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Here are some more projects I've been working on since Fall and finally got them running:  an interurban, a trolley, and a rail bus, all in standard gauge.

 

To name and decorate these guys, I just did a little research and found protoypes for each type of motor with colorful names.  If you google them I'm sure you'll find them.

 

The first is an interurban made out of a Lionel 18 car.  This has been being done for over 80 years, but for my first project I wanted one that I knew would work.   I put a build-a-loco motor in this, which was the easy way, but probably wouldn't do it again; it's a long enough car that the center motor makes for a lot of out-swing on corners, it was hitting things even some of my larger locos don't. Lots of power though.  There it is, the Kansas City, Excelsior Springs, and St. Joseph: you gotta love a name like that.  The white windows let the interior light show, but hide the big motor.

 

Then there's the Newton & Boston Street Railway trolley, made out of a Lionel #17 caboose.  I thought the caboose had a very old-time trolley shape to it, if you punch a couple more windows.  This one is powered by a G Scale DC motor unit which sorta fit back into the 17 truck to hang on the bottom of the trolley.  The motor had to be taken apart to convert it from 2-rail to 3-rail, and given larger wheels, widened to fit Standard Gauge.  The center rail power pickup is in the other truck; between the headlights, interior lights, and the bridge rectifier for the motor, there's a lot of wiring crammed inside the trolley, which was very visible once I cut all those windows.  That's what all the people are for, they obscure the wiring at least somewhat.

 

The third is the Lac du Bonnet - Great Falls  rail bus.  This was a preliminary attempt at a rail bus, I want to do some more and follow the more common design of having the driver's cab in the bus itself rather than in a separate cab.  The bus I did here does have a prototype - the Michelin buses posted here recently are of this type - but I also want to try a different look.  This one was made from a Lionel 36 observation car, which seemed to best fit the scale of the 1:24 diecast truck cab.  It is powered by a Lionel #54 O Gauge gang car motor, modified for Standard Gauge.  It's a zippy little thing!

 

 

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Thanks everyone.

I want to do a version of the caboose Trolley again, I think I can improve on it.  And I know I want to do different versions of the rail bus.  Hoping that with practice my skills will get better.

 

Right now I'm working on a MOW work car; Marc posted a picture on the Standard Gauge Blog, here. It seemed to make sense to start with a 212 Lionel Gondola, so it'll be a little different from the one in that picture, but very similar concept.  I'll let you know when I have something to show.

 

 

Rob, powering these things is a puzzle.  McCoy makes a great under-floor SG powered truck with a strong motor in what looks like a Lionel 10 series truck.  I'd love to get a case of them to use on projects like these but they are not readily available.

 

Fortunately, others have puzzled this out before.  I have found a G scale DC motor unit that works well in some projects.  But old O Gauge motors have the advantage of already being AC, and set up for center rail pickup.  There are some small O Gauge motors that fit inside a wheel truck if you need to be completely under the floor - handcars and such - but they tend to be not strong enough for Standard Gauge.  I have some motors out of O Gauge diesels that are heavy and strong - but haven't yet figured out how to mount them.  

 

The gang car motor is also a good strong motor.  But it does stick up into the car, and you have to cut out some of the floor for it to pivot.  It has just a single pickup roller, so to improve performance and prevent stalling I used a pickup roller on the front truck of the rail bus as a second roller.  

 

That just leaves the drive wheels.  On the G scale DC motor that I use, I am able to remove the stock wheels and press standard gauge (lionel loco pilot truck) wheels onto the long axles and have them 2-1/8" between flanges.  But the gang car motor doesn't lend itself to that, and you can't replace the drive axle with a longer one without re-machining the whole thing because of the drive gear.  So I solved this one very inelegantly: by JB welding a set of SG wheels on the outside of the existing O Gauge wheels.  Getting them exactly centered is very important and very difficult.  Crude, but it does seem to work. 

 

I am trying to find some brass bushings or collars the right diameter to make axle extensions which would be the better way to do this.

 

Only one axle of the gang car is powered, so the other axle is easy: just replace it with a SG axle and press the solid wheels on it.

 

Not having learned this from anyone, it's basically a matter of asking questions, searching for photos or other examples of how others have done it, and then just trying your hand at it.  Be prepared for some unsuccessful attempts; there are some mangled messes in the trash here.  

 

This, by the way, is why I used a build-a-loco in the Interurban.

 

I'll try to get some photos in the next couple of days.

Last edited by Former Member

Okay, so here's a peek under the hood, so to speak, of the Lionel #50 gang car motor as adapted to run the standard gauge rail bus.

 

I stripped down the motor, removed the reversing mechanism and the main housing with the workers sitting on it.  The part of the orange housing that remains has to stay, because it holds the end of the armature and the brushes.  I cut an arched hole in the floor with room for it to pivot, and attached it with one bolt.  I used a piece of brass bolted to the gang car frame to create a pivot point on the motor housing.

 

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the horn off the gang car went here:

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Here you can see the end of the brass piece that anchors the motor to the floor of the car.  The original pickup roller that you see here is augmented by another roller on the front truck.  The wheels I used in this case are solid die-cast wheels: they actually came off the G scale motor I used on the caboose Trolley, but they are pretty much standard gauge wheels.  As you can see I ground off some of the motor frame where it would have interfered with the bigger wheels.

 

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The axle on the right is the idler, I just slipped a standard gauge axle through the hole in the motor housing, spaced it with some nylon bushings I had in a drawer, and pressed the wheels on the axle.  The drive axle is where it gets ugly:  There's a little sandwich there of the original O gauge wheels, fender washers to get out to 2-1/8", and the new wheels, all JB Welded. Not very pretty, but it you keep it all centered it works fine!

 

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Hojack (and Steve):

 

Thanks so much for sharing your motor conversion experience and for taking the time to post photos. I often have difficulty visualizing stuff like this, so the pics are especially helpful. Feels like I'm going to "tinplate school" ( you guys might consider charging tuition!)

 

The willingness of so many to share makes this forum a great place to be!

Very interesting and cool. You have given me some ideas for my standard gauge projects.  I too have converted  a Lionel passenger car to a Trolley/MU train you may find interesting. Check it out on youtube, type in         Part two of my standard gauge trolley/MU live catenary train set.  I posted three short videos  of the 4X4 test set. I hope to post a new video of my new 4X12 layout soon. I'm always looking to do something different

They all look fantastic !!Giving me some more ideas for my future projects. I too have made a trolley/MU car from an old Lionel standard gauge 339 car. You can see it run using live catenary that I made. The 4X4 experiment layout has been extended to just over 12 feet long. I hope to get a video of it up on to youtube soon. If you would like to see it, you can find it on youtube. Standard gauge trolley/MU live catenary train set. there are three videos showing it. By the way they are my first attempts of videoing 

RonH posted:

Great job, thinking out of the box. They all look good and run great.

Question: What pantographs did you use on the street car?

Ron, the pantographs on the white interurban are the Lionel part used on the 408 locomotive.  They fold up and down and are smaller than the bigger pantograph I use on a lot of my conversions.

Jonniewalker, if you could give us a link to your youtube videos, we'd love to see them!

hojack posted:
RonH posted:

Great job, thinking out of the box. They all look good and run great.

Question: What pantographs did you use on the street car?

Ron, the pantographs on the white interurban are the Lionel part used on the 408 locomotive.  They fold up and down and are smaller than the bigger pantograph I use on a lot of my conversions.

Jonniewalker, if you could give us a link to your youtube videos, we'd love to see them!

Thank you for the panthograph info. Think this would look great on my Prewar #8 loco, better than the original. If you get a chance, could you measure the length when folded down?

Thanks for saying so Greg. I made it as simple as I could with all the necessary parts coming from a hardware store. Some of the posts and supports were recycled. Luckily I had saved them from a job I was on. It was like putting together a project from an Erector set. The most time consuming part of the project was cutting the notches in the shelf supports to accept the upside down rail with my dremel. It was a little shaky at first but once the entire loop was assembled it became pretty ridged.  I am looking forward to sharing my next video of the new layout. It is a 4x12+ foot layout, using the original 4x4 at one end. And it too is run with live catenary. This forum has given me a few ideas for my next Interurban that is sitting and waiting for power.

JohnnieWalker posted:

Thanks for saying so Greg. I made it as simple as I could with all the necessary parts coming from a hardware store. Some of the posts and supports were recycled. Luckily I had saved them from a job I was on. It was like putting together a project from an Erector set. The most time consuming part of the project was cutting the notches in the shelf supports to accept the upside down rail with my dremel. It was a little shaky at first but once the entire loop was assembled it became pretty ridged.  I am looking forward to sharing my next video of the new layout. It is a 4x12+ foot layout, using the original 4x4 at one end. And it too is run with live catenary. This forum has given me a few ideas for my next Interurban that is sitting and waiting for power.

I guess it is probably too late, but I was wondering if perhaps o27 profile rail would look better, given the smaller size. You would have to use rail from 42-dia curves, but they did sell that size in o27. Just thinking out loud.

I thought about that but, I used what I had on hand and I really wasn't looking for any type of scale. In fact I like the larger size so  it stands out and people will see it. I want it  show cased since I've never seen this done before.  By using the 027 it would be cheaper for sure, but like I said, I had plenty of old standard gauge curves to use and the straights I used were new 3' sections. I got 3 , 3' rails from one piece which was a big help. Plus that gave me a nice working distance between posts. I will be posting a link shortly to view the new longer layout .  Let me know what you think. Oh, and thanks for watching the video.

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