I've been running a consist of K-Line "Texas Special" cars behind a Lionel 2245 consist at the Arkansas and Missouri RR museum, but I never cared much for the disparity in sizes (and the elderly motor in the F unit), so I recently pieced together an A-A Alco consist from Erie locos and TS shells...
Much to my displeasure, the lead (powered) unit kept derailing on the O42 curves, so back to the Razorback Traction Co. shops for troubleshooting...
The main problem, I think, is the inboard traction tires. They're causing the truck to pop a wheelie, as it were, just enough to derail on the curves. So, a bit of dismantling, swap the axles, easy peasey, right?
Nope. I'd have to pull the wheels, and I wasn't in the mood for futzing with that...
So, I started experimenting a bit. Maybe restricting the front axle lift would help?
A bit too light.
Wound up plopping a 1/2" rubber grommet in there...
While I was in there, I decided to do something about the headlight, which mostly illuminated the front windscreen...
One of the better buys I've made in the past few years is a bag of miscellaneous Erector Set brackets and braces...
Lights up nice!
Better than factory!
The trailing unit got the same treatment (note the Lionel sound unit I installed)...
Even with the grommet, the little indefinite still kept derailing, so time to break out the weights. I couldn't fit enough weights up front to keep the thing on the rails, so I decided to make the power unit the rear loco, and added some cars to simulate the weight of the Texas Special consist...
I now have some insight as to just why K-Line went t**s-up. These are locos labeled as O27, but can they handle the curves? Nope.
Okay, time to clean out the fishing weight section at Walleyworld...
With half the sporting goods department epoxied to the chassis, problem solved, right? Wrong.
One of the problems with electronic E-units is that they tend, even when switched to the "off" position, to reset to a default value after the power is off for a short time. In this case, default is reverse, which is unacceptable for a museum train which is liable to be operated by the boss when I'm not around to make sure things are set up properly. So, time to tear out the e-unit and put in a rectifier bridge. The capacitor was salvaged from an old "Sound of Steam" board. Despite its humiliating origins, it works fine...
Protip: Hobby clamps work good for soldering wires onto slide switches. Cats paws? Not so much...
Norma Bates Kitteh, natch, begs to differ.
With the furball gently evicted, the wiring harness is completed with a manual reverse switch.
An impromptu screw sculpture courtesy of a magnetic parts tray...
The finished product, using up most of the Strategic Little Grey Wire Nut Reserve...
But, as they say in the Fatherland, "Zum Holle, es lauft!" ("What the h**l, it runs!")
A bit of tidying with a zip tie, and voila!
The Radio Shack switch is a perfect replacement for the factory original.
And awayyyy we go!
For some odd reason, I've gotten into the habit of tidying the workbench after each project. This worries me.
As always, I'd like to thank Norma Bates Kitteh, chief supervisor and transformer noodger, without whom this project probably would have gone more quickly, but not more amusingly...
Mitch