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A piece about how to do it would be great and much appreciated by all considering undertaking the task!
 
Originally Posted by scale rail:

Kerrigan, it all depends on the curve and or switches. Marklin made three different lengths  of wire. If I remember, one is twelve inches, one six or seven and the third can be adjusted to length. It's the shortest. All my curves were and will be at least 072 but I still used lots of the middle size wires. I took a old Lionel freight truck and glued a dowel to the center of the truck. The dowel went up to the hight I wanted the wire and it showed me the center of the third rail. I made my brass cross arms longer than need be. Once I attacked the overhead wire and got it centered I cut of the end of the extra long cross arm. I have found the MTH pantographs work best. The springs on K-line and Williams are too weak and the pans will sway back from the drag. Lionel's work fine but they are not scale. 

One other thing that help the look of the overhead was to paint the wire flat black. It makes it look smaller and dirty like the real thing. You have to remember to sand the bottom of the wire for good contact. 

I think I need to write a piece for OGR about making a catenary system. Don

 

Oh yes!
 
I vividly remember a trip as a kid on the Olympian somewhere when a trainman let me sit up in the dome on a dark night when it was raining and watching the light show of the pans arcing and sparking on the bipolar as we raced westward.  Never forget that experience.  I sat there for an hour well past midnight until the conductor made me go to bed ...Originally Posted by Forrest Jerome:

"the sparks look great at night"

 

did the prototypes spark?  i have seen GG1's (and modern stuff, too) in the NE corridor, but i can't remember any sparking.

 

Originally Posted by pidjy:

Here it is! MTH re-realease the Realtrax Catenary system, you can see it on the RTR 2012 Catalog.

 

but but but... 150$ the 8 pieces catenary system!!!! if it's a joke, it's a bad one!

It's more than reasonable...dunno what you expect to pay for...???

Probably street price will be lower.

 

Well don't look at the Sommerfeldt price in case...avg price for 1 mast is $40 and then ad the price of the wiring $10 for about 3.5 ft

 

 

Wow.  Almost $1900 for 100 poles ...

That makes one think about building a less-expensive option ... somehow ..

 

Originally Posted by Lafondue:
Originally Posted by pidjy:

Here it is! MTH re-realease the Realtrax Catenary system, you can see it on the RTR 2012 Catalog.

 

but but but... 150$ the 8 pieces catenary system!!!! if it's a joke, it's a bad one!

It's more than reasonable...dunno what you expect to pay for...???

Probably street price will be lower.

 

Well don't look at the Sommerfeldt price in case...avg price for 1 mast is $40 and then ad the price of the wiring $10 for about 3.5 ft

 

 

Bill...your mod looks great!  Many folks have mentioned in previous posts that the MTH system looked clunky....  I had stepped out on a limb by responding that the width dimension of the poles was a little large but by painting them black or a dark gray, this could visually narrow their width.  Even painting the wire a darker color improves its overall look.  The height is fine for the very reason you said in your post above, the Pennsy poles were quiet tall.  I had considered taking the bases off and mounting the poles into the Quiet Brace surface on my layout...

 

Anyway, your modification to the hangers looks fantastic and I am going to do the same after seeing yours so thanks so much for posting these pictures.  If you have the time, I sure would appreciate close ups of the details of how you did this.  I will be starting on my catenary in the next few weeks so this is very timely!!

 

Alan

Originally Posted by wippen:

Hi everybody 

 

Im wippens son jake and we are huge fans of model railroading. i want to buy my dad a GG 1 for christmas. i have MTH DCS and I'm looking for recommendations that are suitable for beginners.

 

Thanks Jake

Jake, if you are looking for a scale piece, and you are happy to run conventional, Williams scale size GG1's are on scale for around $180. This is the O gauge bargain of the year if you like electrics. They are normally over $250. These are great runners and look very nice. If you want to upgrade to PS3, it's still a very inexpensive loco.

I have 7 WBB GG1's and love them.

In answer to the original poster, recently I got a price for the Sommerfeldt poles, and I was quoted about $70 a piece. This was here in Australia, and was retail price, so I'm very disappointed. I certainly can't afford that sort of money. Even if it's $20 cheaper in the US it's going to be too much.

Wow.  Way beyond my budget.

I'll wait for the article by Scale Rail Don on how to do it without breaking the bank.  His Milwaukee cat is exactly what we need to put on the CL&W "Mountain Division".

 

Originally Posted by Dave Allen:

In answer to the original poster, recently I got a price for the Sommerfeldt poles, and I was quoted about $70 a piece. This was here in Australia, and was retail price, so I'm very disappointed. I certainly can't afford that sort of money. Even if it's $20 cheaper in the US it's going to be too much.

Originally Posted by Dave Allen:

In answer to the original poster, recently I got a price for the Sommerfeldt poles, and I was quoted about $70 a piece. This was here in Australia, and was retail price, so I'm very disappointed. I certainly can't afford that sort of money. Even if it's $20 cheaper in the US it's going to be too much.

$70.- seem slightly high...with shipping..??

 

So far the price are from about 24.- euro to 37.- (about $30.- to $45.-) depending on the mast.

I know still on the expensive side..can quickly add up (with wiring and other) to a few 100 dollars per scale mile.

Again we suffer from a very tiny niche market with probably very small production run.

 

The target market is probably people how run Fulgurex/ Hermann engine, with a matching consist were cost can be $15000.- and up..so a few 1000 dolars for catenary is not a "big deal".

Guys...I am only bringing this thread back to life because there has been some interest lately in catenary AND this was a good thread.  Unfortunately, Bill Phillips who posted some great pictures and ideas while he was building his layout, passed away a little more than a year ago ( January 3, 2013 ) so he didn't get to finish his project.  His last post was in November of 2012 in a short "wire for catenary" thread.  His modifications of the MTH system were really nice so I thought those of you that might be interested would enjoy seeing them...

 

Alan

Hi guys,

 

We have finally started installing our new Milwaukee prototype catenary on the NWTL and another layout in Seattle.  Here's a short video that we did showing a short section of the catenary with a Little Joe.

 

 

For anyone who is interested you can contact me off the forum.  We will be bringing the catenary system to market in kit form in the near future.

Last edited by Dave Hikel

Remember the original post from two years ago [ well, less two days ] regarding Sommerfeldt reintroducing their line of 0 scale catenary ?  They have recently announced that it is to be at dealers by the end of [ this ] March.  Pricing is yet to be determined;  I believe they've said they want to see what their production costs are, so whether the pricing floated two years ago will still apply isn't known.

 

I must say that from the photos posted that the tower masts look very nice, and are certainly to a higher standard of fidelity to the prototype than the equivalents from 30+ years ago;  this seems to be true across the range, including the catenary itself. 

 

Best regards,  SZ

I did contact Sommerfeldt last fall & they were planning on having these available by last Christmas. But then again, I have been following this thread for over a year & I am not surprised to hear that have delayed the release again.

But as mentioned in the previous posting they did not finalize the price & so I was not able to send them an order when they asked me to.

Also the only payment they accept is Bank Transfers. No credit card & no PayPal.

Thanks,

Naveen Rajan

With all of this discussion about catenary systems, I noticed that my Spell Check indicator would appear every time I used the word: Catenary.  (Even now as I write this.)  So I thought:  "Are we spelling it wrong or something?"  Nope, that's how it's spelled in all articles that I've read.  So I looked it up in a dictionary that I keep here at the desk to settle arguments.  Nope, not in there.  Well then I found that my wife had a special dictionary of unusual words at the TV set and I looked there.  Sure as heck, the word "catenary" was in there. 

 

Do you know what it means, according to the experts?  "Catenary, n. a curve formed by a cord hanging freely from two fixed points." 

 

Never thought of it that way, but I guess that our RR definition of the word kind of follows that description.  The catenary curve, (Which we always called the "messenger cable") is the top part of the trolley and is used to support the actual trolley wire between the line poles and the bracket arms so the trolley wire doesn't sag.  On a streetcar or many interurbans, they don't use a messenger cable and support a simple trolley wire only at the location of line poles or brackets.  That system isn't called a catenary, just a trolley wire.  And it tends to have a natural sag to it.

 

I've come to think that my  "spell check" is pretty dumb!  It doesn't recognize "interurban" either.

 

Paul Fischer

Just got an e-mail from Sommerfeldt with the price list for their O-Scale Catenary components. The images & specifications for the items in the price list are in the catalog, at the link on page 1 of this topic.

Since they only accept bank transfers for payment, any interested buyers in the US, could contact Eurolokshop, an authorized Sommerfeldt dealer.

Thanks,

Naveen Rajan

Attachments

Originally Posted by scale rail:

Dave Drake, Dave Hikel did NOT make my cantenary. I don't even know Mr. Kikel. I originally made my Marklin cantenary two layouts back, over fifteen years ago. I use wood dowels, brass rod for cross arms, wood telegraph arms and most of the poles are stumped as the Milwaukee did. I drill holes for the dowels to fit in then glue them in place. They are very sturdy when complete.

You can see one of my videos with the electrics here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...=11&feature=plcp

Don

Don: Time to get ready to rebuild that exceptional layout that you once had in the lower 48. Remember you don't stop playing because you get old, you get old because you stop playing. I'll enjoy my trains until the day that they lock me in the box!

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