Not to side track but there is an app ?
We have an app!? Groovy! I mean sic! That is sooo GenY David.
BD is not your ordinary run of the mill site owner and host now is he???
Never looked for an app, but just get the website on safari and bang zoom in chatting or posting away
Hmm cannot find the app on my iPhone. David can you show us the app?
Donât know how to get a screen shot but this is from the app on my android
I know I got here by searching on my firefox app from my phone and then saved the sight to my phone and got a different screen view for the sight
An abbreviated page when on the phone.
I just searched the sight and came up with this:
Scroll down and Devon gives a pic and his explanation.
Devon, I love your explanation.
Devonâs here until Thursday! Try the veal!
HuhâŚan App appeared for my phone, so I accepted it.
Anyway, to review, Kid-zilla and I laid out all the parts.
He then took each chassis to the tracks to see if their power trains worked. For one, I cracked it open and put leads to the motor. Good to go. By his count, we have enough stuff on hand to try three separate projects, bringing us toâŚ
Part the First: Emmett
I had forgotten that we have a couple circus cars. He did not. He immediately realized that our tender from the museum would give us a circus train (so much for an OR&L inspired loco or my 4-6-0T!). I disassembled the tender, and he gave it a thorough cleaning in the deep sink.
Even with soap and an old toothbrush, he couldnât get all the drek off the old thing. This was a valuable observation as we go forward, as paint, I learned in the Navy, does not stick to dirt!
We spent some time finding a lower hull plate, pilot, and leading truck for the old boy, but, minus a pushrod, we soon had him on tracks for some more testing.
Emmett needed a little coaxing, but âheâ came to life. He was binding, and we discovered I had not properly aligned everything when I matched Emmett to his new lower hull plate. It wasnât too long, however, and the circus came to town! Here we see the Triple O crew accepting their new motive power into service.
For reasons not clear, my videos remain locked in my phone, but weâll get them up eventually.
Not the project I intended, but, per CINCHOUSE guidance, it cannot be just my hobby! Now Kid-zilla has an engine he restored, and, for however long Emmettâs gears last, âheâ - with donor parts from three other locos - is again bringing joy after years in storage. The fact that Emmettâs rebirth and Kid-zillaâs success is the product of the generosity of three people over many years makes this little engine pretty special, so thanks to all.
Kid-zilla is already cleaning up the other hulksâŚ
âŚso stay tuned for Part the Second!
Have a great week!
Eric
Does Cinchouse have a jewellery cleaner? If youâre having difficulty cleaning tight spots it could be quite handy. They can cost as little as $6AUD from AliExpress
https://www.aliexpress.com/w/wholesale-ultrasonic-cleaner.html?spm=a2g0o.home.auto_suggest.1.650c76db2dd4UY
Nope. Put it on my âto getâ list! Itâd have to be big enough to hold a boiler and firebox, though!
FinallyâŚ
âHurry, hurry, hurry! Step right up and get your tickets for the circus!â
VIDEO: âEmmettâ returns to service
Kid-zilla is pretty proud of this!
Eric
Buying salvage trains is one of my favorite things to do, Iâm a modeler first, so this is like getting a new toy, teardown and rebuild, the best part of the hobby for me. Very satisfying and getting the feel of accomplishment.
Hmmm, the 1.3 litre ultrasonic might fit your requirements and theyâre pretty inexpensive. However, the hidden cost might just be the amount of jewellery you will need to purchase Cinchouse, to justify that size!
John,
Iâve come to this conclusion, too. Iâve littered LSC with posts documenting my effort to keep another 10-wheeler rolling, my LGBO Olomana working, and my LGB Zillertalbahn pulling. It is frustrating, but these repairs that have become campaigns have taught me a lot about how these models are put together and thus how to maintain them.
We botched this project, too, and learned a bit more. Somehow, a wheel got out of quarter and jammed a siderod. Long story short, seems we didnât make sure all the journals were in place when we buttoned Emmett up, letting the forward driver work loose. Irritating âown goalâ but not a fatal error!
Eric
Update:
Emmettâs leading truck gave way, with the stem running up into the chassis snapping off at the base and the frame holding the wheels snapping in half. I suspect a dog may have jumped on it, as Kid-zilla has been playing with Emmett on a track he set up in the living room.
Regardless of cause, now I have to conjure a solution. eBay came up âzero,â with parts heaps notably lacking these leading trucks. I went to the Bachmann website. The new trucks seem a lot more robust, but they seem to attach to modern chassis in a radically new fashion. Has anyone retrofitted one of these new leading trucks to an older 10-wheeler? Failing that, has anyone designed an built one from scratch? That would be the best long term solution, actually, as Emmett and the two derelicts all now lack leading trucks and it would provide a solution should North Starâs leading truck give way.
Thanks in advance!
Eric
One more project on the listâŚ
Eric, if you are talking about the truck with the metal strip (drawbar,) Iâm sure I have read that you can just bolt them on to the chassis bottom plate.
I havenât made one for the 4-6-0, but I made pilot trucks for other locos.
I assume then the truck broke you were left with 2 metal strips with the wheels in them? Hereâs a photo of an old one:
So you just need a âUâ channel to fit over the metal strips and a brass strip as a âdrawbarâ.
Or is your truck even older than that?
I want to help, but living and shipping from Ottawa Canada would be a tad expensiveâŚ
I do have two pilot wheel assemblies for the Bachmann ten wheelers that I can spare.
You can use the âNEW and improvedâ latest pilot wheel assemblies, if you can make an attachment point on the existing underframeâŚworth a try if you are game for it.
Let me know, and I can package the needed old style parts and send them to youâŚ(No charge)âŚit would probably take at least 3 weeks to reach you.
Fred Mills [email protected]
Eric, is it a clean plastic snap? If you think it can be placed together and only shows a hairline it may be worthwhile trialling a solvent glue like MEK methylethylketone.
You hold the pieces together. Capillary action will suck it into the crack, melt the plastic which then solidifies as the MEK dissipates leaving little evidence of gluing. Once completely dry you have less worries of glue failure as the MEK has evaporated and the plastic becomes a solid welded plastic.
Iâve used it on styrene like plastics with success. I believe ABS glue does the similar but with ABS.
HiEveryone,
Here is the picture of the break:
You can see that the post holding the truck to the frame snapped as did the truck itself.
It would seem that I could try Peteâs (@PeterT ) and Billâs (@Hines ) suggestion, using a solvent style glue and a bit of a U-channel to brace it. Then I should be able to tap a hold into the step and drive a screw through the lot. There would be nothing hurt in trying.
Fred (@freddy ) thanks for the kind offer of replacement parts. I will write you separately. They would be welcomed.
As for drilling into the frame to mount a new style truck, I am wondering if the plastic will handle it. The stems that take the screws holding the bottom of the chassis to the upper part of the chassis gave way, too, and we are going to have to get long screws to hold this contraption together. One part we are going to see if we can âfixâ with a zip tie held in place with CA, reinforcing the steam and allowing the screw to bite. The cause of the break is unknow, but could be 1.) we overtightened it, 2.) we used screws from a different derelict that were slightly larger, 3.) the plastic was old and brittle and could no longer handle the stress of holding together a working locoâ, or 4.) Act of Dog. One more thing to puzzle out as we proceed.
Eric
Eric;
Today, I have mailed you two âNewâ pilot trucks for your 10 wheelers (No Charge) EnjoyâŚ
Please send me your telephone number, and email address Does your email address have a dot at the end of it ?
Fred Mills