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It's #SwitcherSaturday Time!!!!

Lots of us out there love switchers (shifters, docksiders, yard goats, critters, etc.), so lets keep #SwitcherSaturday (a.k.a. SWSAT) rolling!


This week we've got NYC #8244 pushing boxcars and reefers around the yard at the Murnane house, along with a quick video of it pulling some varnish around at the last club outing. I also stumbled upon a picture of RS-3 units heading west at Natick, MA in February of 1961. (Photo: Mr. Robert Coolidge) for your SWSAT viewing pleasure.

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I hope everyone has a great weekend, have some switcher fun and when you get a chance - please post some switcher stuff here!


All the best...Rich Murnane

p.s. Miss the post on Saturday? NO BIG DEAL, just keep posting pictures of your favorites until the next #SwitcherSaturday

If you missed last week's SWSAT you should really go take a look, we had a ton of posts and it was a great fun!
https://ogrforum.com/...saturday-2018-mar-17

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New Haven class Y-3 #3400 was built by ALCO Schenectady, one of ten USRA type 0-8-0 steam switchers delivered to the railroad in September 1920. The nominal locomotive weight was 220,000 pounds and the tender weight was 144,000 pounds. The USRA design produced 51,000 pounds of tractive effort with 51-inch drivers and a boiler pressure of 175 psi. The Y-3s were followed on the New Haven by the even more powerful class Y-4 three-cylinder 0-8-0 steam switchers in 1924. New haven retired its last Y-3 switcher in 1952. The model is an MTH Premier version with PS-2 first marketed around 2004.

MELGAR

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Last edited by MELGAR

Good morning and happy SWSAT everyone!!  Great pics and videos guys!!  Rich - got to love those RS3 locos especially when pulling a passenger train  They certainly were the power for many commuter trains back in the 1950/60s.  As a kid I always loved these locomotives .... and as a much older kid I love them today!

Today on the Free State Junction Railway, we have the B&O Docksider performing switching duties and going head to head with the WM BL2.  Have a terrific weekend everyone!!IMG_5231IMG_5220IMG_5219IMG_5246IMG_5240IMG_5318IMG_5326IMG_5330

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Well first I have a couple Camelback locomotives I found online while researching something ...

1D27F6AE-51DD-402C-A299-EDDAEE7977F4E7281B90-4284-41A0-BC8E-AAD8BD107E5D

Then, I was thinking about the horse switching thread, and camelbacks, and thought- hey, what about switching with camels?

Well, I didn’t find any images online of camels moving rail cars, but here are some Egyptian locomotive images I found.

1035A195-020F-447D-B89A-1B54D3C4C4BF66E0E001-3AB7-475E-B9D0-EE4E82FAD817

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brwebster posted:

Completed upgrading this late '90's Atlas SW8 today.  I opted to forego sounds in it but am confident a current ERR board and speaker can also be wedged inside.  It successfully shuffles a string of 25 scale cars anywhere around the layout.

 

 

Beautiful model, thank you for posting .  The speaker can be installed in the fuel tank.   Contact Atlas for the parts.  This is a similar speaker install done recently. Cut and fit was done with a dremel and small hand file.  

Electro-couplers can also be done.

Last edited by Mike CT
Mike CT posted:
brwebster posted:

Completed upgrading this late '90's Atlas SW8 today.  I opted to forego sounds in it but am confident a current ERR board and speaker can also be wedged inside.  It successfully shuffles a string of 25 scale cars anywhere around the layout.

 

 

Beautiful model, thank you for posting .  The speaker can be installed in the fuel tank.   Contact Atlas for the parts.  This is a similar speaker install done recently. Cut and fit was done with a dremel and small hand file.  

Electro-couplers can also be done.

Mike,

I should have shot some pics of the ERR Cruise Commander Lite install for clarification purposes, but its compact size fit snugly over top of the motor on a styrene mount I fabricated.  The lack of clearance here meant insulating the body inside with thin styrene.  I left off the front weight/heat sinc, giving sufficient space up front for both ERR sound board and a compact cube style speaker.  When I upgrade the second switcher ( PRR like yours ) I'll add sound to it.  BTW, the fuel tank on mine now holds the program/run switch, rather than the sound/reverse lockout switches previously there. In the upgrade process I added LED headlights and a cab light...dash lights were already installed.  The couplers (1.75") were modded to fit directly onto the trucks without the Atlas pivoting extension.  Even though solidly mounted, it appears the coupler swing is still within tolerable limits on 072 curves.  Antenna is a thin brass sheet, slightly wider than the cab interior, that tight fits up inside the roof in an arc.  The engine came to me without most of its railing, so along with the remaining plastic stuff I made all replacements with bronze wire and brass tube.  The end result sure is one smooth running little gem and can be made to creep along at a slow walk without a stutter.

Bruce

Don Sierakowski 111617 posted:
BAR GP7 #63 posted:

Happy Switcher Saturday to all. Before S.B.R. Alco HH660 "Anchor" arrive, SOU NW2 #2401a & CN FA1 #6706 switching around Shark Bay area. Also SP&S #600 switching this weekend near Port of Shark Bay.

20180322_19044020180322_19055720180322_19441820180322_19472520180323_21310820180323_212621

 

This is an example of extreme professionalism in model railroading---any scale, anytime.   Well done and much appreciated!

Don

Don: Thank you very much. 

Johan

brwebster posted:
Mike CT posted:
brwebster posted:

Completed upgrading this late '90's Atlas SW8 today.  I opted to forego sounds in it but am confident a current ERR board and speaker can also be wedged inside.  It successfully shuffles a string of 25 scale cars anywhere around the layout.

 

 

Beautiful model, thank you for posting .  The speaker can be installed in the fuel tank.   Contact Atlas for the parts.  This is a similar speaker install done recently. Cut and fit was done with a dremel and small hand file.  

 

Electro-couplers can also be done.

Mike,

I should have shot some pics of the ERR Cruise Commander Lite install for clarification purposes, but its compact size fit snugly over top of the motor on a styrene mount I fabricated.  The lack of clearance here meant insulating the body inside with thin styrene.  I left off the front weight/heat sinc, giving sufficient space up front for both ERR sound board and a compact cube style speaker.  When I upgrade the second switcher ( PRR like yours ) I'll add sound to it.  BTW, the fuel tank on mine now holds the program/run switch, rather than the sound/reverse lockout switches previously there. In the upgrade process I added LED headlights and a cab light...dash lights were already installed.  The couplers (1.75") were modded to fit directly onto the trucks without the Atlas pivoting extension.  Even though solidly mounted, it appears the coupler swing is still within tolerable limits on 072 curves.  Antenna is a thin brass sheet, slightly wider than the cab interior, that tight fits up inside the roof in an arc.  The engine came to me without most of its railing, so along with the remaining plastic stuff I made all replacements with bronze wire and brass tube.  The end result sure is one smooth running little gem and can be made to creep along at a slow walk without a stutter.

Bruce

Wonderful.   Next upgrade will most likely be an ERR upgrade.  The TMCC bottle board, I used, was a purchase from another Forum member, who had switched out an Atlas SW to get cruise control.  I always thought the large horizontal motor was good at most any speed. 

I had used the small wafer speaker in a Rich Yoder GE 44 tonner.  Glued in place with a silicone adhesive.

Best wishes with your projects.  Mike CT. 

 

Last edited by Mike CT

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