Skip to main content

Replies sorted oldest to newest

bob2 posted:

i just discovered I have everything I need for an early CLW PA except the nose halves.  Check your junk boxes - $$ for a matched pair of nose castings.  I can fix butchered parts.

Send me a picture of what you need.  I will be at the Indy show next weekend and can take a look around for them.  Email is in my profile.  Let me know an idea of what you would be willing to pay.

Jim

All of mine are soldered together.  The castings are unmistakeable - two halves, with that strange ATSF spotlight cast above the windshield.  I have been paying  fifty bucks for a complete unit - but the parts I have are worthless without the nose.  I would go fifty for a nose pair and a roof casting.  Photos later.

Hello PA folks ..and Bob ...here are some photos of my two ...note differences in nose numbers boards and head number board....   were these casting differences ? ..Sorry Bob I do not have a loose nose .    The cast ones were first made for the Santa Fe ...and a set was used on the MSI layout ... in the late 40 's ..or was this part of Bob Smith's MSI rebuild in 1953 with the conversion to O gauge and new trains  ?...

Cheers Carey P_20180913_005503_LLP_20180913_005428_LLP_20180913_005619_LLP_20180913_125514_LL[1]

Attachments

Images (4)
  • P_20180913_005503_LL
  • P_20180913_005428_LL
  • P_20180913_005619_LL
  • P_20180913_125514_LL[1]

F8458556-0CDE-4C38-BBAD-0ADE5C95579519846230-4EFD-4109-A692-2F5C79C55D9BYep. Those are they.  The full story is in a 1990 issue of OSN, and thumbnails have been published on forums.  Happy to do it again if you can’t find the interview Harmon and I did with Bob and Winnie Smith.

The NYC has been slightly modified with old number boards and searchlight filed off.  You could easily fix the windshield without messing up the unit - Bondo and a good file would be a good way to watch the News Hour.

Here are the photos of the parts I need.  The roof would enable one more B unit, even though I do not really need B units.  A truly damaged but complete A would be ok.

Attachments

Images (2)
  • F8458556-0CDE-4C38-BBAD-0ADE5C955795
  • 19846230-4EFD-4109-A692-2F5C79C55D9B

Me too, Sam.  I have an ABA Overland in PRR red, a couple of MTH lost-plastic in both Bumblebee and Warbonnet, and a fleet of these doorstops which includes an ABA UP, an AB SP with snowplow, an AB PRR in Brunswick, a fantasy PA in B&O, and the one above that someday I want to nickel plate.

I need another doorstop PA a lot less than I need a mental heath professional to find out what this train obsession is doing to my synapses.

Still, wouldn't it be a shame to not pair up castings that have been inadvertently separated?  Another option is to wait until the Lionel bodies (possibly the most accurate) become a dime a dozen and have a nose "lost plasticked." (Is that a word?)

Sorry, Bob, I didn't spot any PA parts.  It sounds like Carey spotted a full PA model, but I never saw that.  

There wasn't much at the show in the way of boxes of scrap parts.  It's interesting to me, because I felt the same way at the past Chicago show.  Normally you can't escape the stuff, but I haven't seen much of it at this year's shows.

Jim

These two were done with MTH bodies - the first was provided free, with MTH aware of what I was doing.  I thought that was pretty nice of them.

The first is silicon bronze, cast with the "shell cast" method in an art foundry.  They did not quite understand what I was doing, so did not know the rivets, etc., were important.  Whole rows were ground off the finished product.  They were good enough to replace the metal and file it so it was close to what I wanted.  I am happy.

The second was done in Nickel Silver at K&D Foundry.  I had to cut the body in two pieces to fit the flask, then solder together after they were cast.

The secret to all this is called a "double burnout".  My father taught me that, and all it is - you leave the investment in the furnace twice as long as for wax.  All this was an honorable experiment.

Should you wish to do something like this, I recommend getting some sort of permission, since it is in effect copying someone else's artistry.  That's what I do, and it is always freely forthcoming.

Lionel is putting out some superb plastic Diesels - I hope some day to capture a shell or two and permission from them to convert to metal.  It is not cheap, but hey - it is a hobby, right?

Here is what the Lionel PA looks like - arguably the best body I have seen, maybe even better than the stunningly good MTH:

Aviary Photo_131082440552824929

Attachments

Images (1)
  • Aviary Photo_131082440552824929

Sure.  I don't do it.  I turn it over to a competent foundry.  My father taught jewelry making in Tucsson, and he did my first lost wax castings.

The foundry attaches the plastic body to a wax sprue (or multiples) and encases the entire thing in a high grade silica plaster.  When that sets, the plastic and wax is turned to ash in an oven.  Not sure, but I think it is 1100 degrees for 24 hours.

The cavity left is then filled with molten metal - sometimes under pressure or vacuum, but in the simplest cases by using a centrifuge.

When the metal starts to cool, the plaster is thrown into cold water.  The thermal shock splits the plaster, and - presto - a metal part.

This is an ancient process.  As I understand it, it has been done with wax for thousands of years.

Wikipedia probably knows more than I do about it.  And I bet Jay C knows more than me and Wiki combined.  Maybe he will chime in?

I use 60/40 rosin core, but I flux with acid.  The acid bottle says "Stay Clean - Harris".  A simple propane torch with pencil burner tip works - takes about ten minutes to get it hot enough, then you work local areas - solder will flow along an inch of seam at a time with flame opposite the solder.

My solder came from Radio Shack.  I stocked up.  Try Amazon.

Hi Bob,

 

I just noticed your post and I have the exact CLW PA-1 Section 2 parts you need... a CLW PA-1 Body with both sides of the Cab Nose correctly soldered together.

The Cab Nose assembly is soldered to the main outer shell. 

There are no problems with solder gaps, scratches, tears, etc. to this unpolished and unmodified CLW set of parts.  I do not have the accessories pack nor trucks that came in the PA-1 Section 1 or Section 2 Kits...

Do you still need these CLW parts?  If so, please contact me offline...

 

Regards, Steve

Cincinnati, OH

Sort of related, since I am still thinking of sand castings -

I just found out that Lionel did the E-7 about 12 years ago.  If indeed scale, I am hoping to find a damaged E-7B body for less than honorable purposes.  See my ad in "Wanted".

I am working on a plastic side, but it is tedious.  I have only one row of rivets glued on, and find myself doing almost anything to avoid opening a new tube of glue.  I might even pay real bucks to avoid the tedium.

The first shots will be in aluminum, but after that I plan to go back to bronze - see my Erie-Built project.

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×