Supertrain

Super Stuff

Home
Broadcast History
Episode Guide
Express To Terror
And A Cup Of Kindness, Too
The Queen And The Improbable Knight
Hail To The Chief
Superstar
Pirouette
A Very Formal Heist
The Green Girl
Where Have You Been Billy Boy
Unproduced Episodes
Lost Episodes
Crew
Passengers
Creative Team
Consist
Route Map
Building Supertrain
Models
Grand Central Set
In Action
NBC in 1979
Fred Silverman
Side Tracked
De-Railed
Home Video
TV Guide Review
NBC Publicity
Publicity Stills Collection
Simulator
Super Stuff
About The Author
Sources and Links

Supertrain Merchandise

     Though heavily promoted, there is not a great deal of known "Supertrain" tie-in merchandise.  There were no fast food kids' meals toys and no toy train sets for the series.  What follows is the grand total of many years of enjoying and collecting "Supertrain" items. 

Supertrain Affiliate Poster
     NBC supplied its affiliates with promotional materials for the networks series.  One such item is the above seen poster.  They come in various sizes, though most are in the neighborhood of a typical movie poster's 27"x41" dimensions, these posters generally would be found in places like the lobby of an affiliates offices/studios and were not known to have been made available to the public in general.
Supertrain T-Shirt
     Never saw this in stores and don't have much information regarding the Supertrain T-Shirt.  May have been promotional and could have even been a production crew item, it is not known for certain.  The shirt is a typical cotton white t-shirt with the Supertrain" design on  the front only.

Supertrain Itself!
     Found in an early 1980s edition of Model Railroader magazine is a half page ad offering the smaller of the two Supertrain models.  For a stated $25,000 AHM (Associated Hobby Manufacturers) was listing a full set of Supertrain that was powered and included its own set of track.  AHM was a company that offered model trains in a variety of scales from N-gauge and HO-gauge and on up to O-gauge.  The AHM company entered the toy train/hobby market in the 1960s and disappears in the late 1980s.
     How's that for the ultimate train set to put under one's Christmas tree!  Attempts to track down the buyer, if there was one, have failed over the years and the status of this model is not known today.  Who knows, just over the hedge in somebody's backyard may be one of NBC's most costly stars ever enjoying her retirement!