Gents,
Thanks again. Mike, there are no missing parts, and, as Bill suggested, the poor fit is more a matter of a poor picture. The motor, Mike, is held in place by the port and starboard side of the chassis. A motor block lid then drops on top of the assembled chassis. This is held in place by four screws, two on each side. The whole is made fast with a couple screws around the cab, and, to some extent by the wheels and axles themselves. Per Dan’s warning of years ago, I have been observant of the issue of quartering, so I do not suspect that to be the cause. Oh, and Greg, this is the original motor. There is no observable damage.
Like Bill said, this seems to be an issue of wear… but where? And, like Greg said, it has to be in the drive train. Because both idlers get stripped each time I “fix” Glitchy Gustav, I am inclined to think the motor is, in fact, sitting wrong. Since it is grinding out both idlers at once, wouldn’t this suggest:
- The motor wiggles port-to-starboard, eventually binding the idlers.
- The idlers themselves no longer spin true, eventually binding on the drive gears, much to their physical detriment
- The axles no longer spin true, eventually locking one or more of the drivers.
As for what I am willing to spend, Greg, this has been a running thought project. I am willing to take the time to engineer a solution. Monetarily, I am at that “Las Vegas Rules” tipping point. Since i am in over $100 (I had already purchased long-lost detail parts before this issue with the gears), I have reached a point where I am willing to spend for a permanent fix, but I am not willing (or allowed) to throw cash at experiments anymore. I have considered buying a used one on e-Bay just to enjoy the look of this loco on our railroad again (trust me, it somehow looks “right” amidst our tight curves and bright flowers), but the proposal met with universal non-approval on the Homefront. The style of the locomotive is evocative of some of the side tankers that ran out here, so fitting this shell to another chassis of a different wheel base (2-4-2 or 0-6-0) is on the table, but, for the moment, probably beyond my skillset. Probably…
Glitchy Gustav is in parts (again), and I am happy to take new, hopefully better pictures of the internals if that’d be useful. I’ll call it a homeschool class in “mechanical engineering” and get some help and credit with the crew’s teachers. Otherwise, I am going to bolt him back up to avoid losing parts.
Thanks to all for the renewed interest and continued discussion. Having shredded the gears through misassembly of my recently re-animated m2075, I am hoping to use this to avoid a similar chain of missteps in the future if not to get this loco back on the tracks.
Aloha.
Eric