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Originally Posted by Norton:

Rusty is thinking of the 2055 Santa Fe type. The 2056 is a 2046 without magnetraction.

 

http://www.postwarlionel.com/c...in/postwar?ITEM=2056

 

http://www.postwarlionel.com/c...in/postwar?ITEM=2046

 

Interesting, even PostwarLionel has it wrong. The 2056 is not a Santa Fe type.

 

Pete

Ooops, got my 5's and 6's mixed up.  I was thinking of the 2065.

 

Sorry.

 

Rusty

All six Santa Fe 4-6-4's were remarkable locomotives. They were built by Baldwin Locomotive Works in Philadelphia in 1937 (Nos. 3460-3465). The first was Santa Fe's first and only streamlined steam locomotive. She was nicknamed "Mae West" because of her curvy figure and also the "Blue Goose." All six had 310 lb. boiler presssure and 84" drivers (just 4" shorter than the diameter of their boilers), and force feed lubrication. They resembled condensed 4-8-4's rather than elongated 4-6-2's.

 

To accommodate 90-foot turntables, their tenders were tall and rectangular. They contained 20,000 gallons of water and 7,000 gallons of fuel oil. They were designed for service on moderate grades of the Eastern Lines between Chicago and La Junta, Colorado.

 

On December 12, 1937, No. 3461 completed a test run that is believed to be the longest ever by a steam locomotive in regular service. She arrived in Dearborn Street Chicago, with mail and express train No. 8, after a run of 2,227.3 miles from Los Angeles, California. This train consisted of a dynamometer car and 10 to 12 steel cars, a total trailing load of 737 to 939 tons. This run usually required four locomotives plus helpers.

 

No attempt was made for a speed record. The elapsed time was 53 hours, 40 minutes. About 4 hours 35 minutes were spent at stations en route, loading and unloading mail and express and cutting cars in and out . The running time was 49 hours, 5 minutes at an average speed of 45.4 mph. The highest speed was 90 mph.

 

They had Worthington feedwater heaters rather than Elesco with its prominent tank across the top of the smokebox front. The 685 in 1953 was an accurate model. Lionel added a smokebox front with an Elesco tank in 1954, probably to distinguish the 665/2065 from New York Central Hudsons 646/2046.

 

Lionel added an angular 6026W tender with a coal pile instead of a fuel tank. Some plain, boxy prewar (pre-World War II) tenders resembled a 3460 tender, but Lionel probably wanted a detailed tender that looked different from the streamlined Pennsylvania Railroad tender behind the NYC Hudsons and later steam turbines.

 

Lionel 685/665/646 small Hudsons require frequent oiling, especially a drop or two on  armature shafts, gear hubs and axles. When they "run dry" of lubricant they can slow down and screech. But they are easily taken apart and serviced. The armature needs an occasional cleaning, too. If brushes wear down or the brush springs get weak, replacing them will improve operation.

Originally Posted by EIS:
Originally Posted by Bobbie21921:

okay rusty Besides the looks

Are these Basically Identical and do they use the same tenders

Interesting comment "Besides the looks, are these basically identical?".  Maybe I need to look up 'identical' in the dictionary.

 

Earl

Earl I fell flat on that one didn't I

Here's a nice 2056 obtained from a Forum member who had repainted it to recreate a real Hudson No. 5326 that his uncle was engineer on back then. He did a really nice job with it and had the 2426 Hudson tender to pair with it adding to the effect. It is a fine runner on our layout.

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Best way I have found to distinguish the ATSF from the NYC Hudson is to simply look at a photo of the real engine and then look at the model.  Each loco is a reasonably accurate - if compressed - model of the real one, and the differences are obvious, as in valve gear, boiler front, pilot deck, etc.  The Santa Fe with the added Elesco is just plain silly, however, as the loco could not have both systems.

 

The tenders are usually wrong, too. The NYC is most often seen with the PRR Turbine tender, even tho L. was making the proper NYC tank with the huge coal bunker and using it on even the little 2-4-2's.  The ATSF should have had a boxy oil tender, as all were oil fired.

Originally Posted by GGG:

Back to your original question, how is it acting up after running for a while?

 

The motor may need cleaning and new brushes/brush springs.  G

When It Runs for about 15 to 20 Minutes with A 3 Car Passenger Set from MTH it Starts to Slow down and continues this till it comes down to a Crawl. Take it off the Track and let it cool down and it runs fine for about 15 to 20 minutes and it does it again.

Originally Posted by martinpw:

On Jim Policstro's question about diesels in 1952 having Magnetraction while steam did not: Supplies of the Alnico magnetic material were limited due to Korean War demands, so Lionel decided to devote their supply to the diesels and leave the steam engines without.

 

Martin

 

Thank you, Martin.

 

It makes sense considering that Lionel was trying to push the newly introduced diesels and wanted them to be at their best. 

 

Jim

 

Just thought I would mention that you can find, from time to time, 2056s that do have Magnetraction. I have one that is original, probably came from early production when Lionel still had 2046 parts. After all, they were only toys and not collectibles in 1952 and whatever parts that were on hand were used.  Both my 2046 and my 2056 run well with proper lubrication and maintenance.  Still a beautiful Alco inspired  locomotive with an NYC look that works with freight or passenger consists.

I just bought a 2056 at a train show. It has a 2-6-4 wheel arrangment and a 2046W tender. It runs OK but the tender shorts out the track from time to time. I plan on dismantaling it and cleaning it up, any tips?  I have old Marx engines but this and a 2020 S2 tubine I just got are the only old Lionels I have.

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