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Freight cars from Biaggi, a not comon Italian small train manufacturer based in Milano after the second world war. Biaggi has produced many models in O and 1 gauge, and they are considered to be in the spirit of Marklin. Unfortunately they suffer of zinck pest and die cast parts are very often destroyed. Products are not very well known and catalogs are rare to find. I am still searching a locomotive for this little set....

5 BIAGGI ITALIE 1947-506 BIAGGI ITALIE 1947-507 BIAGGI ITALIE 1947-50

Have a nice tinplate weekend,   Daniel

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Some prewar streamliners- Lionel 264-E and a Sakai "Banjo" engine (from Japan, thanks Steve!). A Lionel 2225W tender stands in for the Sakai tender, which I do not have. In the distant background up on the upper level is the LR "Super Rapide".

I picked up the 264-E from the late Jeff Schulze (Jeff passed away just last month sad to say). It was in very fine shape (as were the Sears set coaches it came with), except for a bad gear on one of the drivers. I replaced it using a nice wheel puller that I purchased on Ebay, and now it runs great. 

Lionel 264E and Sakai steamerLionel 264ESakai steamer 

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Last edited by John Smatlak
Fendermain posted:

Great items John as usual. I also have a 264-E and had two drive wheels replaced... sent to a shop for replacement.  I would like to be able to that myself in the future. What brand of wheel puller did you get? Also, how did you press the new one on?  Thanks

Fendermain

I got the O gauge wheel puller from PE Design: https://pedesignmanuf.com/wheel-puller-o, who has all kinds of toy train repair tools. Pressing the replacement on was done using a vise, although as I am still learning, next time I will go back to the large C clamp that I have used before. With the 264E I just wanted to replace the one wheel that was bad- I got if off (in pieces), but putting the new one on without damaging the opposite side wheel on the same axle was tricky. I also learned that you had to clean up the axle a bit to remove burrs before pressing the new wheel on. But that's part of the fun- you learn by doing.

PE-Design-O-gauge-Wheel-Puller-w

Speaking of wheel pullers, at the TTOS meet this past weekend, Larry Pearson showed me a nifty standard gauge wheel puller (see photo below), in fact we used it to get the last of the broken wheel pieces off the above-mentioned 264E (you can see the broken wheel in the photo). perhaps someone knows who made it and if they're still available? This style has the advantage of fully supporting the back of the old wheel.

Standard gauge wheel puller

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  • Standard gauge wheel puller

Here is a very simple clockwork locomotive from the Spanish toy-train manufacturer Rico. I do not have further information on this manufacturer. This locomotive has a gauge between 0 and 1 (about 40 mm), but maybe it was meant to be a floor runner. It is standing on my windowsill for a couple of years now and I thought I make a picture of it. It is lettered for the National Spanish railway company RENFE. 

mceclip1

Regards

Fred

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John Smatlak posted:
Fendermain posted:

Great items John as usual. I also have a 264-E and had two drive wheels replaced... sent to a shop for replacement.  I would like to be able to that myself in the future. What brand of wheel puller did you get? Also, how did you press the new one on?  Thanks

Fendermain

I got the O gauge wheel puller from PE Design: https://pedesignmanuf.com/wheel-puller-o, who has all kinds of toy train repair tools. Pressing the replacement on was done using a vise, although as I am still learning, next time I will go back to the large C clamp that I have used before. With the 264E I just wanted to replace the one wheel that was bad- I got if off (in pieces), but putting the new one on without damaging the opposite side wheel on the same axle was tricky. I also learned that you had to clean up the axle a bit to remove burrs before pressing the new wheel on. But that's part of the fun- you learn by doing.

PE-Design-O-gauge-Wheel-Puller-w

Speaking of wheel pullers, at the TTOS meet this past weekend, Larry Pearson showed me a nifty standard gauge wheel puller (see photo below), in fact we used it to get the last of the broken wheel pieces off the above-mentioned 264E (you can see the broken wheel in the photo). perhaps someone knows who made it and if they're still available? This style has the advantage of fully supporting the back of the old wheel.

Standard gauge wheel puller

Don’t forget aligning the siderod mounts and quartering the wheels for steam engines. There are special wheel presses and cups for this. I have done it with a vice, “learning the hard way”. It is part of the fun, but make sure you took your blood pressure medicine that day.

BTW, I have also pulled a wheel using a flat blade screwdriver gently working a little at a time around the wheel and prying against the frame. You can only do one wheel at a time this way...

George

Last edited by George S
sncf231e posted:

Here is a very simple clockwork locomotive from the Spanish toy-train manufacturer Rico. I do not have further information on this manufacturer. This locomotive has a gauge between 0 and 1 (about 40 mm), but maybe it was meant to be a floor runner. It is standing on my windowsill for a couple of years now and I thought I make a picture of it. It is lettered for the National Spanish railway company RENFE. 

mceclip1

Regards

Fred

more Rico, the 127 trolley

rico trolley

and a recent passenger set listing on the Bay.

rico pass set

 

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American Flyer Leftovers

Consider the set below

1914_AF_Set_M00

  At first glance it appears to be a set M0 ca 1914.  However, a closer look indicates the frame on the Chicago car is a Type III which was introduced around 1914 when Flyer dropped the Chicago litho treatment and introduced #102 which had completely different litho treatment.

  I purchased this set many years ago and when the Greenberg guide to AF Prewar came out I purchased a copy and started inventorying my collection.  Much to my surprise, this car was not only not listed but shouldn't exist - body/frame mismatch.  Given this finding I looked over my car again and found telltale skid marks on the under frame where the body tabs were bent to keep the two together.  Since the set is like new I thought this odd but then we were talking 1914 or there about so - who knew.  

  A couple of years ago a set exactly like mine went up for bid on the bay.  The seller was from the west coast and he had split the set into the engine/tender and the car.  I tried to get both but was outbid on the engine/tender.  The car, however, came home.

Car_Chicago_Passenger

  It's not quite as nice as the one in my set but it too has the skid marks.

 Time has passed and I have met other collectors who have a car like this one. Between collectors and a couple of train meet sightings my tally of these cars is now 11.

   American Flyer was well known for using up old inventory in various ways.  If I had only my one example I would write it off as a home modification, however, 11 cars owned by collectors in a number of different states is just too many for home modifications which would argue that either Flyer or a Flyer customer put together a manual assembly line and assembled these cars for sale.  At this late date about the only way I can think of to resolve this conundrum is to find a boxed M0 set with the set contents matching  the train in the first picture. 

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Last edited by Robert S. Butler

My offering this week is another one of my purchases at York in October.  I am still processing the experience (It was great) and I am finally getting around to processing some of my purchases.

As I was walking around in the Silver Hall with my head on a swivel and my eyes nearly popping out of my head I spotted this box on a table.

Ives was definitely on my list.  I opened the box and found a passenger set with with 4 cars and an electric outline engine.  I have read somewhere that Ives never cataloged the #60 series cars in a 4 car set.  I started taking the contents out of the box and there at the bottom was an original 1926 catalog. 

(I love looking at catalogs, either original or reproductions.  They can be invaluable when trying to identify items or trace their history. This Ives catalog promises to provide several evenings of reading copy designed to stir the imagination and a desire to have more trains.)

I liked what I was seeing and I negotiated what I thought was a reasonable price so I bought the box. Once I started examining my purchase I discovered with the help of the catalog that it contained No. 502 Electric Train

"The Manager's Special"

As cataloged the set consists of

No. 3252 Engine

No. 60 Sliding Door Baggage Car

No. 62 Parlor Car

and No. 68 Observation Car

There was a 4th car in my box so I checked the page in the catalog that listed separate sale O gauge cars.

And there it is; No. 61 Passenger Car, which is lithographed with "Chair Car" on its side.  

It makes a good looking consist.

The set makes a nice memento of my first trip to York and the folks that I met.

Have a Great Tinplate Weekend

Northwoods Flyer 

Greg 

 

 

Greetings Kibri lovers

 

Won an interesting lot on Ebay the other night--some hard to find Kibri to go with my stations. Note the load of soup on one of the carts and the wooden crates marked Kibri on another. Probably the most fascinating are the 15 miniature52-3 with carts 152-3 with carts 2KIBRI NEWSPAPER WAGONSKIBRI LOT PURCHASED Kibri Cars, Loads, and Stationmaster newspapers--all prewar-- including those from Cologne, Stuttgart, Frankfurt, Lausanne, and New York City.

By the way, we are having a debate about the soup cartons. Did they really come with the Kibri wagon?  Were they part of Kibri's toy kitchen offerings?  My friend Dirk Hertel remembers eating the "spring", "tomato", and "mushroom" soups.  They were not his favorite foods.

Do others in the group have some Kibri loads and newspapers?

 

Enjoy

 

Lew Schneider

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sncf231e posted:

Here is a very simple clockwork locomotive from the Spanish toy-train manufacturer Rico. I do not have further information on this manufacturer. This locomotive has a gauge between 0 and 1 (about 40 mm), but maybe it was meant to be a floor runner. It is standing on my windowsill for a couple of years now and I thought I make a picture of it. It is lettered for the National Spanish railway company RENFE. 

mceclip1

Regards

Fred

I will match your beautiful Rico Renfe , and raise you with its smaller Brother from my collection

I have seen conflicting info as to whether this was from the late 1930's and also its from the early  post war period, but like you have found getting info on Rico can be tough ... a  HO Clockwork Rico Renfe

HO Clockwork Rico

I am about to email the Toy  Museum in Ibi Spain ( where Rico was founded by ex-employees of Paya Hermanos) hoping to find more information on mine , I will include a picture of yours as well if thats ok and I will see what they have to say ?

I think this weekend needs a little taste of Aussie in it ... Here is one of my Maurlyn Silver Chief's  Made in 1948 , in Sydney Australia . This one is missing the front Bogie at present , but another I have is missing the boiler front pressing but has the bogie , so a quick swap shall ensue at some point and make me one whole one

A lovely Deco 4-6-2 clockwork !

http://collectionsearch.nma.gov.au/object/164602 <-- more info

Ooh hang on , it's ALUMINIUM plate ( or aloooooominum as you yanks say ) ... trots off to find the "aluminium plate forum"

1948 Maurlyn

the donor unit for the front bogie... and tender and carriage ( this stuff bends soooo easy lol )

 

Maurlyn second unit

Modelled after our Beautiful "Spirit of Progress " S series locomotives that were given a makeover in 1937-9 with new bodywork

spirit of progress

spirit

Last edited by Fatman
Fatman posted:

I think this weekend needs a little taste of Aussie in it ... Here is one of my Maurlyn Silver Chief's  Made in 1948 , in Sydney Australia . This one is missing the front Bogie at present , but another I have is missing the boiler front pressing but has the bogie , so a quick swap shall ensue at some point and make me one whole one

A lovely Deco 4-6-2 clockwork !

http://collectionsearch.nma.gov.au/object/164602 <-- more info

Ooh hang on , it's ALUMINIUM plate ( or aloooooominum as you yanks say ) ... trots off to find the "aluminium plate forum"

 

the donor unit for the front bogie... and tender and carriage ( this stuff bends soooo easy lol )

 

 

Modelled after our Beautiful "Spirit of Progress " S series locomotives that were given a makeover in 1937-9 with new bodywork

 

 

Very nice! I like it. 

Fatman posted:
sncf231e posted:
 

I will match your beautiful Rico Renfe , and raise you with its smaller Brother from my collection

I have seen conflicting info as to whether this was from the late 1930's and also its from the early  post war period, but like you have found getting info on Rico can be tough ... a  HO Clockwork Rico Renfe

HO Clockwork Rico

I am about to email the Toy  Museum in Ibi Spain ( where Rico was founded by ex-employees of Paya Hermanos) hoping to find more information on mine , I will include a picture of yours as well if thats ok and I will see what they have to say ?

Of course it is OK to use pictures I uploaded here, everything I put on the internet, including everything on my website http://sncf231e.nl/, is free from copyright.

Regards

Fred

Fatman posted:

I think this weekend needs a little taste of Aussie in it ... Here is one of my Maurlyn Silver Chief's  Made in 1948 , in Sydney Australia . This one is missing the front Bogie at present , but another I have is missing the boiler front pressing but has the bogie , so a quick swap shall ensue at some point and make me one whole one

A lovely Deco 4-6-2 clockwork !

http://collectionsearch.nma.gov.au/object/164602 <-- more info

Ooh hang on , it's ALUMINIUM plate ( or aloooooominum as you yanks say ) ... trots off to find the "aluminium plate forum"

1948 Maurlyn

the donor unit for the front bogie... and tender and carriage ( this stuff bends soooo easy lol )

 

Aluminum should pass for tin. I have heard people call aluminum cans “tin cans”.

Eitherway, maybe we should rename this the “old toy trains” forum? Thanks for sharing!

George

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