Showing posts with label Electric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Electric. Show all posts

Thursday, May 9, 2019

Train Day 2019 Success

Thank you to all who supported us by attending the 2019 Train Day festivities at the Billings Depot! After about 50 combined hours of set up, we had 8 operational loops for our guests!


Here is a overhead plan of the layout:



The set up and operation crew consisted of my folks and my uncle, who traveled from Chicago, IL for the event. During the event, we were all dressed as the crew of the Northern Pacific’s Vista Dome North Coast Limited passenger train, circa mid-1950’s. We had a conductor, brakeman, stewardess, and engineer (me). The gents all kept time with antique railroad-era pocket watches.

We also developed a free EBook, available here: https://payhip.com/b/kiXu, and a new website: https://www.modelrrfun.com/ prior to the event. We orchestrated a giveaway contest, where winners would receive either a Thomas the Tank Engine DVD, or one of two O-scale delivery trucks. A few hundred people attended our layout presentation. It was a lot of hard work, and stressful at times, but overall very rewarding to share the fun of model railroading with the community!

A friend loaned us a few boxes of Lionel Fastrack, which proved very helpful on the layout surface we had available. We ended up with 3 Fastrack loops, 3 tubular O27 loops, a Gargraves O54 loop, and a tubular O-style O42 loop. We were provided with 14 identical plastic tables as the foundation for the layout. We arranged them into a 5x3 grid, with an opening in the middle for the control station. This resulted in a 24’x12.5’ surface. We covered each table with a disposable green tablecloth, and ran track power lines between the table edges. There was very little wire visible on the table top, but LOTS of it under the tables, which we managed with cable ties. Once we had the track loops powered and tested, we added buildings, structures, and a bit of scenery to the layout.

Track 1 used O36 Fastrack and proved to be pretty reliable. It was actually used to display a trainset we were selling for a friend (one of the attendees actually purchased it later.) It ran a Postwar Lionel #1467W freight set, consisting of black Erie Alco locomotives (from 1952-3) and O27 freight cars (Lionel Lines stock car, Leigh Valley hopper car, Sunoco tank car, and Lionel Lines SP-style caboose.) Our backup motive power was the yellow Union Pacific Alco locomotives from the same set in earlier years. The Erie locomotives ran well for several hours, and then we gave them a break and pulled in the UP locos for the remainder of the event. Track 1 was powered by a Lionel RW transformer via a single lock-on. The only issues we had with the loop was the Fastrack versus the unevenness of the plastic table tops (as was an issue with every loop for the most part.) The tables were “high” on the edges, and went down half an inch or more into the “bowl” of the middle part of the table top. This was enough of a height difference to cause trouble at the track joints. We occasionally had to tighten the Fastrack connections, and eventually moved the loop slightly so that it only covered two tables instead of three. In the middle of this loop was our farm structures, along with a laptop that looped a video of my previous layout back in Illinois, along with footage of the real North Coast Limited passenger trains.

Track 2 also used O36 Fastrack, and was the most reliable, and maintenance-free-est loop on the layout. It was a Postwar Lionel passenger train, consisting of three Lionel Lines silver passenger cars (Elizabeth, Clifton, and Summit). It started the day being pulled by my father’s silver Union Pacific Alcos, and at midday we changed motive power to my son’s #2046 Lionel Lines hudson steam locomotive. The loop was powered by a Lionel LW transformer, which was fun to use (the whistle button worked great with the hudson’s whistle!) This loop just had one power connection, which was plenty. In the middle of this loop were several neighborhood-ish buildings: houses and a fast food restaurant.

Track 3 was a roughly 8’x3’ O27 layout, that encircled the control station at the very center of the layout. It hosted rapid transit trains (a Bowser streetcar in the morning and an MTH single CTA L car in the afternoon.) This loop was powered by one of the dual-track MRC O27 transformers, and had two lock-ons. This track was prone to separate in various places throughout the day, but was very easy to maintain since I was standing inside the loop all day. One of the 10” straight sections was so dirty that I had to spend some time cleaning it with an Emory cloth, which proved successful. I had intended to run a 4-car L train in the afternoon, but the cars had trouble navigating the O27 curves when coupled together, so I just ran the powered unit. It was still fun, since it provides a fun whistle and station announcement sounds.

Track 4 was an O36 Fastrack dog-boned-shaped track on the north side of the layout. It was powered by Lionel diesel locomotives, and pulled a variety of modernly-produced freight rolling stock. This track did not have ANY problems whatsoever – we just developed some locomotive issues. The rolling stock on this line shifted throughout the day, based on which locomotive was pulling the train. It hosted a die-cast K-line Northern Pacific hopper, a K-line wood-sided IGA reefer, a Lionel Great Northern wood-sided box car, a Lionel Dairy Men’s League reefer, an MTH Northern Pacific steel reefer, a Lionel Copper Range ore car, a K-Line Texaco tank car, a Lionel Montana Rail Link double-door box car, and for cabeese, either a Lionel Montana Rail Link extended vision or a K-Line Chicago Burlington and Quincy offset cupola. We started the day with a Lionel Montana Rail Link SD9 and finished with a Lionel Postwar Celebration Series Chicago Burlington and Quincy GP7. The line was powered by one of the MRC O27 transformers, through a single lock-on. This was probably part of the problem. I had another lock-on prepped, but ran out of time to actually run the power line and connect it to the transformer. The effect was that after the train ran through the loop a dozen times or so, it would become sluggish at certain points, even though the power supply remained at a consistent level. On the other hand, I’ve observed this behavior with trains powered by the MRC O27’s, even when there are MANY lock-ons on a line. The main takeaway from the event was a problem with the MRL SD9. When I picked it up to trade it with the CBQ GP7, I discovered that the front powered truck was no longer attached to the frame! Over time the mounting screw had come undone. What was remarkable was that the locomotive continued running as expected, even though it was literally “sitting” on the truck! Track 4 encircled the “yard” which is where all the backup motive power and rolling stock was stored for easy access. There were also several yard structures nearby.

Ah, Track 5, my bane for much of the day… So, Track 5 and Track 6 (also a problem child) used O27 track, and were mirrors of each other: one on the north side and the other on the south side of the layout. Overall, they were horseshoe-shaped, and met each other at a few spots along the center line of the layout. On paper, this provided a neat effect, and a lot of track for the train to enjoy. The combination of O27 track, the non-flat surface of the table tops, and two S-curves resulted in troublesome operation. Track 5 was the logging train. I set aside my two MTH steam switcher locomotives, a Northern Pacific 0-6-0 and a Chicago Northwestern 0-8-0, with matching cabeese, to pull seven log cars. The cars were all Lionel-produced, with four hauling a set of three stacked-logs each, and the other three hauling one “chunk” of a gigantic tree each. These last three cars were very short overall, only 9” long each. Through many trials, we found that the four “traditional” log cars, at 11.5” each, were too long to handle the track situations mentioned above. Also, after about a dozen derailments, we took the Lionel Northern Pacific caboose out of the roster and placed the MTH Chicago Northwestern caboose there instead. The CNW steamer was unable to handle the O27 S curves at all, as it’s 4 drivers ended up being to long to traverse the S curve properly. So, the NP 0-6-0 got to run all day. It had dozens of derailments in that time, including a spectacular wreak that sent it off the track onto its side. At one point the tender was smoking due to electrical issues. Just a bad day overall for the #1163! In the afternoon, we added some cork padding underneath the curves on the west side of this loop, which appeared to fix the majority of issues. This train, with the final roster being the NP 0-6-0, the three skeleton log cars, and the CNW caboose, ran without any problems for the last 2 hours of the event. It just took a while to figure out the right formula. The line was powered by a Lionel Z transformer via 3 lock-ons. Inside of Track 5 was Track 4, several yard structures on the west side, and a forest and logging buildings on the east side. We created the forest with two pieces of Styrofoam, covered with disposable table cloth, and then poked trees through the cloth into the Styrofoam. The end result was very good!

And onto Track 6, the southern twin of Track 5. This loop started with moderate goals but we had to chip away at them throughout the day. This line was supposed to feature some of the larger Postwar Lionel freight cars, and be pulled by either the (modern) Lionel Chicago Northwestern 4-6-2 pacific steamer, or the Postwar Lionel #2037 2-6-4 adriatic steamer. The rolling stock would have consisted of four 6464-series box cars, a gondola, a flat car carrying trucks, a searchlight car, and a bay window caboose. After much consternation, the roster for the event ended up being the CNW loco, two Great Northern 6464 box cars, and the Lionel Lines bay window caboose. The S curves, track separations, and frequent derailments proved very annoying. At point, a derailment and electrical short went unnoticed for an unknown period of time, resulting in a section of track becoming ALMOST white-hot. The line was powered by a Lionel ZW transformer. Here’s the main problem I have with Postwar transformers, in this situation: if an electrical short occurs, these transformers just keep sending power to feed it. Yes, that is the nature of things, but the MRC O27 transformers actually stop sending power when an electrical problem occurs, saving equipment and preventing several dangers. This happened frequently prior to and during the event. Locomotive 2037 did not perform well, even after lubricating it, so the CNW pacific had to run the line for all 6 hours of the event. We added cork padding to this loop as well, but it was not as effective as the cork on track 5. By the end of the day, I wasn’t dealing with the curves any more – I just manually ran the train backwards and forwards along the 16-foot straight section near the front of our display. Inside of the Track 6 loop was Track 1 and Track 2, along with the “downtown” section of the layout, which included the large MTH station as the focal point.

Track 7 carried the heavyweight passenger steam train on O54 Gargraves track. Everything mentioned thus far was “inside” of the Track 7 loop. Morning power was supplied by a Lionel Frisco 2-8-2 mikado, and afternoon power was supplied by an MTH Chicago Northwestern 4-6-4 covered Hudson. This train, with its large steam locomotives, and its overall 60’ track-length, proved to be a crowd favorite. After various troubleshooting efforts, to ensure that this train wouldn’t impact the train on Track 8, it pulled all six of my Lionel 19” heavyweight Pullman cars and a K-Line Santa Fe heavyweight car at the end. Initially there was a Weaver Railway Express Agency headend car behind the locomotive, but it developed some coupler problems later in the day. All-in-all it was an impressive looking train with either locomotive. It was powered by one of the O27 MRC transformers, through five lock-ons. This track provided the biggest mystery of the day. During the testing phase, the locomotive would lose power within a length of track section, very close to a lock-on. We worked on it for a long time to ascertain what was going on. We replaced the offending piece of track with several smaller pieces, and that resolved the issue. The mystery continues: how do you lose power in the middle of a 3-foot piece of track, with wooden ties, and a lock-on on the adjoining track to the west and a couple tracks to the east? Despite our track alignment efforts, this train did bump into the VDNCL on Track 8 along the eastern side of the layout, so I began running them separately from each other.

Track 8 featured our flagship passenger train: the 11-car Northern Pacific Vista Dome North Coast Limited. The cars were produced by MTH, and were pulled in the morning by a Lionel Northern Pacific F3 ABA set, and in the afternoon by a K-Line Chicago Burlington and Quincy E8 AA set. With just a couple inches difference in the two motive power sets, the train was nearly 21 feet long. And due to the size of Track 8, the entire train could be on straight sections without any curves along the northern and southern edges of the layout. That alone was fantastic! I’ve run this train on my home layout on Track 4, and it chases its tail and is nearly all curves. It was so neat to see this train really stretch out! The track used brand-new O-gauge track from Menards with O42 curves (which is the minimum allowed radius for this set.) The track was prone to disconnecting at a few spots, so we wired them together. Track 8 encompassed Track 7, and thus the entire layout was ringed by Track 8. This train was admired by all our guests. An impressive feat discovered during testing: I ran the entire train with a single lock-on connected to a MRC O27 transformer! I added several more after the initial test, but wow that Lionel F3 has power! As mentioned earlier, this train did bump into the heavyweight train at a few spots, so I had to either make sure they only passed on straight sections, or alternated between the two trains. After attempting to drive 8 trains simultaneously for many hours, I found that alternating Track 7 and 8 was easier and much less stressful. Especially while continuing to deal with the antics of Track 5 and 6.

The train crew greeted visitors and encouraged them to sign up for our giveaway contest. They answered questions and explained the train layout and the real trains that the layout represented. The crew also had to help with any layout problems, as I couldn’t physically reach most issues without shutting the layout down, crawling under the table and addressing them myself. We opened a window, which allowed those outside to see the layout as well, and provided some refreshing spring air to the room.
It was a great event, and I believe it was a success. This was most likely the largest temporary O-gauge layout constructed in this state this century. The engineer would like to thank the following people for making this display and presentation possible:
Bill Monteleone, our Conductor
Merrill Poynter, our Brakeman
Joyce Poynter, our Stewardess
Julie Poynter, our Right-Of-Way Liaison
Charlie Pratt, provider of historic artifacts
Gary Aasheim, provider of track
Toni Calton, provider of historic artifacts
The Billings Depot staff: Marci, Caleb, Michelle and company

My beautiful bride and kids for helping me and putting up with me all the time, even more so this past week!

The Depot did another great job for their second annual Train Day event. The Rimrock modelers had wonderful HO and N scale layouts, in addition to a slew of railroad artifacts and railroad footage playing in their section. We had our O gauge layout and a section of Northern Pacific artifacts and information. The Depot hosted two different gift shops and several activities for kids - a miniature train ride, giant coloring pages, a carnival game, face painting, food, and the return of the "Race the Train" exhibit. It was a beautiful day, and we were so happy to welcome so many folks to the event!

Thursday, March 2, 2017

Through-lines coming Through

Here's an update from the train room for March 2017. I'm very happy to report that my son, now 3 months old, really enjoys model trains. When he's upset, I run the trains for him, and he calms down every time. The combination of the train's motion and sounds have a lulling affect, and he's even fallen asleep a couple of times as the trains circle about in front of him.

Since my last post, I celebrated another birthday, and my parents and my parents-in-law all gifted me some nice railroad-related items. I received two nice posters of steam locomotive paintings, for the Northern Pacific and Great Northern railroads. I was also given several model railroad scenery supplies, including a bag of real coal. I also received an authentic chain for my railroad pocket watch. And, my wife gave me an evening with just the two of us, which meant a lot more to me than a thousand trains. Thank you to everybody for your generosity!

I've been running NP 0-6-0 for my son (well, for me too) and haven't had any problems until recently. I warmed it up one day, and there were no audible sounds from the speaker. This is the same issue I encountered last year, and took it to Caboose Hobbies in Denver to have it repaired. I've contacted The Caboose (new owner and location) to see if they have detailed records of what was specifically repaired last year, in hopes that I can duplicate it.

Over the past week, with help from my father and son, the train layout roster has been changed. We also performed a bit of inventory on the previous and new roster items. As of now, there are 97 items remaining to inventory. The theme of the roster is "through-lines", meaning that these trains are not run by local/regional railroads - they are "passing through". The locomotives in use are the only ones in the collection from their respective railroads. So, here's the new March-April 2017 roster for your review and entertainment:

On Track 1, the Blue Train makes its first-ever run this month. With the majority of its members hailing from the mostly-blue livery of Montana Rail Link, I developed this train simply because my bride likes the color. With last year's acquisition of the Union 76 tank car, this mixed freight now includes three scale-and-time-displaced cars with a locomotive and caboose. As more primarily-blue rolling stock is collected, they will be added to this special freight. This version of the Blue Train consists of the MRL SD9 (Lionel), a Needham Packing reefer (MTH), a Union 76 oil tank (K-Line), an MRL double-door boxcar (Lionel) and an MRL extended vision caboose (Lionel).

Track 2 hosts an all-dairy-related train. The Dairy Express is led by the MPC-era MKT NW2 (Lionel), a GN stock car (Petersen) a Borden milk tank car (Lionel), a Carnation reefer (K-Line), a Dairy Men reefer (Lionel) and an MKT extended vision caboose (Lionel). The NW2 is a single-motor unit and runs very well - it growls like a Postwar locomotive and was the first diesel model I had as a youngster.

On Track 3, reliable and mighty Mikado #4100 pulls mixed freight #408. A variety of goods and materials are in tow behind the Frisco 2-8-2 steam locomotive, built by Lionel in 1993. First, a CP log car (Lionel), followed by two recently acquired Lionel tankers with Philadelphia Quartz and Army liveries, a Midnight-Chief-inspired boxcar (#97191, K-Line), a Peacock reefer (K-Line), an Old Dutch reefer (K-Line), a GN hopper laden with coal (MTH), a CNW flatcar with semi trailer (called a "piggyback") (MTH), a late-80's MRR tank car (Lionel), an IC hopper (Williams) and a Frisco wood-sided caboose.

The ATSF boxcar has a brake-side coupler issue. It's opening at certain spots on the loop, but I haven't determined the cause yet. I thought the magnet was activating, but I've proved that isn't the issue. It only opens when it is coupled to another car, so weight and force, combined with certain sections of track are somehow causing it to malfunction. I'll keep troubleshooting, but for now I've placed the boxcar at the end of the train to prevent uncoupling problems.

Also, as I learned while holding my son, one should not shift the Frisco Mikado into forward from neutral at 25% power. I had gotten used to running the NP Switcher, which has a very gentle shift and can run smoothly at low speeds, but the 2-8-2 experienced extreme acceleration. The log car uncoupled from the tank car and both derailed. Of course, this happened at the inaccessible corner of the layout, so it took some ingenuity, while holding a baby, to pull the cars closer and re-rail them. No harm done, and everything is running again, but it was a small adventure to fix it.

And on Track 4, I've assembled the longest-yet version of the Northern Range heavyweight coach train. This time, its being pulled over Pennsylvania Railroad ROW, so the train is called the "Philly Phoenix" and is pulled by a big GG1 electric locomotive (Williams). The real-life prototype for this locomotive is nicknamed "Blackjack", and can be viewed at the Pennsylvania Railroad Museum. Behind my O-scale version of Blackjack is a troop car converted into an REA head-end car (Weaver), the Van Twiller combine (Lionel, first time on rails ever), the Willow River coach (Lionel), the Willow Valley coach (Lionel), the Willow Range coach (Lionel), the second Willow River coach (Lionel), the Highland Falls sleeper (Lionel), and the Granite Canyon coach (K-Line) takes up the rear.

The GG1 horn sputters frequently while pulling the Philly Phoenix. This can be prevented by holding down the Bell button on the controller. I think this is just a symptom of something fishy going on electronically with Track 4, as I’ve had problems with Whistle/Horn-Bell functionality in the past.

With my son around, the trains are all getting a lot more run time, which means more fun for everybody!

Have a blessed day, and keep those rails shiny!



Bday steam locomotive artwork

The Blue Train

Dairy Express

Frisco 2-8-2

"Chicaqo" piggyback

Santa Fe Blackbonnet paint scheme

Mike and Blackjack

Part of the Philly Phoenix



Thursday, November 3, 2016

Banana cheese logs

Happy November ~

Please enjoy some views and video of the all-electric roster below. Visitors since the last blog posting included my uncle and aunt from the Chicago-area. Also, some new rolling stock just came in: a K-Line reefer full of bananas, a MTH reefer carrying Phenix cheese, and three heavy-duty log cars carrying some massive sections of tree trunks. The banana car really has bananas inside. The cheese car is a scale version of a 36' reefer, and thus it is shorter than the other reefers in the fleet, but is still prototypical. The log cars are referred to as "skeleton cars" since they are "bare-bones" only - just a rolling platform for transporting big logs.

Until next time, keep your rails shiny ~



Trolley, L Train, Interurbans and Electroliner

South Shore and North Shore

3rd rail and overhead electrics

Loops of electric trains


The banana car has lots of accessories

New rolling stock

Three new log cars

New cheese reefer

Banana car with bananas inside

Bananas, cheese and logs


Thursday, October 6, 2016

Electrified

The autumn winds have blown up a flurry of activity in the train room over the past two weeks.

I started by putting away the semi-scale roster. Based on operation, I did some troubleshooting with the whistle on the NP 0-6-0. I confirmed that, once again, there needs to be other power draws on the track for the sound to work properly. For example, a passenger car with consistent lighting, or a street lamp that is tied to the track power. Modern trains controlled by modern transformers require this.
Next I tested the Electroliner successfully. I opened up the front car to re-affix the internal window frames. In doing so, the new wires I installed last month were disconnected. I used Gorilla Glue to affix two long frames and one short frame, and left them to adhere overnight.

I also tested the CSS Interurban set and confirmed that the cowcatcher on the lead unit contacts the track occasionally when running forward. This results in lots of sparks and sometimes a derailment. So I manually bent the cowcatcher about 1/8" and tested it again. The train now runs properly.
Continuing on the Electroliner, I installed longer lead wires on the front motor connection. I noted that two other wires were disconnected, and through additional testing I came to believe that these had been disconnected for years. I reattached another window frame to the front unit.

Taking a break from repair work, I researched existing and potential "long" locomotives that will run on the future train layout to determine minimum operational track radii. I adjusted the master layout planning diagrams to support a minimum radius track of O-54 (for the Electronliner, shays, hudsons, and northerns). Two locomotives yet to be purchased (the Little Joe and Z-6) have a minimum radius of O-72, so they will be unable to run on some of the loops. The three longest loops will be able to support very large radius track, and I'm experimenting with O-81, O-90, O-99 and O-108 radii to see what will fit into the plan. As of now, the plan is to have two O-54 loops, three O-63 loops, three O-72 loops, and three to-be-determined large-radius loops.

I re-soldered the connections on the Electroliner, but after several attempts found that this was causing a short.

I inventoried several cabeese while pondering the electrical issues on the Electroliner.

I reversed the wires coming from the power pickups on the lead car of the Electroliner. This resolved the electrical shorts, and provided extra power for the train. It appears that both sets of wires in this car were wired backwards from the factory. This car, numbered 802, is the lead unit on the train, and is identical to the trailing car, number 801, in all but two ways: 801 has red marker lights, signifying it is at the rear of the train, and 801 has a male electrical connection to the next car. Car 802 is the only car in the 4-unit train that has a female electrical connection, and it seems this was originally installed backwards, although this is not apparent by looking at the wire colors, which are in line with the appropriate wires in the next car. I reattached additional window frames on 3 cars of the Electroliner after resolving the electrical issues.

I disassembled and lubricated PW Lionel locomotive #2037, which has not run on my layout before. There was a rusty staple stuck in one of the gears under the shell, which I removed. The roller pickups were retracted, so I placed them in active position, and tested the locomotive successfully. It is fully functional - forward-neutral-reverse, whistle, and smoke. 2037's were produced for a number of years throughout the Post-War period. A pink version of this locomotive came with the 1957-1958 Girl's Set, and is quite rare. My engine is unique in that it is missing the decorative bell, but I don't think this makes it more valuable :)

I proceeded to clean up all the tools used for repair work, and set up the new all-electric roster. I opened up the powered CSS Interurban car in order to replace the 9V battery (to provide continuous sound effects), but could not find a battery or battery clip inside. Upon further research, I found that there is no clip for a battery, even though one is mentioned in the instructions. (Oh well.)

Anyway, the roster now consists of:
Track 1 - Trolley
Track 2 - CTA L Cars
Track 3 - CSS Interurbans
Track 4 - Electroliner

Everything runs very smoothly except for the trolley, which has problems running over the 45-degree cross track on Track 1. The Bowser trolleys only have one power pickup, which explains why it has difficulties with cross tracks. To resolve this, I could perform some electrical modifications to the track, but I'm not going to. I'll just have to run the trolley at a consistent 40-scale-mph, which is generally fast enough for it to jump over the dead spot in the cross track without shutting off or cycling into neutral. The layout of the future will have zero cross tracks and only a few switch tracks on main loops, because I just don't want to deal with them. In the meantime, commuters on Track 1 will be quite dizzy, but they'll get to their destinations really fast!

All in all it's been a great two weeks of progress in the train room, from repairs to roster changes and more! Keep those rails shiny~


Lionel PW NYC 6464-125 boxcar

K-Line Kingan's reefer car

Electroliner window frames

First window frame in place on Electroliner

Cowcatcher repaired on CSS Interurban

2037 prior to repair



MRL locomotives in Laurel, MT

All-electric roster



Thursday, September 22, 2016

An Intense Day of Ferroequinology!


Happy First Day Of Autumn to all ~ this past Sunday I crammed a lot of train fun into a few hours. 

I headed out at 5:30AM traveling west. I met with friend and fellow modeler Darren in Butte, MT, and had a great conversation regarding the world of trains. After some breakfast, I headed northwest and viewed a static outdoor railroad equipment display in Deer Lodge, MT. The equipment has been cosmetically restored, and consists of all Milwaukee Road equipment: a bay window caboose, an E-9 diesel locomotive, and a Little Joe electric locomotive. The electrified Milwaukee Road line used to travel through Deer Lodge, beginning further east in Harlowton.  

Leaving Deer Lodge, I continued northwest. I attended a train show in Missoula, MT. I sold the 5 pieces of equipment that I brought, and purchased a Lionel PW 6464-125 NYC boxcar from Jim Caras, and a K-Line K742-8025 Kingan's ham/bacon reefer from Bob Peterson. About 60 tables were set up, 5 of which included O gauge trains. There were lots of kids, HO trains, and railroad artifacts. There were also two or three small, functional layouts. 

After the train show I visited the restored Northern Pacific depot in Missoula and photographed NP 4-6-0 steam locomotive #1356 on static display. Then I viewed the "City of Spokane" passenger train parked in the Missoula MRL yard. The train was made up of 18 or so historic, road-worthy passenger cars from throughout the country, generally traveling from Denver to Spokane. I've seen several of these cars parked in Billings at various times, but it was neat to see them all together. 

On my return trip I photographed the ruins of a Milwaukee Road electrical substation along I-90 east of Missoula. Then I explored the abandoned BNSF tracks in Homestake, MT right along the Continental Divide east of Butte, MT. I found a loose piece of a switch mechanism to add to my railroadania collection. 

All in all a great day of trains and 10 hours of driving in Montana! Keep those rails shiny ~


Deer Lodge MT: Little Joe E70, my Yukon, and E9 36A

Sunlight through the E9's cab

Missoula train show

NP Ten-wheeler 1356 in Missoula

The City of Spokane parked in Missoula

Abandoned Milwaukee Road substation along I-90

Forgotten rails atop the Continental Divide

Unused rails at Homestake at the end of summer

Switch equipment with a loose part

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Electroburgers on the menu!

This week marks the triumphant return of the Electroliner to active service. I bought the Electroliner new in the early 2000's. It is the only brass model I own, manufactured by 3rd Rail/Sunset Models. It is a beautiful scale model, but from day one it has had problems. While troubleshooting these problems, I quickly learned that I don't want to invest in any other brass models in the future. They are very finicky.

Earlier this year, I had the motors serviced in Michigan. This week I performed the final major work, which involved swapping two motor lead wires in the head unit (#802). The photos below show the 'Liner laid out on a foam "workbench", with wires attached to the roller pickups and wheels. It kind of looked like it was connected to life support, or was possibly part of an experiment being performed by Dr Frankenstein. Regardless, this allowed me to power up the train while it was laying on its side, and confirmed without a doubt that the front and rear motors were turning in the opposite directions. I also saw that the rubber tires on the front wheels had degraded to the point that pieces of them were whipping around. I removed the offending pieces of rubber. Later this year I'll apply some Bullfrog Snot to these wheels to provide more traction. Anyway, I opened the shell on the lead unit and unplugged the wires that lead to the motor. I cut the two wires and swapped their placement on the motor connector. I reconnected everything and powered up the Electroliner again, and all the wheels were running in sync. I can't prove it, but I think this was a problem from the factory, as the 'Liner had never run smoothly on the layout in Illinois. The two motors working against each other caused the rubber tires to fall apart, and eventually resulted in one of the motors being damaged (repaired earlier this year).

I placed the Electroliner on Track 4 and tried it out. I found that it has some trouble with electrical flow on the west side of the layout at slower speeds. But when I opened up the throttle, it zips around the whole loop flawlessly. The sounds and horn features work too. There is still some work to do: the aforementioned traction tire repair, the interior lights are out on the rear unit, and most of the interior window frames need to be reattached. But, I've placed the train back on the active roster, since it is performing very well on the track. I've now run the Electroliner more in Montana then I had in Illinois, and am very pleased with its performance. It has a GREAT "clickity-clack" sound which is quite realistic. I know this because I've had the pleasure of riding on the original #801-802 Electroliner at the Illinois Railway Museum. They are currently restoring it again, so we'll all have the chance to ride it again in the coming years. I won the race though: my Electroliner got fixed before theirs!

Also this week another historic Lionel Postwar 6464 car was added to the roster. The red Minneapolis & Saint Louis 6464-525 boxcar is from the original 1957-1958 production run. So far I've collected 5 of the 29 original 6464-series boxcars, and it's been fun so far!

I've updated some of my model railroad spreadsheets to reflect current train prices, and improved the layout on a tab containing Postwar Lionel information. I also purchased some more rolling stock, which will be detailed in next week's blog post.

Keep those rails shiny ~



Electroliner on the operating table

Electroliner rounds the SE curve of Track 4


6464-525, nearly 60 years old

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Total Re-org and CMRM Part 1

Howdy readers – today’s long post details a lot of work done in the Train Room over the past few days, and Part 1 of my visit to the CMRM.

I devoted nearly 12 hours to the Train Room this week, and while most of the changes will be invisible to guests, it was an extremely fruitful week! I’ll start with the layout…

I set up the CTA 4-car “L” set on Track 3. From reading the manual, I decided to try out a fun feature that allows me to program the train to stop automatically at a set of stations that I decide. To program the train, I use the “whistle/horn” and “bell” buttons on the transformer. However, the Lionel ZW transformer I’ve been using to power the set since March 2014 is about 70 years old and doesn’t have these buttons. A ZW transformer has a whistle lever, but this doesn’t work that well for programming purposes. To get around this, Lionel manufactured separate buttons that can be wired between the transformer and the track to provide whistle/horn and bell functionality to any transformer. I had been using these separate buttons, but there are a few drawbacks. One, a ZW controls four trains, meaning I would need 8 buttons (4 trains x 2 buttons each) to get full sound capabilities on each track. Two, these buttons are about $20 each, and I have 3, so it would be kind of expensive to get an entire set for a ZW transformer. Three, I use some rather beefy 10 or 12 gauge wire to power the layout, but these buttons use tiny 18 gauge wire, so when the buttons are used, the power flow is decreased significantly. Four, since bringing the remainder of the collection back from Illinois, I now have my full complement of transformers available to me, some of which have built-in whistle/horn and bell functionality.

So, I decided to make a big change in the layout power supply configuration. I swapped out the 250W Lionel ZW transformer with two 270W MRC transformers. This improves things significantly, and solves the whole whistle/horn and bell button issue. It also means that 2 tracks get to share 270W instead of 4 tracks sharing 250W, so train performance will improve overall. The MRC transformers are controlled by wired remotes. These remotes provide some handy added functionality as well – they have a “brake” button that smoothly slows down the train, and a “stop” button to be used in case of a problem that immediately kills power to both tracks. While I prefer operating a ZW to a wired remote, I am so far pleased with the results.

Anyway, back to the “L” cars… After hooking up the MRC transformers, I began programming the CTA set to stop at specific spots on the track and announce specific stations in an order of my choosing. I followed the manual, and after several attempts I got the train programmed. Even with buttons for the horn and bell functions, it is difficult to get the timing just right. When the train is running, I can send it a command to enter “auto mode”, and it will run and stop indefinitely without any prompting from me. It’s a neat feature for an “L” train!

I set up The Canadian on Track 4, which consists of 3 F3 locomotives and 6 streamlined passenger cars. For more details on this train, please see my December 5, 2013 blog post. This is the first time I’ve run this set in Montana, and it looks really sharp. And now I can operate the horn and bell a lot more effectively with the MRC transformer.

I ran all four trains and found that the extra-long CNW Trainmaster will bump trains on Track 3 when it is rolling on Track 2. So, I’ll just run 3 trains at a time, which is fine and slightly less noisy. Also, I discovered that CP Coach 111 has a low magnet on one of its couplers that occasionally strikes a track joint on the west side of Track 4, which needs some fixing. Later in the week, I opened up CP Coach 111 to check for problems with the truck. While I didn’t see any problems, I was pleasantly surprised by the car’s construction. I’ve never had need to open one of MTH’s passenger cars, but they are well built, especially compared to earlier car designs from other manufacturers. I ran the car with the low magnet at the rear and didn’t have any problems after 10 loops.

In preparation for the Christmas season, I set up the O-scale nativity set that my wife gave me. It looks pretty good with some rocks in the background. It is a neat feature that helps us remember what Christmas is all about!

Also in “above layout” news, I’ve hung up two more artifacts: a PRR can and an MRL crossing post license. I’ve also had some correspondence with the MTH Service Dept regarding the NP 0-6-0 sound problem. I also gave the room a good dusting. Last night I vacuumed the floor and some surfaces.

Now for “under layout” news… I spent a lot of Saturday sorting and organizing all of the non-train tubs. Meaning, the scenery, figures, vehicles, track, transformers, accessories, buildings, electronics, non-O-gauge trains, and a plethora of other items were removed and then replaced into new homes for storage. I found a few things I had been missing, and threw out some un-needed boxes and miscellany. Another big project was the completion of my “every train needs a box” initiative, which started and ended on Saturday. I have four specially designed padded corrugated boxes made for storing/transporting O gauge trains. These boxes now contain all of my trains that don’t have their original box anymore, and each box has a category: Post War Engines, Post War Freight, Modern Engines, and Modern Rolling Stock. After sorting everything, I reorganized the under-table area and the locomotive closet. The under-table area is now in a “U”-shaped storage formation, with the tubs/boxes that I access most often in front and on top. The tubs at the bottom of the locomotive closet contain items that I most likely will not need to access until the layout of the future is being built.

To help keep track of which “train box” contains which train, I’ve added a Location column to my inventory spreadsheet, so I can quickly see where a train is located in the train room. For example, if the field shows “TB1”, then I know that it is located in “Train Box 1”.


And now, back to Colorado...

On the second Saturday of our trip, my wife attended a shopping event in Loveland, CO, and I headed to Greeley. The Colorado Model Railroad Museum is located there in a 15,000 sqft steel building. I had a delightful visit! The museum contains a very large HO layout, a Thomas-themed O gauge layout, a wooden trainset for little kids, a real caboose, a Lionel collection, a large collection of railroadania, and a gift shop. I was there for about 3 hours, but easily could have spent the entire day. There were folks of all ages there to visit, and there were over a dozen staff members or volunteers onsite as well. I took a lot of pictures and video, and got some good ideas for layout details, as well as building construction ideas. I also purchased a Lionel Yule Marble flat car to commemorate the trip, and serve as a birthday present to myself in a few months J

The full-size caboose is a restored Colorado & Southern (CB&Q) rear-cupola wooden model. It sits on rails and ties inside the building. The interior is open for inspection, and is fully outfitted with authentic, period details (including the linens on the bed).

The O gauge layout, although rather small, is very impressive. It is basically a maze of interconnected track loops, and is covered with modern and historic operating accessories. There are 6 trains on the track, which consist of a Thomas-style locomotive and a caboose. There are buttons all around the perimeter of the layout which activate the multitude of accessories, and control the whistle sounds on the locomotives as well. The most impressive part of the layout is the control system, which is housed in a large set of processors on the wall. The system insures that the trains do not run into each other using a rather complicated set of blocking. The trains also run very fast, so they look sort of like a swarm of bees zipping in every direction when in motion.

The Lionel collection consists of about 200 Post War pieces in a glass display case. They also have some Post War transformers, accessories, and advertising on display.

The railroadania collection is spread throughout the entire facility, and consists of nearly 1,000 artifacts ranging from full-size semaphores to vintage time schedules. If time allowed, I would have spent more time studying these items. Highlights include a collection of 40 Pullman seat cloths from various railroads, over 100 time schedules from various railroads in a custom-built wooden rack, which visitors can read, railroad signage and uniforms, one of the most complete railroad lantern collections I’ve ever seen, 100’s of railroad switch keys in a glass case, and a pair of seats from a MRR Olympian Hiawatha passenger car. Wow!

The gift shop had mostly touristy items. However, there were a few custom model railroad cars for sale (including the Yule Marble car I purchased), and several DVD’s produced in house about layout construction and scenery. These looked pretty interesting!


But, the unopposed star of the museum is the massive HO layout, which I will talk about next week in the Thanksgiving post! Until then, have a jolly time, and keep all of your rails shiny ~

The November-December Roster: MKT NW2 Grain Train, CNW Trainmaster Fast Reefer Freight, CTA 6200-series “L” cars, CP F3 ABA The Canadian

The Canadian

CNW reefer freight

The CTA 6200-series set

PRR can

Under-layout view

Train box for PW Freight cars

The model railroad nativity set

Lionel display at the CMRM

Passenger car towel display at the CMRM

Railroad time tables display at the CMRM

Part of the railroad lantern collection at the CMRM


O gauge layout at the CMRM, notice the control system on the wall

C&S caboose inside the CMRM