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I think he means the steel tire.  I have done a Hudson and a B6, and had to saw the tire off, then saw the flange off, and finally true up the driver on an end mill with a special jig before pressing steel tires on.  Sometimes it is easier to press the driver off its axle and do everything on a lathe with a mandrel.

Yes Bob,

I mean the steel tires. I could turn them down on the lathe but I would prefer to press them out. Next step would be to strip the paint on the drivers and see if it's a different metal. Maybe the wheel center is die cast and the tire is nickel plated ? I don't know. On many brass engines, tire is press fit on a brass wheel center.

Yes.  Cold rolled, or better, iron pipe, is best.  Once you machine them, polish them to a high shine.  That inhibits corrosion.  Almost anything else will not have adhesion on the rails.  You can use leadloy if your lathe is smaller than 9", but it is expensive.

 

Most Lionel I have messed with has the flanges cast as part of the wheel- usually sintered iron, but sometimes die cast.  The tire is a ring of stainless.  I believe the stainless is the reason they went to rubber tires.

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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