintaining toy trains.

 

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