User talk:808AntW

Narrow gauge railroads
I see you like narrow gauge railroads. I like narrow gauge railroads, too. It's always cool when a new person with an interest in trains shows up here. Anyway, I'm talking to you because of some edits you did to the 3 ft gauge railroads in the United States article, specifically in the Hawaii section. Do you have any references for all of those defunct Hawaii railroads you added? I have done the vast majority of edits on this article since it was created and at minimum I have each railroad linked to an article mentioning it, which more-or-less confirms that the line actually existed and I didn't just make it up. Not that I think you made up all of the ones you added, but if someone else comes along without any knowledge about trains and sees all of that unlinked and unreferenced stuff, they may delete all of that stuff without warning per standard anal-retentive Wikipedia rules. So, when you have a moment, please add references to all of that unlinked stuff or link them to articles mentioning them, if there are any. US railroad-related articles in general on Wikipedia are plagued by unreferenced content, and I'm trying to change that.  Jackdude 101  ( Talk ) 18:00, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

User page
Unrelated to the topic above, you should create a user page for yourself. Some established users will deny this, but there seems to be a negative bias overall to users with "red text" usernames (people without user pages), and their edits are scrutinized more heavily. To put it into perspective, having a "red text" username here is the equivalent of showing up at a fancy restaurant in shorts and a t-shirt. When you create a user page, the text of your username will go from red to blue, and then you will not have that problem. You don't even need to add a lot of content when creating your user page; you can just do what I did and include one quote and that's it. All that matters is getting that all-important blue text for your username.  Jackdude 101  ( Talk ) 19:00, 20 July 2016 (UTC)