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Has anyone else had a problem with this plastic part failing in their PS4 MTH?  I bought a Southern Crescent Limited about a year ago and I have had this part fail at least 3 times and have sent my engine back to MTH two other times for either the same issue or possibly a different issue.  So, all together, it has been back to MTH 3 times plus a conversation over the phone with an MTH technician to send me the part after we agreed for me to take it appart rather than send it back a 4th time.  This is a small plastic part about an inch long with two plastic tips protuding out of the side on each end.  This part fits into the drive train between the drive motor and the gear box.  I believe this part is designed to fail in case the wheels get locked up in order to protect the drive gears and the motor.  I would think that 3 to 5 failures in a year is excessive and I need help to resolve the issue.  This was the first MTH PS4 I have ever bought and was very excited to get one because of what I felt were superior features on the MTH PS4 and DCS System.  But as it stands now, unless I can get this resolved, I'm too afraid to spend $1500 on another MTH PS4 train and system.  Has anyone else experienced this problem?

 

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Well first, the list price is 899? It was delivered in 2013.

http://mthtrains.com/20-3466-1

Was it used?

Has it been modified?

Do you keep throwing traction tires?

Are you pulling long trains?

If you turn the sound off does the drivetrain sound smooth?

Do you hit the estop or is the engine exposed to slamming stops or super fast starts with long trains or consists?

If you take the shell off turn the flywheel by hand to fully rotate the running gear all the way around a cycle to check for any binding.

 I have several of their steamers and have not had any failures of the drives but I'm sure it can happen. I run two rail so the tires will just spin if overworked.

 I would expect that an axle is out of quarter or something major to cause this.

Pete, High strength plastic dog bone drive shafts have been used since the 90s in MTH Engine. Let alone other manufactures.  I Have not had but one replacement over all my years of servicing engines.

 

MTH HO big boy had a production run issue, but that was resolved.

 

If an MTH O engine is snapping dog bones drive shafts, something else is at issue.  I would not go to metal until I found out why I am snapping a drive shaft.  Especially 4 in a year.  G

Originally Posted by Engineer-Joe:

Well first, the list price is 899? It was delivered in 2013.

http://mthtrains.com/20-3466-1

Was it used?

Has it been modified?

Do you keep throwing traction tires?

Are you pulling long trains?

If you turn the sound off does the drivetrain sound smooth?

Do you hit the estop or is the engine exposed to slamming stops or super fast starts with long trains or consists?

If you take the shell off turn the flywheel by hand to fully rotate the running gear all the way around a cycle to check for any binding.

 I have several of their steamers and have not had any failures of the drives but I'm sure it can happen. I run two rail so the tires will just spin if overworked.

 I would expect that an axle is out of quarter or something major to cause this.

Engineer Joe - Thanks for your reply.  By the time I bought the engine, 5 passenger cars, Z4000 transformer, and DCS system, it totals $1500.  This is my first MTH, so I had to buy the whole kit and kaboodle.  PS4's do not play well with Lionel transformers, so that is why I had to buy the Z4000.  I was a Lionel man before this, and with the luck I have been having, that may be what I have to stick with.

 

1.  This is a new engine

2.  No, I do not throw any traction tires

3.  The Southern Crescent Limited and/or Southern has a 5 passenger car combo to go with it.  I bought that, but the coupling on one of the cars kept disengaging, so I just use 4.  

4.  Yes, drive train does sound smooth

5.  No, I use the DCS system to slowly start and stop.  With the sound effects of the PS4's that is part of the fun of owning one to here the sounds in time with the speed changes.  It starts and stops smoothly with no jerking motions.

6.  Last I checked, there was no binding, but to tell you the truth, I will need to double check to be 100% sure.  It has been over a month since the last failure and I'm not as young as I use to be.  I agree that there must be something causing the failure.  The tips are what is wearing off.  The slots in the metal shaft that the tips slide up in have sharp edges, they were not machined smooth from the manufacturing.  I am suspecting that is part of the problem.  I have had problems with the slide rods connecting the wheels on base Lionels getting slightly bent causing binding, but do not see that here.  Again, I will double check that tonight when I get home to see.  

 

One thing that is frustrating is this train has been back to MTH 3 times within one year and you would think that would all be checked out before sending it back to the customer, especially repeat failures.

 

Again, thanks for your help in trying to trouble-shoot the problem.

 

Do you know where I can get these "dog bones"?  Surely they can't be too expensive and MTH did not have any in stock the last time I had this problem.  After a month I hadn't heard from them, so I called them to remind them I still had not received a part and they had to take one out of one they had at their shop.  

 

I can make one out of something besides plastic, but fear that may cause me more grief by stripping gears or burning out a motor.  Looks like I may have just gotten a lemon.

Last edited by Jblovel
Originally Posted by RJR:

Contact GGG, whose email can be found on his data listing.  He'a good tech and stocks many parts.  MTH has a high shipping charge.  If you call MTH tech support, ask to speak to someone above the tech.

Thanks,  there is a train show in Nashville this weekend:

 

Music City Chapter Train Collectors Association Address: 500 Wedgewood Ave. Agricultural Bldg. Nashville, TN 37203
 

My son and I will be going to it this Saturday and I am hoping I may get lucky and find someone there that may have several of these and some advice.  But then, they should not be failing at this rate.  

 

Anyone near Nashville - this is a good train swap meet/show.  I went 2 years ago.  You may want to pay it a visit.

"If you take the shell off turn the flywheel by hand to fully rotate the running gear all the way around a cycle to check for any binding"

 

I went home for lunch to check it out.  Rolling forward rotates several rotations very smooth, then a catch, but then it rolls out of the catch for several rotations and repeats.  I can't get it to roll in reverse by hand.  Not sure if this is normal or abnormal rotating by hand.

 

So, what is your advice?  

 

1.  If this is in the gears, it is beyond my capabilities

2.  If I send it back to MTH again, how do I prevent this whole cycle from reoccurring for another year?????

3.  If I have had this much trouble with a train over the past year since taking it out of the box new and I indeed do have a lemon, what are the chances of MTH replacing it with a new one and how do I go about doing that????????

You should now be able to turn the input to the gearbox with your fingers. Try it and see if you can feel any binding. If this was mine I would measure the diameter of the plastic pins, then get some music wire at the hobby shop. Cut off the pins then drill a hole so you can replace the plastic pins with the metal wire.

 

Pete

Does anyone else notice what looks like wear in the metal sleeve on the motor drive side?????  Is this normal????  I've had nothing but plastic dog bones in this thing and I bought this engine new............

 

What appears to be wear is in the "forward" direction.  This time it failed on the wheel drive side even though there is wear on the "dog bone" on the motor side too.

 

Click on the picture to get a larger view.

Last edited by Jblovel
Originally Posted by RJR:

I don't see any grease on it.  Did you read my suggestions above?  Try any/

 

This part is also used in RC boats.  For a better price/source, try googling RC boat parts.

1.  Screw drive box is well greased with no foreign matter that I can see.

2.  Motor and gear box shaft appears to be aligned well.  No adjustment if they were not.

3.  There appears to never have been any grease on this part.  Again, MTH has worked on it 3 times and they did not apply any grease directly on the "dog bone" but I'm willing to try anything once I get another "dog bone".  

4.  I Haven't started looking on line yet for an alternative supplier for the part, but I will search them to see.

 

Thanks a bunch for your suggestions.  Just trying to explore all possibilities for failure.

 

Originally Posted by Jblovel:

 

 Rolling forward rotates several rotations very smooth, then a catch, but then it rolls out of the catch for several rotations and repeats.  I can't get it to roll in reverse by hand.  Not sure if this is normal or abnormal rotating by hand.

 

 

So you are doing this by rotating the flywheel?

It won't turn in reverse? Is the catch happening as the running gear is in the same location?

then you state there are no problems in either direction?

I'm sorry, this is hard to follow.

Could he have an axle that's one tooth off on a gear? or one is out of quarter?

Originally Posted by Engineer-Joe:
Originally Posted by Jblovel:

 

 Rolling forward rotates several rotations very smooth, then a catch, but then it rolls out of the catch for several rotations and repeats.  I can't get it to roll in reverse by hand.  Not sure if this is normal or abnormal rotating by hand.

 

 

So you are doing this by rotating the flywheel?

It won't turn in reverse? Is the catch happening as the running gear is in the same location?

then you state there are no problems in either direction?

I'm sorry, this is hard to follow.

Could he have an axle that's one tooth off on a gear? or one is out of quarter?

When I went home for lunch, I was trying to turn the wheels by physically pushing on the bottom of the wheels.  But when I came home after work, I tried turning forward and reverse by turning the drive shaft.  

 

When I turn the wheels with the drive shaft it is very smooth and will turn the wheels in forward and reverse with no problems at all.  Pushing up on the wheels to turn them may have put the whole system in a bind possibly????  

 

Anyhow, there was no problem turning in forward or reverse when turning the drive shaft just like the motor would.

 

Sorry for the confusion.  Hope this clears it up some.

Last edited by Jblovel

If had had a loco that went back to MTH for the same repair three times and now is going bad again, I'd call MTH and insist on talking to someone higher up in the company than a basic tech.  Obviously there is a root cause that the techs haven't addressed, and I suspect that some person at a higher echelon would want to know if there were repeated unsuccessful attempts to repair a problem.

That is interesting, and it is possible the wear in the sleeve has a sharp edge and is cutting at the tit of the DB.  How is the thrust play of the motor.  Does the Flywheel push fwd and pull out significantly in the opposite direction?

 

If the drive trains is smooth, and the alignment looks ok.  I am not sure why the tits are breaking off unless it is wear via the sleeve, especially if the thrust is significant.  It could be acting like a saw.   G

Thank you for taking the time to explain. I do understand the frustration.

My next hunch would be that the motor is out of alignment with the drive then?? There must be some extra stress on this shaft for it to wear out so fast.

 Norton and others here have more experience than I do. I tear stuff apart all the time to get to the root of the problem. I have repeatedly bought used stuff that was abused. It helps to learn the goings on inside all the engines.

 Metal replacement joints are a known cure for some shafts that get extra stress. I believe that 3rd rail switched to metal u-joints because of some failures in their old diesel?

 I just find it odd that this loco doesn't pop up more as a troubled model. I'm left guessing that you have a 1 off??? I'm wondering if it was damaged in original shipping throwing something out of whack?

 BTW, I explained to turn the flywheel so I thought that's what you had done. I don't think these engines freewheel? ( the wheels shouldn't turn?)

Interesting. (OK, "infuriating" to Jblovel; sympathies.) The sleeve acting as a saw seems most likely, and that would be good, because the inside of that sleeve can be filed or ground by something. It will be awkward, but I'd give that a go, if I may suggest it. A set of small files is priceless in this hobby.

 

Is it always the same end that breaks? That could be important.

 

The drive system is a proven design, used pretty much by everyone, almost universally successfully. The design is kind of a u-joint type to allow movement of wheels and motors independently of each other (though with unsprung drivers I don't see that happening much), and to reduce the need for all sorts of fixed-length driveshaft variations and inventory. I suppose that it could also be a fail-safe stress point to protect other components; never thought of that.

Last edited by D500

Thanks everyone for the input.  

 

MTH contacted me today via email and stated that they suspect that the last batch of dog bone couplings were made of the wrong plastic material.  

 

They are shipping me one of those now and will ship me one of the correct material later after it has been made.

 

I will make sure the edges of the slots are not sharp this time before I re-install.

 

To D500 - I can't remember if the failed end is the same this time, but one of the tips on the other end is almost gone and the other is worn and if I recall correctly, that was the case last time.

 

Well, I'm going to the Nashville train show and swap tomorrow and try to forget about this for a while.

 

Again, Thanks to All.

JBLOVEL,

Did you ever get this issue resolved? I have the exact same engine and it just ate the second dogbone today. The first time I just dismissed it as a bad part but after it failed again I got to looking closer and found the motor shaft and worm drive shafts were not aligned well. The motor was angled down too steeply and I can see the same issue in your picture. I tweaked the motor bracket a little and cut strips of soda can to put between the frame and bracket as a shim to raise the motor. The alignment is very close now. I do not have a new driveshaft yet to try this but I think this will be the fix. 

MTH sent me another dogbone  (after eating 4 of them within a year and being shipped back to their shop 3 times) that was suppose to be of a harder material.  It has lasted longer than the others, but part of the reason is I just haven't been using this train long after due to electrical issues.  It would stop sporadically until it finally just died.  I put it up on the shelf disgusted with it for a long time.  I attended the Nashville train show earlier this month and I left it with a train shop where they told me the board was probably shot.  I'm now trying to decide if I want to continue to bother with this train.  It has been a lemon ever since I bought it.  It has been down for one reason or another or at MTH much more than it has ever run.  I've had it with MTH.  If it was an alignment problem, they should have corrected it at the shop and I have had so many problems with it, they should have replaced it by now.  My very first experience with this train was the board blew the first time I got it out of the box.  I'm going back to Lionel.  Thanks for the info though.  I may try that if I have the board fixed.  I had already decided that if this dog bone got ate up that I was going to make one of my own with the tips made of copper wire of a thick gauge that would wear instead of the metal shafts, but would last longer than the plastic tits.  I don't run mine around carpet or anything that the wheels would bind and strip anything.  

It is the holidays and Midge was out.  At some point you should get a response if you sent an e-mail.  In the end the parts have to come from them.  If you post a picture with measurements of Flywheel dia and thickness and length of dogbone I can get you the parts numbers and you can order right off the web.  G

Jblovel posted:

MTH sent me another dogbone  (after eating 4 of them within a year and being shipped back to their shop 3 times) that was suppose to be of a harder material.  It has lasted longer than the others, but part of the reason is I just haven't been using this train long after due to electrical issues.  It would stop sporadically until it finally just died.  I put it up on the shelf disgusted with it for a long time.  I attended the Nashville train show earlier this month and I left it with a train shop where they told me the board was probably shot.  I'm now trying to decide if I want to continue to bother with this train.  It has been a lemon ever since I bought it.  It has been down for one reason or another or at MTH much more than it has ever run.  I've had it with MTH.  If it was an alignment problem, they should have corrected it at the shop and I have had so many problems with it, they should have replaced it by now.  My very first experience with this train was the board blew the first time I got it out of the box.  I'm going back to Lionel.  Thanks for the info though.  I may try that if I have the board fixed.  I had already decided that if this dog bone got ate up that I was going to make one of my own with the tips made of copper wire of a thick gauge that would wear instead of the metal shafts, but would last longer than the plastic tits.  I don't run mine around carpet or anything that the wheels would bind and strip anything.  

If you are done with this engine I would buy it from you non operational.  E-mail in my profile.  G

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