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Hello,
There are a few angled grab irons that will need to be pulled out at one end.  The shell is in two pieces and the hood comes out before the cab.  In order to get the shell completely off, you will also need to remove the screws for the smoke unit on/off switch and the reverse on/ off switch.  Once that is done, carefully move the wires to give you enough room to unplug their connections.  There is not a lot of give in there, but you can safely take it apart.

If you go to the thread "do you modify your engines" you will see a photo I posted of mine completely disassembled.  That may help you.

BTW those grab irons pull straight out...they are not glued.  You may also need to cut the bell string and add a new one.

 

Give me a minute and I'll post of few photos that may help.

Last edited by Michigan & Ohio Valley Lines

On the left side of this photo you can see that the front of the hood has two grab irons hanging.  They were removed from the frame and that freed the hood for removal.  Also note that the hood has a lip that goes slightly under the cab.  The cab will be snug, but it lifts straight up.

 

DSC03510

 

Removing the cab too will give you better access to unplug from the board...

 

DSC03517

 

Completely disassembled...

 

DSC03531

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Originally Posted by Grampy Marc:

I am trying to service smoke unit on a K-Line Plymouth Switcher #K2625.

I removed all the screws to no avail.

What steps shoudl I take to get inside this unit?

Does the top open up?

 

Thanks...

 


Grampy,

From what I am reading it sounds like you have the smoke unit already off the frame and are trying to pull the top off. You say you have the screws that hold the metal upper cover out and it will not lift off. Not un-common they stick. I have had to pry them off. Is your heat element bad or the fan not spinning? I have had two that have burnt up the voltage requlators and that is why the fan would stop working.

Success

6 Screws Only.

Slide grab rails away from cab as the hood and cab seperate.

 

I see the VR (LM78L05ACZ - NatSemiCon) and forget how to test. My Electronics courses were 30+ years ago. I manage tasks/people now, not repair boards.

 

I did find the following helpful:

http://www.chipdocs.com/manufacturers/NSC.html?okwd=LM78&partid=775316

http://www.datasheetarchive.co...05ACZ-datasheet.html

 

Next trip to the Shack and break out the old iron...

 

Only semi-related, but where would be a good place to hook up a tether between doubleheaded Plymouths? 

 

I'm aiming to re-do my "30-Car Rampage" at the NJ Hirailers, and there were a couple of switches that stalled the units the first time I tried it. I think simply tying the roller pickups together should help the pair across the gaps.

 

I don't plan to make it a permanent mod, just have a wire or two and a small plug between the units.

 

---PCJ

Originally Posted by Michigan & Ohio Valley Lines:
... In order to get the shell completely off, you will also need to remove the screws for the smoke unit on/off switch and the reverse on/ off switch. 

Just an addendum: Those switch screws thread into nuts inside the body shell. A couple of them got away inside the innards, and it took a few minutes to fish them out and re-install them (involving a rare-earth magnet and two screwdrivers). They don't seem to have anything to do with the shell attachment, but the shell itself will take a bit of insistent back-and-forth rocking to loosen it from the frame once the six body screws are out.

 

Looking for a place to splice a tether seems like it boils down to tapping the roller-pickup leads, but getting that wire outside the shell is a whole new challenge--if that shell fit any tighter together it would be waterproof

 

---PCJ

Originally Posted by Michigan & Ohio Valley Lines:

.  You may also need to cut the bell string and add a new one.

 

I was hoping to avoid that step while I had mine apart...till the thread came loose from the bell. While contemplating how I was going to glue it back on, it occurred to me to take a closer look at the tip of the thread, since it didn't look like it had broken off of anything:

Plymouth-bell1

Well, it seems there is a little collar on the end of the thread. With a little plier-fu, it should go back on the way it came off.

Plymouth-bell2

And now re-attached. Maybe not the exact original configuration but that should just require sliding the collar down to the horizontal end of the crank.

 

Edit: Nope, this is how it's attached out-of-box.

---PCJ

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Last edited by RailRide
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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
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