Anonymous
Post 04/20/2018 09:01     Subject: Re:I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Anonymous wrote:I sunk so much $$ into the whole Thomas train world--I just want to gouge my eyes out with those trains, honestly.

+100. I am 100% certain that I spent as much as $1,000. Things like the Tidmouth (sp?) shed and additional track... I bought bridges and accessories from specialty online toy stores... I kept telling myself that its something he can pass down to his kids - but even still its just too much! Huge first time parent mistake... Just like buying one of the those $300 ride in cars with the electric battery
Anonymous
Post 04/20/2018 06:05     Subject: I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Oops...the Play Trains website is play-trains.com...a wealth of toy train information moderated by a mom...
Anonymous
Post 04/20/2018 02:48     Subject: I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Long-running string...but still incomplete. Thomas trains have been produced by many manufacturers over the years and there are a lot of variations and differences.

The wooden trains with slightly curved round magnet couplers that run on wooden tracks are the most straight-forward, common, and popular. The diecast metal trains with smaller rounded-square magnet couplers are generally a little less expensive and have the advantage, for little kids, of connecting at either end whereas the flat round magnets have to connect "north-to-south".

The wooden track from most manufacturers is very similar but always slightly different (to avoid patent infringement issues). Most wooden trains will work in a satisfactory way on most wooden track.

The older Thomas diecast metal trains from the "Take Along" series fit wooden tracks but newer "Take n Play" diecast trains are smaller and do not fit wooden tracks at all and have shown up with several different types of plastic track over the decades,

For just one year (2004) Gullane/Learning Curve produced "Interactive Learning" trains with metal engines and plastic cars that use the rounded-square magnet couplers and run on standard wooden tracks or heavy plastic resin tracks that exactly match official Thomas wooden tracks. The special engines and some freight cars have bottom magnets that trigger the special "Interactive Learning" destinations like freight depot, crane, barrel loader, water tower, etc. and announce greetings and instructions when a train arrives. They are pretty cotton pickin' cute...but hard to find on eBay or Craig's List these days.

Many years ago Tomy Toys in Japan began producing "Pla-Rail" blue track motorized plastic trains and track with the same dimensions as Thomas products but apart from the Thomas train franchise. Like Japanese cars they tended to be cheap, well made and reliable with a lot of features. Eventually Tomy acquired rights to produce Thomas "Pla-Rail" trains and, more recently, "Track Master" plastic track with more realistic colors and shapes, as part of the Thomas franchise. Adapters are available, if you hunt around on eBay, that allow connections between virtually all types of tracks. The Tomy trains all have springy plastic hook couplers that are not suitable for little kids...they're actually sort of annoying for some adults...but trains do not come apart on hills or curves.

This is still not a complete description or explanation, and frustration will continue...but it's probably worth dealing with the annoyance and minimizing the cost by shopping eBay, thrift stores, and garage sales...because kids love toy trains,

One last thing...visit playtrains.com for practical help and ideas. One more last thing...visit wtrak.org for some amazing examples of how cool little wooden toy trains can be.
Anonymous
Post 09/03/2017 16:27     Subject: I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Personally, I don't think all the wooden tracks are compatible. Yes, you can force them together but the bridges and what not can be a fraction of an inch off. This doesn't sound like a big deal to the casual observer, but when a train is trying to negotiate a dramatic curve near an incline or something, it just doesn't work .
I have pieces from all the above and generic pieces from Amazon.
Anonymous
Post 09/03/2017 15:36     Subject: I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

I am very confused. I am trying to find out if Thomas Trackmaster remote controlled trains will work on the Imaginarium Train table. Does anyone know.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2016 21:52     Subject: I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Thomas is 30% off at Barnes & Noble. Extra 10% off if a member and I could use my 40% off 1 item coupon!
Anonymous
Post 08/22/2016 13:08     Subject: I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Anonymous wrote:are the Thomas wooden tracks and brio compatable


If they are all wooden, yes.

We've had some luck at thrift stores and with eBay for finding tracks & trains. Kid number 2 now loves them (& kid 1 still likes them too), so we've gotten 5+ years of play out of them.
Anonymous
Post 08/22/2016 09:58     Subject: Re:I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Great thread, handy advice. Thanks!
Anonymous
Post 06/07/2016 09:41     Subject: Re:I"m so confused: Thomas the train and incompatability

Anonymous wrote:I sunk so much $$ into the whole Thomas train world--I just want to gouge my eyes out with those trains, honestly.


True, but I loved the fact that for three solid years there was never any question as to what DS wanted for birthday, Christmas etc.