As you view some the information provided on ShowMyHobby.com, you may encounter certain terms or abbreviations. Many of them may be self-explanatory or overtly obvious. Others, however, may not be and/or they may be the author’s own creation. In some cases, words, phrases, or abbreviations may be linked to site tags or categories. In the descriptions of some products, especially those imported into the site, some of the abbreviations may be expanded for you. In almost all cases where an algorithm was used to expand an abbreviation, you will typically see a term = value pair where the term represents a word or an abbreviation and its meanings is the word or phrase that follows an equal mark. Example: pLFW = Plastic Low-Flange Wheels. The term is “pLFW” and its meaning is “Plastic Low-Flange Wheels”. Below are several sections that identify most of the vernacular used on this website.
Product Conditions
In the shop, many products are listed from time to time. I use the following terms to describe the conditions of the products that are listed on this site. This site uses technology that posts products on this site to eBay and possibly other marketplaces. Those other marketplaces my use different terms for formal conditions. Attempts to match condition between marketplaces may be made, but it all cases, the conditions provided on this site are the most accurate. Conditions have a ranking value as well and many times may be the starting point of the established price or value of an item. For instance, New has a ranking value of 100% which represents that the item is Factory New and believed to be in its best possible condition. The Good condition has a ranking value of 60%. So, you might see a used product listed in the shop that has a starting price of 60% of its original manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Example: A new Bachmann Steam Locomotive that is NEW might have a retail price of $259.99 while that same used locomotive may be in Good shape with a price of $155.99 (60% of the $259.99 retail price of the new one). Be aware, that there is a possibility for an item to be Better Than New.
Conditions
Meaning
Rank Value
Enhanced
This condition is typically a modifier of other conditions wherever 2 conditions can be stated. When it appears where only 1 condition can be stated, then the previous condition was probably not known, and the item was found to have been enhanced or it was enhanced by this website’s owner. An enhance by the owner can very easily make an item worth more than it was originally when it was first manufactured.
125%
Upgraded
This condition is typically a modifier of other conditions wherever 2 conditions can be stated. When it appears where only 1 condition can be stated, then the previous condition was probably not known, and the items was found to have been previously upgraded by someone.
110%
New
Factory New
100%
Old Stock
Older/Vintage Factory New item (Packaging may show signs of age)
95%
Like New
Like New, Opened Factory Seal, May not be in original packaging, Probably examined, photographed, or tested.
90%
Excellent
Excellent condition better than Great but not NEW. May not be in original packaging.
85%
Great
Great (between Excellent and Very Good). May be missing original (or any) packaging.
80%
Opened
Opened item. Unsure about newness. May not have been evaluated or tested.
75%
Works
Tested and Works reasonably well or better.
75%
Very Good
Very Good (between Great and Good). Is Functional.
70%
Good
Good overall condition, useful, works, original packaging not considered, may have marks, scratches, blemishes, and inconsequential errors, damages or missing parts.
60%
?
Questionable as in Not evaluated or not sure what it is. (Condition matches AVERAGE or FAIR)
50%
Fair
Fair, Average, Reasonable, Unremarkable.
50%
Unknown
Unknown – Not examined, Not Evaluated. Until it is, it is assumed Fair or Average.
50%
Used
Used, Assumed Fair or Average, Believed to be functional and working decently.
50%
Untested
Hasn’t been evaluated or tested and probably won’t be. This condition is only applied to items that are believed to be functionally operational. Until tested, it is assumed AVERAGE.
50%
Okay
OK, some issues, (between Fair/Average and Poor), Useable.
40%
Poor
Poor and has consequential issues, noticable errors or ommissions, but can probably be useful to someone albeit not necessarily as intended.
30%
NotWorking
Tested but is Not Working properly
25%
Broke
Broke and disfunctional as intended, may need repairs to be useful, could be missing necessary parts
20%
Bad
Bad, damaged, beyond broken, almost unrecognizable.
10%
Junk
Really Bad, typically unuseful, might can be rebuilt or used with something else or for an alternate purpose than intended.
5%
Free
Free as a condition means this item has no resellable value as is according to me/us, but, I/WE do not with to trash it as someone might be able to make use of it.
0%
Package Types
Below are the abbreviations used for the type of Packaging or Container an item utilizes.
Packages
Meaning
ABB
Athearn Blue Box
Bag
Bag
Bdl
Bundle
Box
Box
Btl
Bottle
Bxd
Boxed
Can
Can
Crd
Card
Crt
Crate
Cse
Case
Csm
Custom Made Package
Ctn
Carton
DpC
Display Case
Dsp
Display
Env
Envelop
Fil
File
n/a
Not Applicable or None
No
None
None
Not Packaged
Slv
Sleeve
Tub
Tube
Wrp
Wrap
Yes
Bxd
Coupler Types
Below are the abbreviations used for the types of couplers on trains.
Couplers
Meaning
1HHC
1 Hornhook Coupler
1KdC
1 Kadee Coupler
1OKC
1 Operating Knuckle Coupler
1Rc+1MLc
1 Rapido Coupler + 1 Micro-Line Coupler
2AKCs
2 Automatic Knuckle Couplers
2HHC
2 Hornhook Couplers
2KCs
2 Knuckle Couplers
2KdC
2 Kadee Couplers
2MLCs
2 Micro-Line Couplers
2OKCs
2 Operating Knuckle Couplers
2RCs
2 Rapido Couplers
HHC
Hornhook Couplers
HHC+KdC
1 Hornhook Coupler + 1 Kadee Coupler
KdC
Kadee Couplers
MC
Missing Couplers
NoC
No Couplers
Wheel Types
Below are terms and abbreviations for the type of wheels used on trains.
Wheels
Meaning
HFW
High Flange Wheels
LFW
Low Flange Wheels
MFW
Medium Flange Wheels
mHFW
Metal High Flange Wheels
mLFW
Metal Low Flange Wheels
mMFW
Metal Medium Flange Wheels
NoTrks
No Trucks
NoWhls
No Wheels
pHFW
Plastic High Flange Wheels
pLFW
Plastic Low Flange Wheels
pMFW
Plastic Medium Flange Wheels
This information is current as of March 30th, 2023.
Here is a very interesting project for the O scalers out there. As some of you may know, ShowMyHobby has had a consigned Gantry Crane up for sale for about four years now. What makes this crane so unique is that the state I received it in was never previously made by Lionel. Yes, Lionel makes Gantry Cranes. They make some that are very similar to this one and some might even say they make better ones than this one. But, they did not make this particular combination. What I received on consignment appears to be a combination of 2 different items available from Lionel. Item #1 is the trackside gantry platform base which is part of Lionel’s Command Control Trackside Crane. Gantries are structures built typically to straddle over a track or other workspace. Item #2 is the Crane from a Conrail Command Control Crane Car by Lionel. Apparently, someone removed the crane from the car and placed it on top of one of the gantry platforms. I received the gantry crane as 2 detachable pieces: the crane and the gantry. Until about the middle of December, 2022, I only displayed this crane for sale at train shows. Quite a few people have looked at it over the years, inquired about it, and even shown a little bit of interest in it. But, thus far, no one has purchased it. So, to increase the exposure and let even more people know about this interesting gantry crane combination, I decided to list the item for sale on ShowMyHobby.com around the middle of December, 2022, which also listed it on eBay.
Here are some pictures taken of the gantry crane combo before I started upgrading it and making it work:
I took pictures of the Gantry Crane combo practically the first week it was consigned over 4 years ago. I have taken other pictures of it over the years too. Finally, wanting to sale all of the big Lionel O scale train items in my inventory, I put it up for sale online as a 5-day auction using some of the pictures I have taken. I think 2 people added it to their watch list on eBay. I’m not certain how many people looked at it. The listing was very lengthy full of my observations and some of my history of the item plus a little bit of the information that I could piece together about it from Lionel and the internet. As the item didn’t come with any type of power source or control methods, I didn’t have an easy and convenient way to test the item. Additionally, in the previous 4 years, I just had not invested the time to dig really deep into this item. To me, the crane looked attractive, and I felt as if it could probably be made to work. I promised in the write-up of the first listing to take the time to pull out my multimeter and a 9-volt battery and check whether or not the motors inside the crane actually work.
Finally, early morning on 12/21/2022, I pulled this item out of storage, weighed it, and took the time to try to test the crane electrically using my digital multimeter. I wasn’t able to get any readings or feedback at all from the 4 contact strips located underneath the round base of the crane. I unscrewed the diecast metal shell from the frame via 4 screws underneath it. As I looked around inside, I saw 4 horizontally positioned motors. I could also see why I couldn’t get any readings using the multimeter. There appears to be a missing PC Board or DCC decoder as I could see several plugin connectors that must plug into something that should be inside the cab shell. I also could see an on-off switch that is accessible via one of the sliding doors. I originally thought this might be an On-Off power switch or a switch that turns on the lights. I would learn later the true purpose of this switch. There were no connections between the contacts on the bottom of the crane’s base and the motors inside. The missing board would provide those connections. Hence the reason my meter returned no feedback.
I also noticed the gears that engage with the motor that rotates the crane 360 degrees has 1 gear that is spring loaded. It looks like that gear is designed to engage and disengage with the main drive that rotates the crane. When disengaged, the motor runs but no rotation occurs, plus the crane can be manually turned by hand in this mode. By default, the gear is disengaged. When the gear is engaged, the crane can rotate 360 degrees when the rotation motor is turning and the crane cannot be rotated freely by hand in this mode. Whatever causes the sprung gear to engage/disengage was not present inside the cab of the crane. Apparently, this is something else that is missing. I could push the sprung gear into place with my hand but of course, it didn’t stay in place when I took my fingers off of it.
In the process of turning the crane upside down and removing the shell, some of the strings that represent wire cables slipped off a couple of the pulleys and at some point, the large hook fell off the pulley assembly that shuttles the hook up and down. Eventually, I would also notice that there is a set of metal cross braces missing from the boom. Additionally, both lights are missing. I can also see 2 trigger switches that appear to activate at the maximum extents of the boom. My guess is those trigger switches are supposed to stop the boom from electrically moving too far and causing harm to the motor when it is in operation (provided the PC / Decoder board is present). I updated the listing with some of these details including suggestions on how I felt someone buying the crane might be able to get it working.
After the auction expired without receiving any bids, I decided to delve deeper into the suggestions that I made within the listing regarding ways a buyer might get the crane operating.
Here are the suggestions that I made (slightly updated into numbered steps with part numbers and links):
If the PC Board / Decoder [cs-691CRANC01-p] is available for the car, obtain it.
If the LED lights and covers [cs-6109899300-p, cs-6209805017-p, cs-6109899301-p, cs-6109899302-p] for them are available, obtain them.
One would need to have a TMCC Cab-1 and a TMCC command base.
If the above items could be obtained, then it should be real simple to get the crane operating electrically by replacing the missing parts.
One could then connect the contacts under the rotating part of the Crane to wires, run those wires down one the of the legs of the gantry base, and then connect the wires directly to the tracks.
Doing the above should allow a TMCC Cab-1 remote to operate the Gantry Crane combo.
If the parts are not available at Lionel, perhaps with some tinkering and experimentation, one could either adapt one of Lionel’s wired gantry crane controllers to work with this combo or create their own crane motor driving control system.
A couple days went by after the auction ended. Christmas arrived. I wanted to get this Lionel Gantry Crane combo working. relisted, and sold (as quickly as possible). So, I did some more research and followed some of my own suggestions. I visited Lionel’s parts website to see if they have parts available for either the crane car or the gantry crane. The first time I did this, I found a crane car, but not the Conrail Crane car. When I looked at the list of parts for the crane that I thought was similar, I didn’t see any available parts that were needed. I mostly saw large sub-assemblies. It could be that I was looking at the wrong item. Who knows?
On the day (12/30/2022) I started writing this article, I searched again (to obtain links) and found the actual Conrail Command Control car. Lionel does have some necessary parts available that I suggested might exist. They did not appear to have all the necessary parts available to make this crane combo work, especially the way I felt would be the quickest and easiest way to get it up and running via TMCC. Additionally, the parts are somewhat expensive. There may come a day when they have all the necessary parts available again. I have already spent a good amount of money replacing parts and upgrading other items consigned by the same consignor of this gantry crane. Most of the repaired or upgraded items have been sold. However, an S scale Lionel American Flyer Minneapolis & St. Louis Baldwin Diesel Switcher locomotive that now runs absolutely great using the newly replaced parts from Lionel also has not sold yet. It too has been listed online for at least 2 to 3 years. So, feeling a little bit discouraged with the switcher’s selling results, I am unwilling to put hundreds of dollars into this crane to purchase the Lionel replacement parts that I suggest would work. {Little did I realize that I would invest thousands of dollars of my time in getting this crane to work and relisted.}
I located examples of Lionel’s trackside crane. They have made many different crane models over the years. I have seen some of their older models with their own wired controls. The gantry Command Control Trackside Cranes Lionel is selling now have decoders in them and work with their Legacy Control Systems. I found a video of someone at Lionel demonstrating the operation of the Command Control Crane Car with the use of a TMCC Cab-1 remote and command base. The model being demonstrated is the Burlington Northern crane car and includes the RailSounds Boom Car as well. The boom car has a sound module in it. I have searched for parts for both the trackside crane and the crane car. Seeing the video and reading the online manuals for all of the aforementioned items explained exactly how the original Conrail Command Control Crane car should work. The instructions for the crane car include details about how the pulley strings should be arranged and about the lever inside the car that prevents the crane from rotating. Lionel states that the crane should be in free-rotation mode during transport such as shipping the item probably to prevent the rotation drive gears from getting damaged. Research also revealed that the switch inside the cab is used to switch between Run and Program modes of the decoder that is supposed to be inside the crane and/or to allow the car to operate on standard AC track powered layouts or Command Control layouts. Armed with this updated knowledge, I reexamined the Gantry Crane combination that I am selling by taking apart the rotating disc underneath it. There I discovered that it is not possible to run any wires up through the rotating base of the crane to make it operate. Only with the Decoder board installed can communications through 3 wires that can be attached to the rails allow for remote control or any physically disconnected control of the crane. This would make my previous suggestions of someone creating their own trackside motor drive practically impossible to implement.
However, all this research brought about the following additional suggestions:
One might try obtaining the decoder board for the Trackside Crane and seeing if the connections that are available inside this crane car will match-up and work with the purchased decoder.
One might purchase the sound module (decoder, speakers, and any required additional components) that comes with the RailSounds Boom Car in addition to the Crane Car’s decoder, hook it up to the track in similar proposed fashion to the crane’s suggested connections, and in this way, one would also hear the sounds produced as if the boom car was present.
Of course, if one really pays attention to the pricing of all the suggested parts from Lionel, budget-wise they might come out better buying a brand-new Trackside Crane or Command Control Crane car and Railsounds Boom car directly from Lionel when they are available and save the hassle of trying to get this Gantry Crane combo working.
On Christmas Day, I decide to binge-watch the 4 Home Alone movies. While doing so, I pulled out the Gantry Crane combo. I updated the listing on my site again but didn’t have my site relist the item on eBay. As I wrote more and more about how to get the crane car working, I realized that the reason this item probably isn’t selling is because no one wants to buy it and then have to do what is necessary to make it work. So, I made the decision to MAKE THIS TRACKSIDE GANTRY CRANE Combo operational. Why did I do that? Well, I feel like this: If the crane car works and I can show people that it is working, then perhaps people will have more interest in it and I can soon give it a new home. Little did I know that making the crane work would take up nearly 40 hours of my holiday time.
Pictures of some of the odd items that I used to get the Gantry Crane combo to work:
Starting Christmas Day, 2022, late afternoon, I committed myself to a new TRAIN PROJECT with Getting this Gantry Crane combo working as my goal. The steps I took are as follows:
1. I thoroughly examined both pieces. The gantry platform is in great shape with no discernable issues. The crane, on the other hand, has a few issues. My overall assessment of the Gantry Crane on Christmas Day is as follows:
The boom has 1 set of cross braces that are missing.
The small auxiliary hook in the front doesn’t always hang properly. The string slips out of the guide at the top of the hook assembly causing the hook to skew or tilt.
The large main hook appears to be missing a very small bar on one side of the hook which would normally keep the hook straight and horizontal. Instead, it hangs at a slight offset angle occasionally.
When the motor is engaged to lower the large hook, the hook doesn’t always lower. The string bunches up near the spool and looses tension along the string. The hook appears not to have enough weight to force itself to fall straight down keeping tension on the line so a hand may be needed to help it out or more weight should be added to the hook assembly. It could be a factor of the string and friction on the pulleys but I didn’t notice any incorrect routing of the string cables.
The shell is missing 1 rear and 2 front LED lights along with matching lens covers. Very tiny wires will be needed to put lights in the front of the crane.
The lever that Lionel uses to hold the sprung gear in the ENGAGED position is missing.
There is a hole in the back of the crane that is also supposed to be a rear work light.
The crane is missing 2 Cab Locking pins (which are really not applicable to the gantry crane operation).
The roof hatch has latches that broke at one time and I glued them back together. The glue is visible. (I should probably paint over the glue.)
The Decoder Board inside the crane is missing and therefore the crane doesn’t have a method of controlling the motors.
All 4 motors appear to be universal motors. (I have confirmed that they work using DC power. Lionel track power is AC power. Since the motors work smoothly under DC power it is concluded that they must be universal motors.)
2. To make the crane work, I wanted to use materials and items that I had on hand since ordering anything would delay my progress. The materials I felt I would need are identified below:
4 switches to control the 4 motors (preferably micro-miniature DPDT 3-Position On-Off-On switches).
A power source such as batteries (preferably 1 9-volt battery).
A way to connect the power source to the motors and a method to allow the batteries to be replaced when needed.
2 or 3 lights (preferably LED lights) and very small wire.
Some method to engage the rotation motor with its driving gear.
Wires to connect the motors to the switches, the lights, and the power source.
A place to physically put the control switches and method of operating the controls to make the crane work.
3. The first thing to fix was the missing lever that controls the rotation of the crane across 360 degrees:
I used a metal clothes hanger and a screw from a laptop.
I cut and shaped the clothes hanger so that when it is installed and moved towards the far front of the Cab, it disengages the drive gear and free-hand rotation can take place.
I installed the laptop screw. This screw should not be TIGHT, nor should it be allowed to LOOSEN so much that it falls out. The buyer may have to adjust the tension on the screw occasionally. The screw is located at the base of the custom-made lever.
When the lever is pulled backwards and allowed to rest on the base of the crane’s main frame, it provides enough pressure against the drive gear to allow rotation to take place via the motors. THE CRANE SHOULD NOT BE ROTATED MANUALLY WHILE THE ROTATION DRIVE GEAR IS LOCKED INTO POSITION. Doing so could damage the motor and the teeth on the crane gears.
It may be necessary to use a small screwdriver to change the position of the drive gear rotation lever. To move the lever, one should press the drive gear (the sprung smaller gear) seen when the right-hand side front door is open, and then pushing the formed clothes hanger forward or backwards. When moving the lever forward, be careful and make sure that all parts of the lever clear the gear. Do not push the lever to far forward as it might exit the cab or scratch the paint at the front of the cab. Go slowly. When moving the gear backwards, do so until it rest on the base of the Cab.
4. I decided to create a control box for the crane:
Since the motors operate directionally by reversing the current, I decided to use 4 DPDT switches (3-position [On-Off-On] Double-Pole, Double-Throw switches, to be exact). I would like for the switches to be as small as possible. Probably, little miniature black sliding switches. I have some NEW, small black DPDT switches but they are 2-position On/On switches. The only 3-position DPDT switches I had were previously used by someone else. I acquired 8 of them in a lot that I bought several years earlier. All of those switches had all 6 connectors soldered with some heavy copper wires on them. The previous user cut the wires instead of unsoldering them. Unsoldering the wires would simply make a huge mess and even melted the insides of 1 switch when I tried doing that. So, I continued using the existing wires on the leads already which in some cases were up to 3/4″ long. And these switches are much larger than miniature slide switches. This would make for a bulky wiring job and a much larger control box than I originally envisioned.
I located the 4 DPDT switches and hand-held them together as I test fitted them against the shell to figure out what would be the best way to arrange the switches and where I could possibly put them. Creating a piggy-backing box with the controls at the top came to mind and would provide the best fit.
The next decision was how to get the switches to ride on the back of the shell. I had a new, very old, never sold U.S. Robotics 56K modem laying around. Many years earlier I decided I would someday use the parts in this modem with my trains. I had already used the power transformer to power lights on my HO scale Libraryville layout. Now, I decided to use the plastic shell of the modem. I unscrewed it from the modem, cut a corner piece off of the back plate the width of the 4 switches, and then fitted it against the shell. I made a few more ruff cuts on the plastic and before you know it, it appeared as if the modem’s plastic shell could easily hang on the back of the crane’s shell. I then invested about 10 hours carving, cutting, drilling, and melting different pieces of that plastic which is about 1/8″ thick, to create a box that would hang on the back of the crane’s shell and encompass the 4 switches.
The hole in the rear of the crane’s shell which is supposed to have a rear light in it, didn’t have one. I figured I could route wires from inside the shell to the outside of it.
I chose to use multiple, different colored wires that I pulled from the inside of a broken laser printer. The wiring is stranded, somewhat small, and flexible. It would be great if the wiring had been even smaller, but again, I wanted to use what I had available that didn’t cost me any more money. I have smaller wires that I’ve bought but I will save those for other projects that benefit my own personal needs.
Next, I cut the wires in pairs and removed the shielding on both ends of each wire.
One goal that I wanted to achieve with this project is that no matter what modifications I made, I want everything that I’ve done to quickly and easily be able to be UNDONE, removed, or detached leaving all the original components intact so that if the buyer does wish to purchase the Lionel Decoder Board and other replacement parts, or try some of my original suggestions to get the crane to working using TMCC or Legacy controls through track power connections, that they would be able to do so. I managed to reach this goal. In doing so, some of the methods and modifications that I made were done the way they were done to ensure that this goal would be achieved.
Therefore, I tinned one side of the 8 wires I cut to control the motor and inserted those tinned ends into the Lionel connector harness that goes to the 4 motors. I then wrapped a small piece of paper around the connector and hot glued the wires in place. I didn’t have a matching connector for the harness plug Lionel used. I did have a lot of different ones on the ends of wires that I removed from printers, but none were an exact match for Lionel’s. Using the hot glue keeps the leads in place. Pull the glue hard enough and all the leads will come out cleanly and any excess glue can be scrapped off cleanly too. The paper should make undoing this connection quite easy and clean and it isn’t touching anything that could create a fire hazard.
Next, I ran the 8 leads through the back hole and soldered those leads to the connections on the 4 DPDT switches appropriately so that each switch controls a matching motor.
From the beginning, I had simply wrapped 2 wires around the posts of a 9-volt battery. I used a red and yellow pair of stranded wire for that. It was quite a long pair of wires. Although now a very tight fit, I managed to get the 2 power leads through the rear hole of the crane for a total of 10 wires in there. I tested each connection and motor operation in turn. The last switch for the Small auxiliary hook failed to operate. I ended up having to replace it. So, altogether I used 6 of the 8 DPDT switches that I had, 2 of which turned out to be bad and had to be discarded.
Next, having already built the control box using 4 of the 5 pieces that I had precut and shaped, there was a gap produced on one side of the control box that is closest to the ladder on the shell. So, I had to cut a 6th piece which is a small slither of a piece to fill the gap. Altogether, over 30 hours would be consumed working on the control box, sanding it down, painting it, gluing the parts together, and getting the leads of the switches soldered together. This step took a long time, but still, I was not finished.
5. The next objective was to come up with a way to deal with the missing work lights at the front of the crane:
I have some very small wire that I think is called magnetic coil wire. I think it is similar to wire used as windings around armature stacks in small motors. This I ordered back in 2016 and have not used any of it until now. I bought it to install LED’s inside of a double-track signal platform that I modified for my HO train layout and where needed for some really small N scale wirings. I just haven’t made it to that point in those projects yet. I figured I could use this wire which has red and black enamel coating over the 2 wires which are twisted together in a pair. They certainly fit through the small holes and shafts inside the headlight housings.
I didn’t have any headlight lens covers, but that didn’t matter. The 1.8 mm LED’s I decided to use are too big for headlight covers anyway since the LEDs actually extend outside of the front of the housing. This is okay because I feel like they look good sticking out of the housing. The only question would be could I solder the wires close enough to the LEDs to actually be able to get the LEDs inside the headlight housing. The LEDs were purchased in 2019 to install directional LED lights in 3 HO scale Bachmann Union Pacific GP-18’s that are in another project that is started but have not completed yet. Thus far, only 1 of the 3 locomotives has received LEDs plus another Like-Like PRR Diesel. The LEDs came as part of 10-piece pack with current limiting resistors. They are Golden White LEDs recommended as realistic lighting for older era diesel locomotives.
When I first decided to put my LEDs on the crane, I thought I might use 3 of them. I feel like the beams from the light are impeded a little bit by the frame of the boom. I wanted to put 1 light in the center of the front of the crane. I soldered leads on 3 of the LED’s. But when I started fitting the lights in place, I realized there would be no way for me to install the middle light because the shell must come off and the light would have to stay attached to the crane. Without 2 micro-miniature connectors that could easily be disconnected at will the 3rd center light just couldn’t be installed. So, you may see in some pictures that there is a third light. It gets used, but not as a third light.
I originally connected 2 LEDs in series and tested them directly with the 9-volt battery. They worked fine. I ran the leads through the shell and connected them in series to 1 resistor, thinking this would give me brighter light output plus protect the lights from receiving too much voltage. The LEDs worked fine during my test. I used heat-shrink tubing around the junction of the larger printer wire to the micro enameled red & black magnetic wires.
I glued the light leads to the inside of the shell and ran them to the back of the shell to rendezvous with the 9-volt power source.
Now, the question was, should the lights always be on or not? Well, they should have a switch so the user can turn them on when desired. I didn’t have enough room to install another switch. So, I decided to re-task the Run/Program switch already inside the crane attached to the crane’s main frame. This switch has leads on it that go to a 3-pin female connector plug. The connector probably plugs into the Decoder PC Board but since that board isn’t present and since this crane isn’t being connected directly to the track power, the switch would be perfect for controlling the lights. Otherwise, the switch would be useless and have no connection or function in my modified use of the crane.
I looked on a PC Board of a Receipt Printer that I had taken apart some time ago and found a 3-pin male receptor plug housing that matched the female connector the Lionel Run/Program switch provided. I unsoldered the male receptor from the printer board and soldered blue printer wire leads to it. I then soldered this assembly into my circuit for the lights and connected it to the 9-volt battery power source.
The wiring looked beautiful and the installation was sweet. The lights looked great and perfectly positioned. So, I worked on the next objective. [I’m going to try to maintain my timeline of events here although this is not the end of dealing with the LED lights. I will reference this point again later so that you know exactly what happened and when.]
6. The next obstacle to overcome is something that I have been concerned about from the moment I discovered that the 9-volt battery would actually sit inside the shell on the frame in the area where the Decoder board probably typically sits. In this step I needed to make a decision on how to get that battery to stay inside the shell:
Somewhere in my train collection, I have a 9-volt battery clip wiring harness. For 4 days I tried to remember where it is and even took a couple hours to search my inventory database as well as certain places within my home to locate that battery clip. I just couldn’t find it. I know I have one and now is the perfect time to use it. However, I didn’t find it. Then I put about 3 more hours into visiting 4 local stores: Dollar Tree, Big Lots, Roses, and Walmart trying my best to find a low-cost item that uses a 9-volt battery. I was willing to pay up to $5 for the item because all I was going to do was cut the clip out of it and use the clip for the project. I couldn’t find anything that used a 9-volt battery with a wired clip. So, I returned home and cut the one out of my alarm clock in my room. Before I went shopping, I did add a 10-pack of battery clips to my Amazon shopping cart, but it would be New Year’s Day before they would arrive. I really wanted to be done with this project by then.
With the clip in hand, I cut the red and yellow wires that I had wrapped around the 9-volt battery to a shorter length that seemed appropriate for inside the shell connection to the battery including having enough slack to remove the crane’s shell without ripping the battery out of place.
Next, I soldered the battery clip into place connecting it as the power source to the 4 motors and the 2 LED lights with the Program slide switch acting as power control for the lights.
I had been using a Duracell 9-volt battery that I have had for quite some time. I decided to grab a fresh, new, Energizer 9-volt battery and connect it to the battery clip. I will sell the the unit with the Energizer battery inside and connected. The battery objective is now accomplished and all the inside wiring looks good. I am almost done (or so I thought).
7. In my head, I had already formed the idea that I would label the control box so that one can easily look down at the labels and know which switch controls which crane function:
I began by creating a document to print the labels.
First, I used Microsoft Word. I wanted my arrows to match what I envisioned. None of the arrows inside of Word lived up to arrows that I wanted.
I located some arrow images on the internet. I opened Paint.Net which is installed on my laptop, and I pasted them inside. I finally narrowed my selection to the 1 that I liked best. However, it was a solid arrow with 2 directions. I modified it. But when I attempt to import it into Word, it was just WAY too large and reducing the size became too time consuming with results that I didn’t like.
I chose Microsoft Excel and inserted arrow symbols into cells and function words into other cells. I merged the function cells and their coordinating arrow. I turned on the borders to specific cells. Then I started test printing the labels on regular plain paper.
After getting the functional labels the right size, I decided to make a couple informational labels identifying me as the maker of the control box and the dates of manufacture. I test printed, cut and fitted the labels to positions on the control panel as well as to the Atlas Connectors.
Lastly, I put 3M Sticker paper in my printer and printed the official labels.
I applied the labels to the Control Box.
Lastly, I put a layer of clear shipping tape over the applied stickers.
8. Time to button everything up and put the shell back on.
I positioned the control box in place. The box split open a little bit (I may not have let the glue dry long enough or the pressure of putting the box in place pushed it apart). It appears to be holding so I left it split apart. (I might try applying a little more glue before it ships out).
Then, I positioned the shell on top of the main frame and screwed the shell on. I even found 2 laptop screws to fit in the 2 mid-shell holes that didn’t have screws in them when I received the consignment.
The crane looked good.
9. I then TESTED all the controls. And to my dismay, 1 of the LED lights did not come on. I was shocked. I had tested things along the way during and after each step. So, I wondered what went wrong:
I had to determine the problem with the LED light and fix it.
This would now become the 3rd time I had to undo one of the light assemblies. I had to redo one light before after having glued its assembly down when I was working on the lights the first time. The resistor came unsoldered when I pushed the shrink tubing over it. So, I had to cut it off, re-solder the connection and wrap the wiring up again. That was no fun. Well, neither was this.
This time, it was the other light. I took the wiring apart first. Then, I took that 3rd LED light that I had originally wanted to put in the center, and I touched it to the leads laying inside the upside-down shell. I already had the light switch on. The LED blew. That let me know that too much voltage was going to the LED and that meant that the light inside the housing was also blown. I had 1 LED remaining now from my original 10-pack (that I bought to put in various HO scale locomotives).
I hot glued the lights into the assembly and I did a great job originally. Getting a light out, wasn’t easy at all. I actually had to heat the exterior of the light housing using the soldering iron in order to get the glue inside the housing to melt so I could pull the burned-out LED out of the socket.
For this one, I would have to completely start over, re-soldering the tiny wires as close as possible to the base of the last LED I was willing to devote to this project. Then, I had to install the LED again.
I did that. I glued the light in and connected all the wires. I tested the light again. Well, it didn’t work again although just before installing it in the light housing, it did work. This meant something must have come unfastened inside the shrink tubing or the light housing which is what happened to the first light.
So, here I go again, heating up the exterior of the light housing and sure enough, the tiny wire had come unsoldered to the cathode side of the LED. I managed to re-solder the connection and reinsert the LED into the housing again, only this time, I wasn’t as proud of the install. The glue didn’t look as clean or compacted nor did the light look lined up right or symmetrical with the other light.
I trimmed glued off around the housing, tucked some of it back inside the light, and then used the soldering iron to heat up the housing again until I was able to get the light looking the best that I could.
I had to glue wires back down inside the shell. This time, my gluing didn’t look as pretty as before. In fact, I used too much glue in a couple places but didn’t realize that would affect the operation of the crane.
I tested the lighting and put the shell back on the crane. The lights were now working fine.
I did a complete test of everything. Everything worked. I took a break.
10. Time to take photos and videos:
I set the crane up in my train picture taking box. I wanted to show that the crane could be manually rotated when the rotation drive was disengaged. So, I disengaged it, and the darn crane wouldn’t rotate. It took me a good 5 minutes looking over the crane trying to figure out what had happened.
I made a small change previously to the design of my replacement rotation locking lever. But that was not the problem since putting the lever in the open (not locked) position clearly frees up the gear that gets engaged when it is locked.
I looked closer inside the crane and discovered that the over gluing was the problem. The glue was binding against the large gear that the small gear connects with in order to rotate the crane. The motor is strong enough to rotate the crane with the gear snug against the glue, but hand turning it with the glue there didn’t work.
I took the crane apart again, took out the soldering iron, and spread the glue out thinner, preventing it from binding on the gear.
I put the crane back together.
I tested it again before taking pictures. All the functions work.
I took pictures and made a video.
Afterwards, I opened and closed all the doors and discovered that the rear right-hand side door must also be binding against glue or some of the wires stuff inside the compartment near the back of the cab because that door is now stiff and hard to slide open. I didn’t feel like removing the shell again, so I left this hard to open door as it is.
The crane is improved, operational, and ready to be sold to highest bidder.
Although I finished working on the crane pretty much on New Year’s Day, it is now the 15th of January 2023, at 2:17 AM in the morning and I am just now getting to this point in this documentation of what I did to the crane combo. Keep in mind that over the past 20 days or so, I have made many updates, edits, and revisions to the listing of the crane for sale as well as to this documentation. Sometime around 10:30 PM yesterday, I finally told my website to publish the auction listing on eBay which caused the listing on this site to refer viewers of the listing to eBay to make a bid. So, officially, the crane is now up for sale as a 5-day auction. You can view the listing here on my site and participate until it is sold: Lionel O Gantry Crane Combo for sale.
Here are some more photos of the crane that were taken during the construction of this project.
Listing as of 10:30ish pm, January 14th, 2023. Starting bid $250. Buy It now price: $500.
Listing as of 10:30ish pm, January 14th, 2023:
O Lionel MOW Conrail Gantry Crane combo now battery operated
Description
As far as I am aware, this is now the MOST UNIQUE Lionel Operating Gantry Crane on the planet. It is a combination of parts from 2 different Lionel O scale items. The base is from one of Lionel’s stand-alone Maintenance of Way Gantry platforms. The Crane is from Lionel’s Command Control Conrail Crane Car. I have made all the vital functions of the crane operational using ingenuity, craftsmanship, some random materials, and a 9-volt battery. Now, one can manually operate the crane with hands-on actions. I do so in the video that I have provided here.
This crane is a consigned item that has been presented over the past 4 years at various train shows. While a lot of people have looked at it with interest and curiosity, no one purchased it, probably because it was unknown whether or not the crane worked. Well, it works. It works very well. I have documented exactly what I went through to make this crane operate. I will provide the buyer with a link to that information in the box when I ship it. For now, I have listed the condition of the items along with the features now applicable to this crane:
The gantry platform is in Great shape. It appears to be missing ladder handrails on 2 legs of the crane. (One might be able to fabricate replacements out of stiff metal rods or plastic including plastic sprues. Simulated stairs appear on 2 legs of the platform).
The crane (which was removed from a crane car) fits snuggly on top of the gantry platform. The crane is in good shape but was received with a lot of issues. I have resolved or provided replacement functionality for most of the important and relevant issues.
The crane has a very nice, rich, blue paint job with crisp, clear, white lettering.
I made a function control box for it which you can see in the pictures appears on the rear of the crane and has 4 Double-Pole Double-Throw 3-position (On-Off-On) switches on it. The control box is painted black with printed function labels.
The crane rotates 360 degrees. It can be rotated by hand or by motor control.
The boom moves up and down via motor control.
The main (Large) hook raises and lowers via motor control.
The auxiliary (Small) hook raises and lowers via motor control.
All 4 motors operate independently and can all be operating simultaneously.
2 operating golden-white LED work lights are positioned at front of the cab. The lights have their own On/Off switch located inside the door on the left-hand side of the cab when looking at the crane from the rear towards the front.
There are 3 sliding cab doors on the crane. They all work. However, when closed none of these doors completely seal the compartment. A gap is always present when the doors are closed as far as they will go. This may be by design. (Originally, all 3 doors moved freely with very little resistance. After I made the control panel, the right-side rear door is very stiff to move. I suggest not opening this door simply because the battery compartment is visible inside the door along with tape and other non-prototypical items.)
1 set of metal crossbar supports appears to be missing from the boom. It appears as if there should be 4 of these on the top side of the boom, but there are only 3. (A replacement set could probably easily be fabricated. Not sure if Lionel sells those as a part.)
Overall, I now feel that a lot of value has been added to this battery-operated Gantry Crane combination. In the first online listing that I made for this crane starting around the middle of December 2022, I provided suggestions on ways to make this crane work. I still believe it is possible to make this crane work using Lionel’s TMCC and Legacy control systems. In my very extensive write-up that leads to the development of the battery-operated modifications that I made to this crane, those suggestions are still present and available on the web. I will leave them there well after this item is sold. Additionally, all the modifications that I have made to this crane have been done to increase its saleability and prove that the crane works. All the modifications I have made can easily be removed without any damage to the crane itself and if one wants to make this crane work remotely using TMCC, Legacy, or their own control designs, these options are still available to them. To make the crane work using TMCC or Legacy, the Decoder PC Board that was missing from the inside of this crane when it was consigned to me (and still is missing), would need to be replaced. The Decoder PC Board and other official Lionel parts may be available from time to time via Lionel’s parts website.
People interested in buying this Battery-operated Lionel Gantry Crane combination might want to know how to change the battery and how to operate the crane. Here are the instructions to accomplish that. The video also shows how to operate it:
How to change the battery
Remove the crane from the gantry platform by holding the platform steady with one hand and lifting the crane straight up from the base with a firm grip around the top and sides of the crane.
Disengage the Rotation drive (see below).
Carefully lay the crane upside down on a soft surface. (You may wish to use a thick towel or pillow.) Be very mindful of the control switches at the back, the delicate top hatch cover that will sway freely when you turn the crane upside down, and the simulated cables that wrap around pulleys on the boom, as well as the boom itself.
Attempt to maintain tension on the boom cables as you turn the crane upside down. Failure to do this might require routing the simulated cables around the pulleys again.
Unscrew the 6 Phillips head screws underneath the frame of the crane.
Flip the crane back over holding it to the frame as you do so.
Gently and slowly lift the shell of the crane upwards and backwards simultaneously so that the front of the shell clears the cables and motors.
After the shell clears the motors, rotate the shell upwards so as to be pulling it backwards at 45 degrees and then continue until the front of the shell is nearly perpendicular with the base of the frame at 90 degrees. Make sure to minimize the distance you pull the shell away from the frame because the wires go through the rear of the crane and connect to the components inside that are secured to the frame of the crane.
Lay the shell on its side and perpendicular to the crane.
You will see red and black wires attached to a traditional 9-volt battery clip.
Gently slide the battery up and out of its resting place.
Carefully remove the battery clip from the battery.
Replace the battery.
Test that the battery is working properly by flipping the little black switch on the frame of the crane upward. The lights on the shell should illuminate and glow. Slide the black switch down and the lights should go out.
Reverse the above directions working backwards from steps 11 to 1 to put the battery back in its place and put the shell back on the frame.
How to operate the crane.
All instructions I provide start by orientating the crane so that the rear of the crane is facing you and you are looking across the top of it towards the boom.
While the battery remains connected all the time, no power is utilized until you engage a function. The middle position of all 4 silver DPDT 3-position switches is the OFF position. The off position for the black SPST 2-position switch inside the cab is when the slider is at the bottom of the switch. All 5 functions of the crane can be active simultaneously so long as the battery has good charge on it. Replace the battery when trying to operate 2 or more functions simultaneously results in very slow or no operations. Because there is no Decoder Board inside the crane, make sure to pay attention to the extents of functions you perform. Once engaged, there is nothing to limit a motor’s operations except by you turning a function switch off. For instance, the boom can only raise or lower so far. There is no circuitry to shut a motor off when the boom reaches its physical limit. If you fail to turn a motor off, you can damage the motor or a function of the crane.
Set the crane rotation method:
Physically turn the entire Gantry Crane Combo 90 degrees to the right so that you are facing the right-hand side of the crane and looking at 2 doors on that side.
Slide the right-most front door to the left to open it. This can be done by using either your finger, a small flathead screwdriver, or a popsicle stick.
To disengage the Rotation drive, move the funny shaped piece of clothes hanger wire lever forward slowly until all of the metal on the lever extends past the spring-loaded gear that pops towards you. Be careful not to push so far forward that the lever damages the window in the front of the cab on that side. Go slowly to prevent from scratching the paint off the inside of the cab. Doing this puts the crane in Free-Hand Rotation mode and therefore you can freely rotate the crane using your hand. This is also the mode the crane should be in when it arrives to you and when you choose to move it from place to place or ship it somewhere.
To engage the Rotation drive, use a finger and push the smaller gear inward while moving the lever backwards towards the rear of the cab. Go slowly and lower the lever all the way back until it rests on the bottom of the inside frame. Note that a portion of the lever keeps pressure on the small spring-loaded gear and keeps it pushed inward. This is necessary to enable the motor that rotates the crane 360 degrees to operate. Use the control switch on the back of the crane to rotate the crane using the built-in motor when the crane is in this mode. One should not attempt to rotate the crane manually while the lever is engaged. Doing so might damage the motor or the gears.
Operating the Crane:
The crane has 4 motors that independently control the Rotation, Large Main Hook, Boom, and Small Auxiliary hook.
Rotation: The left-most switch controls the rotation of the crane. Flip the switch to the left and the crane rotates leftward. Flip the switch to the right and the crane rotates rightward.
Main Large Hook: That main hook is used to lift the heaviest portions of items. The main hook is control by the 2nd switch of the control box (counting left to right from the rear). To raise the hook, push forward on the switch. To lower the hook, pull backward on the switch. (Note: In my opinion, this hook doesn’t weigh as much as it should. Because of that, when lowering the hook without a load on it, you may need to pull the hook downward gently as this switch is engaged. Also, occasionally, the hook may lean favoring 1 side. (Not sure if this is by design or if a small rod is missing.))
Boom: The Boom switch raises or lowers the boom and is controlled by the 3rd switch of the control box (counting left to right from the rear). To raise the boom, push forward on the switch. To lower the boom, pull back on the switch.
Small Auxiliary Hook: The auxiliary hook is used to lift lighter portions of items and is controlled by the right-most switch on the control panel. To raise the hook, push forward on the switch. To lower the hook, pull back on the switch.
Turning the lights on or off:
The light switch is located inside the door on the left-hand side of the crane.
Turn or rotate the crane so that you are facing the left side of the crane (the front of the crane will be on your left while the rear of the crane will be on your right).
Slide the door to the right to open it by using your finger, small screwdriver, or popsicle stick.
To turn the lights on, slide the small black switch inside upward. The lights should turn on.
To turn the lights off, slide the small black switch inside downward. The lights should turn off.
In my opinion, this modified Lionel battery-operated O scale Conrail Gantry Crane would be a great add-on to someone’s layout that has trackage and scenery where this Conrail Gantry Crane combo would fit right in.
If this Battery-operated O gauge Lionel Maintenance-of-Way Conrail Trackside Gantry Crane combo interest you, visit the listing for this crane and make a bid on it or buy it now (before it is sold to someone else): Lionel O Gantry Crane Combo for sale.
HO Athearn RoundHouse Collector's White Pass & Yukon Route Overton Set
HO Athearn RoundHouse Collector's White Pass & Yukon Route Overton Set
Shows the 4-piece Athearn WP&YR Overton Passenger Cars inside their plastic carton. I cannot remember if I took this photo or if it was acquired from the Internet.
In December 2021 a rare opportunity presented itself and I happen to be at the right place at the right time to seize it. Some could say the stars aligned just right that afternoon. Others may call it something else. But on the 18th of December in the 2021st year of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, I acquired the 2004 Limited Collector’s Edition of the Athearn John Deere N scale Train Set from a fellow Metrolina Model Railroaders club (MMRR) member. I am very grateful to him for selling me this very beautiful set to add to my model train collection. I had no idea that it existed. Below are some of the features of the train set along with lots of pictures and videos of the trains running on one of my N scale model railroad layouts known as the HJR Lonsway Pike.
Athearn released the John Deere N Scale (1/160TH) train set some time in 2004. It was NEW and SEALED in its original box with plastic wrap around it when it was first introduced to me. My fellow MMRR member mostly models HO scale items. He had just purchased a nice size lot of items in an online auction and among them was this handsome train set. He intended to sell it from the start. I just happen to be there when he opened up his big box of goodies and pulled this out. I asked him if he would be willing to part with it. He said yes. We struck a deal and now it has been added to my personal collection.
The box indicates the following preassembled contents as follows:
1 – John Deere F59 PHI DC Diesel Locomotive 2 – John Deere 85′ Bombardier Coach Cars 1 – John Deere 85′ Bombardier Control Car 1 – John Deere 53′ Flat Car With 2 7820 Tractors 1 – UL Listed Trainpak Power Supply 14-Piece Oval of Easy to Assemble Roadbed Track
After the MMRR member and I struck a deal we decided to open the train set at that time. I tore off the plastic wrap and in doing so accidentally ripped the golden 2004 collector’s medallion sticker that was affixed on top of it. I found one of the stickers still affixed in a photo of an eBay listing. I copied it and affixed it to my photo of the box in my pictures below. However, I had to find another listing on WorthPoint to be able to ascertain exactly what the sticker said. It says “1ST IN THE N GAUGE SERIES”. I would have kept the sticker that was on the one that I have if I had not ripped it into pieces when I removed the plastic. The sticker was affixed to the outside of the plastic. Both me and the seller thoroughly examined the train cars in the Athearn John Deere train set. There are a lot of minute details on each one of the train cars. The painting is very elaborate too.
I doubt that John Deere operated their own Passenger Train service. According to this Wikipedia article, the F59PHI locomotive in this train set was built for commuter service mostly in California sometime between the years 1994 and 2001 by General Motors Electro-Motive Division (EMD). Bombardier has made passenger cars and other trains in this country for quite some time and it is their line of commuter Passenger Cars represented in this model train set. In 1966 the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy (CBQ) railroad did pull a three-quarter (3/4) mile long train of John Deere tractors and equipment as part of a Deere company marketing campaign. However, I doubt that the John Deere company paid CBQ, Bombardier, or any other railway company to have their locomotive and passenger cars painted the way these model trains are painted. I believe this train set to be yet another John Deere marketing campaign . The campaign is all about the promotion of the John Deere 7820 tractor, a 185-HP (net), 20-speed, row-crop tractor manufactured in Waterloo, Iowa between 2003 and 2006. You can see it highlighted on the model 7820 Bombardier BiLevel Coach Control passenger car as well as see two N (1/160th) scale miniatures strapped to the 53′ N scale Flat car. I believe I have other N scale 7820 tractor models in my collection [need to find and confirm] and I know I have a fleet of 8 John Deere HO scale tractors as well, 7 of which are 6420 models.
Side Note: While writing this page, I searched the Internet and found some very interesting articles about the John Deer company which appears to be called Deere & Company now or just plain Deere (click links to visit Deere.com). I also ran across the Bombardier company and really enjoyed reading about the trains, plains, and other items the Bombardier company manufacturers or manufactured in the past (Alstrom acquired Bombardier’s transportation services a year prior to me writing this article.). [My links go to different places.] As fate would have it, later that same day, I booked a flight to Massachusetts via American Airlines to attend the annual Amherst Train Show and for the first time I noticed that I will be traveling on a Bombardier manufactured commercial passenger jet airplane soon. Had I not paid attention to the type of passenger cars included in this Athearn model train set, I am absolutely certain that I wouldn’t have paid any attention whatsoever to the manufacturer of the airplane I will be flying on very soon. I’m also sure that if I happen to get on one of Bombardier’s (or Alstrom’s) manufactured trains in the future, I will be more aware of it because of this John Deere model train set.
The HJR Lonsway Pike employs the use of some very steep grades. I modified the layout to include those grades in order to enhance the fun and appeal of that layout. My modifications were designed for trains to mostly run on the layout in a clockwise direction. This John Deere train set must be run in the counterclockwise direction on my layout in order for the John Deere F59 PHI locomotive to successfully pull the entire load successfully around my train layout and make it up the grades. You will see this in both videos. In the first video, you will see the locomotive struggle to make it up the steepest grade to go through the top of the mountain. In the second video you will watch it successfully go through the mountain and come out the other side while traveling in the counterclockwise direction. I don’t think I will even attempt to put this train set on my DeskTrain layout because I am pretty sure it will not make the grades on that layout in either direction.
Many thanks to D.O. for selling me the Athearn N scale John Deere train set.
HO Athearn RoundHouse Collector's White Pass & Yukon Route Overton Set
HO Athearn RoundHouse Collector's White Pass & Yukon Route Overton Set
Shows the 4-piece Athearn WP&YR Overton Passenger Cars inside their plastic carton. I cannot remember if I took this photo or if it was acquired from the Internet.
Location Hickory Metro Convention Center 1960 13th Ave Dr SE Hickory, NC 28602
Date and Time April 9th and 10th, 2021 9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
This is a new way for ShowMyHobby.com and its subscribers to share Google Photo Albums. This post is a test to check-out the functionality and will be tweaked more in the next few days.
On this page, I am sharing with you the history of the compilation of my N scale California Zephyr Chicago, Quincy & Burlington Collection. It is mostly comprised of Kato locomotives and passenger cars. However, to complete the Kato suggested possible consists of train sets, the last 4 locomotives to be added to the set are manufactured by Broadway Limited Imports. As a result, I have renamed this page and this portion of my overall model railroad collection and have settled on its final name.
It has taken quite a few years to assemble this particular collection. The first pieces were acquired while on vacation one year. As new editions to the fleet are acquired I will provide updates. In the first quarter of 2022, what I think will be the final pieces of the motive power for this collection are being acquired. The last 4 locomotives will be Broadway Limited Paragon4 locomotives instead of Kato’s. Nonetheless, thus far, everything else is all Kato equipment.
At the end of a vacation on November 21st, 2014, I decided to see if anyone had any good deals to add to my model railroad hobby — the Greatest Hobby in the World. I found what sounded to me like a great deal. A retired gentleman named Harry living in Seminole, FL was selling his N scale Kato CB&Q EMD E5A & Silver Streak Zephyr 6 Unit set (item #106-090). The friend I was visiting on vacation was kind enough to drive me about 45 minutes out of his way to pick-up that set from Harry. It was the coolest looking train set I had seen thus far in my model railroading experience at that time. It came inside of a very nice case designed to easily be stored on a bookshelf. I don’t know of any other model railroad manufacturer that sells their rolling stock train sets in such cool and convenient storage cases. See the pictures below to see exactly what I mean.
As you may notice, the above Kato set features the CB&Q SILVER STREAK ZEPHYR which is not a California Zephyr train set. Hence the reason I renamed this collection to just my “Chicago, Burlington & Quincy N scale Collection featuring the Kato California Zephyr and Silver Streak Zephyr”. I also have a lot of CB&Q freight cars but none of those are displayed on this page.
There are a lot of write-ups about the Silver Streak Zephyr. This Wikipedia article is short and sweet and very quickly provides some insights into how the Silver Streak Zephyr was actually named after the movie that proceeded it. The Silver Streak Zephyr train was in operation from 1940 through 1959 and consist of non-articulated passenger cars, something that CB&Q did away with just about the time the Silver Streak Zephyr was created.
There are 2 train sets running in this video. The Silver Streak Zephyr is the one running on the inside loop and the S-curve overpass. It is the one you see at the start of this video. The train set is an Amtrak train set by Kato.
Kato CB&Q EMD E5-A Silver Streak Zephyr 6 Unit train running on HJR Lonsway Pike
I have some additional pictures and videos of the Silver Streak Zephyr running on the HJR Lonsway Pike prior to 2021 which I will incorporate into this page eventually. I also have close-up still shots of each car in the Silver Streak Zephyr line which I will post here as well. For now, the next paragraph quickly skips ahead from 2014 to 2021.
On June 1st, 2021 a huge addition to my Chicago, Burlington and Quincy N scale collection was added by a friend and client. Here is where I will start to introduce TRAVELING as a hobby on ShowMyHobby.com and provide a segue between these two great hobbies of mine. You may have already noticed a slight combination of the two. I will be more specific in the travel section but for now, notice that while on vacation in 2014, I didn’t leave Florida before checking to see if I could find something interesting to add to my model railroad hobby. I pretty much do this all the time now. In June of 2021, the entire theme of the vacation was all around REAL trains (Wait until you read the travel story — you’ll see what I mean.). The adventure was spectacular for me. And on June 1st, 2021, after getting off of the Amtrak Texas Eagle, picking up a rental car, and heading to my hotel, I had about 3 hours before I could check into the hotel. So, I asked Google Maps to route me to the nearest Train Store. Google found Model Train Crossing located at 1113 W Pipeline Rd Ste 125, Hurst, TX 76053. There website address is: https://model-train-crossing.business.site/. While I was specifically looking for something in that store, I saw a ton of great items. Among them was this fascinating 11-piece Kato California Zephyr train set. Although I looked at it briefly in a glass case that had 2 Kato BNSF locomotives that I was really checking out very hard, the store owner and salesman walked up to me and asked me what I was interested in. We talked a little bit about the diesel engines and then I asked him about the California Zephyr set. All he could remember about it is that it had been purchased at an estate sale. I asked him if I could examine it closer. He went and grabbed the keys to the display case. He retrieved the set from the bottom of the case and handed it to me. At that very moment, my friend/client called me from Boston, MA. He asked me what I was doing. I quickly told him I had arrived safely in the Dallas, Texas area and was then at a train store somewhere near Arlington, TX, killing time before I checked into my hotel. I told him that I was opening up a very beautiful 11-piece train set that I was probably going to buy. I talked with him as I walked to the counter, placed the set on it, reviewed the outside of the box, and then opened it up and slid out the tray holding the passenger cars. He asked me what I thought. As I examined the cars closer looking to see if everything was intact, I told him, “Yes, I was going to buy it because it appeared to be practically new, opened, but none of the cars showed any signs of use or damage.” He asked me to hand my phone to the cashier. I did. When the cashier handed the phone back to me, he asked me if I wanted the receipt printed or emailed. My friend said, “Happy Birthday!” And the set was then all mine. The travel story will provide more details, but for now the story is told in the video. I previously said that I would write more down about this, and I just did. In the videos, I might say a little bit more or a little bit less. Regardless, I appreciate my friend and client very much for the gift. It was a huge gesture. It has served as inspiration and of course has led to me striving to complete the suggested train sets mentioned on the back of the California Zephyr 11-piece box.
While trying to locate and gather the locomotives suggested by Kato that pulled the California Zephyr from Chicago to California and back, I found, bought, and received 2 E5-A locomotives that were supposed to be in great shape and very good running condition. At first, they did not run at all for me. So this post started on my website as a means to document my first attempts to operate the 2 consisted locomotives on my HJR Lonsway Pike layout and to provide an easy method for the seller to see what was happening when I tried to run the locomotives he sold me. The next 2 videos show the seller what I experienced the first and second times I tied to get the locomotives to run.
The seller called me back and provided me contact information to the person that programmed his locomotives. That person was able to give me the correct code programmed into these 2 locomotives. I was able to operate the locomotives as seen in the following video.
After getting the 2 new-to-me DCC Equipped Kato CB&Q locomotives working using the information provided by the seller’s friend, the seller also shared with me some videos of the 2 locomotives in operation on his layout. For several months those videos were posted here. However, as of February, 2022, I noticed those videos are no longer available. I unembedded them from this page.
In January, 2022, I stumbled across a Kato 4-piece add-on set of passenger cars. While doing research to identify the history of the newly received 4-pack of passenger cars, I ran across numerous webpages by Fred Klein, who apparently has been updating some of his pages for over 20 years with information about the Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy California Zephyr train cars and train sets with lots of focus on the Kato N scale models. I wanted to take this time to include links to his very informative and very helpful web pages. I may be excerpting, quoting and/or paraphrasing some of his content in the future. If you wish to read about the real prototypes of the Kato N scale corrugated passenger cars, then Fred Klein’s documentation appears to me to be a very good place to start. He covers models by other brands as well.
Security Notes: Mr. Klein has not yet made his website use Secure Socket Layer protocols. I may have to remove the following links as they may cause my website’s SSL protection to appear to be vulnerable. As mentioned, I visited his site, read all the content a couple times on all of the following linked pages, and found nothing harmful there. Upon clicking these links, your browser may provide you with a warning message indicating that Mr. Klein’s site is not secure. Proceed at your own risk. I feel his pages are safe. However, you agree to hold me and mine harmless should your experience differ from mine.
On January, 26th, 2022, four (4) simulated stainless steel corrugated passenger cars arrived. These cars are supposed to be Kato’s 106-1606 Corrugated Passenger Car Set B of Chicago, Burlington & Quincy. I opened those on February 17th, 2022 and cataloged them. To my surprise, the 4 cars received are not exactly the 4 cars that are supposed to be in the set. I ordered the set on eBay and I have concluded that the seller must have had multiple Kato CB&Q sets and mixed up the cars that he put in the set that he sold me. I’m not that bothered by this because thus far only 1 of the cars he included duplicated a car that I previously have already. One day I think I will actually list every car in my CB&Q roster. For now, as you can see on the side of the box in the following picture and at the beginning of one of the videos below, there is supposed to be a Baggage car, Coach car, Dome car, and Sleeper Car in the Kato 106-1606 set. I received 1 Baggage, 2 Dome, and 1 Sleeper cars.
Before the Kato 106-1606 set arrived, I placed a pre-order with Factory Direct Hobbies for a combination pack of 2 Broadway Limited locomotives, item #BLI-6862. This combination pack consist of 1 powered A-unit locomotive and 1 dummy B-unit locomotive pair. I previously mentioned that once these arrive, I would take more photos and videos of them running. I would also turn on my Broadway Limited Rolling Thunder so that I can share with you the enormous sound that it pretends to give to model railroad locomotives.
Well, the Broadway Limited Imports BLI-6862 Denver and Rio Grande Western F7-A and F7-B Paragon4 equipped locomotives arrived near the end of February, 2022. The following videos demonstrate my experience with this duo and its operation on my HJR Lonsway Pike layout.
N scale Broadway Limited Imports Denver & Rio Grande Western (DRGW) #BLI-6862 Paragon4 DCC-Sound Equipped F7-A and Dummy F7-B set
Attempts to get the brand new BLI-6862 DRGW locomotive set to pull the Kato 106-1606 4-piece passenger car set.
As mentioned in the above video, my thoughts were to see if I could get away with just buying 1 Broadway Limited Imports #6862 F7-A&B locomotive set. If that set ran successfully on my layout and was able to pull all 19 passenger cars or even half of them, like 10 or 11 of the passenger cars, then I would have been satisfied. Perhaps I would have bought another A&B set just to complete the collection and feel as if I had accomplished compiling the suggested array of train sets on the back of the Kato 106-055B 11-piece passenger car set box. But the BLI locomotive pair couldn’t even pull 4 Kato passenger cars up any of the grades on my layout. So, I managed to pull off getting an order in over at ModelTrainStuff.com for 2 individually packaged Paragon4 powered Broadway Limited Imports D&RGW F7-A & F7-B units on special before they ran out.
On March 8th, 2022, the 2 individually boxed and powered BLI DRGW F7-A and F7-B arrived. They both look similar to the F3 units suggested on the back of the Kato 106-055B 11-piece passenger car set box. There is very little difference between an F7 and an F3 unit. This now gives me the suggested 4 locomotives which I can put on the tracks in an A-B-B-A arrangement as suggested on the box. One of the F7-B units is unpowered.
BLI Individually Powered N scale Paragon4 Denver & Rio Grande Western F7-A #5644 (item 6873) and F7-B #5643 (item 6874) locomotives
In the video that follows [after 3 paragraphs], I test the 2 newly received BLI F7-A & F7-B units, BLI-6873 #5644 and BLI -6874 #5643, respectively. After testing them I add them to the F7-A and F7-B pair (item number BLI-6862) road numbers: #5641 and #5642, respectively. I run the 4-unit locomotive consist as 5641 (pf) + 5642 (df) + 5643 (pr) + 5644 (pr), where pf = powered running forward, df = dummy running forward, and pr = powered running in reverse, to create the desired F7 ABBA arrangement. These 4 locomotives consisted together are very handsome, highly detailed, and very loud compared to the average N scale locomotive with an add-on sound decoder. They definitely have bigger sound than the other Sound Equipped Kato locomotives that I have in the CB&Q collection. They run very smooth over most of my Atlas code 55 tracks. But the true test would be to see “could this 4-locomotive Broadway Limited Imports consist with 3 powered units pull my 19 Kato Chicago, Burlington & Quincy passenger car set?” I endeavored to find out.
Originally, this video was about 53 minutes long. However, when I uploaded it to my YouTube channel there was a 1.5 to 2 minute segment where I sat my phone down without pausing the recording while I put more passenger cars on the tracks, and in the background music by Depeche Mode was playing on my TV which could faintly be heard. Even though the music could hardly be heard at all in the video, Google/YouTube felt it was loud enough to warrant flagging my video for copyright infringement. So, I edited the video and had Google cut-out that segment where the music could be heard plus additional time where only a blurry view of foliage could be seen for a total of about 13 minutes removed. I mention this because the BLI locomotives only begin to pull all 19 cars successfully near the end of this video and then right when I was just about to give up trying to get the trains to all stay together, they finally make at least 2 full loops around my layout and then something happens.
At first, it appears to be a short-circuit which typically means that one of the train cars with metal wheels derailed on the tracks and bridged a connection between the 2 rails thus causing the short. You will see that I ended the video to turn the power to the trains off, resolve the short-circuit issue, and then go to bed. After I ended the video and investigated, I wasn’t able to go to bed because I wanted to get to the heart of the problem. I discovered that nothing was wrong on the tracks or with any of the passenger cars. The problem turned out to be something went wrong with the 4th locomotive, #5644 (BLI-6873). Apparently that locomotive shorted inside of itself. Every attempt to get it to operate after the video ends results in an immediate short-circuit indication from my MRC Prodigy Advance command station. I took each powered locomotive off the tracks and then put them back on individually, powered up the transformer and immediately received a short only when DRGW #5644 was on the tracks. So, this resulted in me returning that locomotive for replacement. I mailed it on Friday, March 11th. MB Klein, owners and operators of ModelTrainStuff.com asked me to describe what happened. In that description, I let them know that I also happen to be filming the locomotives when the problem occurred and I gave them a reference point within the video that they can watch on this page if they choose to. However, since I wrote that, the video has been cut short by at least 13 minutes so the timestamp I gave them to look at is not present in the video. [For the ModelTrainStuff.com technicians, the best way to see the problem as it occurs is to skip to the last 3 minutes of the video.]
Getting 4 BLI DRGW Locomotives to pull 19 Kato CB&Q Passenger Cars
On March 13th, I took the following still shots of all four Denver and Rio Grande Western locomotives on my tracks.
When locomotive DRGW #5644 returns, I will make another video of the 4 BLI locomotives pulling the 19 train passenger cars that I have and during that video I will turn on the Rolling Thunder to see if it will work. It should be noted that the BLI F7 ABB consist headed-up by locomotives: 5641+5642+5643 do not have enough power to pull the 19 passenger cars 1 millimeter on my HJR Lonsway Pike layout. The following picture shows this portion of my CB&Q train collection waiting for DRGW #5644 to return. I know that I could add 1 Kato E5-A to the front of this consist and it would pull all of it. The BLI locomotives look great and sound great but they are much less powerful than the Kato locomotives.
In the meantime while we are waiting for the BLI DRGW #5644 locomotive to return, I will attempt to catch up on a few other videos as well as speed match the 3 Kato Western Pacific locomotives. I may even attempt to get them to pull the 19 train cars. One question is where do I have enough room to speed-test the 3 Kato WP locomotives? Will I have enough room on the HJR Lonsway Pike or will I have to use another layout that I am making specifically for resale once it is finished and has been evaluated for NMRA Achievement Award points?
MODEL RAILROADERS UNITE — START THE PRESSES! BROADWAY LIMITED IMPORTS N SCALE PARAGON4 HAS SOME MAJOR MALFUNCTIONING ISSUES!
March 3rd, 2022
On March 18th, 2022, the replacement BLI DRGW #5644 locomotive arrived. I took it out of the box and discovered that the front coupler operating hinge pin on the Micro-Trains coupler was bent out of position and there seemed to be a little bit of a gap between the 2 horizontal halves of the coupler. I turned the coupler pin back to its normal position, but this looked as if it might pose a problem later. Additionally, I wanted to see if this particular F7-A unit was going to clear my tracks. The previous A-Unit that was returned apparently didn’t always clear my track. So, I put the locomotive on my tracks and hand pushed it to see if the nose grill would hit the top of my code 55 rails while coming off of the steepest grade on my HJR Lonsway Pike layout. Sure enough, the bottom of the nose did hit the top of the Points on the tracks. At first, I thought I might have to trim some of the plastic from underneath the nose to keep it from hitting. But when I lifted the locomotive off the track, I noticed that there was about 1/16th or 3/32nd of an inch play in the way the shell fits on the locomotive. If the shell was lifted to the highest point of that play, then the bottom of the shell wouldn’t hit my track. So before attempting to run the locomotive, I removed the shell to see what could be done.
BLI DRGW #5644 with Shell RemovedBLI DRGW #5644 with Shell Off and 1 layer of tapeBLI DRGW #5644 with 3 layers of tapeBLI DRGW #5644 with 2 Layers of Tape – Final
I ended up putting 2 layers of Gorilla tape on top of the interior nose piece that the shell almost rests on when it is on the locomotive. I took some pictures and maybe even a video to document that. After some trials and additional test fittings, this worked out. However, in the end, the coupler hinge pin came out of the Micro-Trains front coupler. I had already snipped the couplers length a little bit because it looked as if it might cause a short or derailment if it were to hit the top of my rails while the locomotive was traveling at a decent rate of speed. In the past, I have noticed that Micro-Trains couplers do not work very reliably without the coupler hinge pin installed so because it slipped completely out, I turned it upside down and just laid it inside the hole made for it. That would work sufficiently without allowing the coupler pin to slip completely through the hole while the train was running until such time that I can look and see if I already have a Micro-Trains coupler that I can use or if I have to order some.
Second Broadway Limited Imports Denver & Rio Grande Western gets a Shell Lift. Also, test Rolling Thunder with Paragon4 and it fails.
Now, with the coupler operational and the nose of the newly replaced BLI DRGW #5644 sitting up high enough to make it all the way around my track without causing any issues, I put the locomotive back on the track and started testing it. I ran it around the tracks solo a couple of times. Then, I wanted to see if this locomotive alone would work with my BLI Rolling Thunder. So, I turned on the Rolling Thunder module. NOTHING. Not a thing. The receiver didn’t recognize the locomotive. So to be sure that my Rolling Thunder was working okay, I pulled out an HO scale BLI Paragon3 locomotive and put it on my HO scale Libraryville layout which is about 2 feet from the N scale HJR Lonsway Pike layout. The Rolling Thunder recognized the locomotive and started providing sound for it. I managed to catch this as part of the above video. [My apologies for my really horrible camera views. I am holding a cell phone while trying to work on or operate the trains so I am rarely looking at the phone to be sure what I am talking about is actually in view. Additionally, in the above video I mention that I think the coupler was screwed to the shell in the first DRGW #5644 that I received. That may not be true. I also removed the shells on several of the Kato locomotives within the 10 days that the locomotive was being exchanged. The Kato’s due have the front coupler attached to the shell and not the frame so I may have remembered incorrectly about the BLI shell and coupler.]
To further determine if there is something wrong with the Paragon4 or N scale not being compatible with my Rolling Thunder, I retrieved a brand new, in the box, Paragon3 N scale locomotive from its storage location and put it on my N scale layout. That locomotive is an undecorated ES44AC that I will eventually paint to match the scheme of one of my companies. It was purchased on March 22, 2020 and has never been operated. I put it on the tracks closest 2 my Rolling Thunder receiver (about 2 feet away) and turned it on. To my dismay, Rolling Thunder did not pick it up. But even worse, the locomotive would not run. It provided a good light show as the cab light-up completely and all the sounds operated, but the locomotive didn’t move 1 millimeter when I turned the throttle. Here again Broadway Limited Imports has let me down by providing expensive crap that doesn’t work as expected when it comes time for it to do so. You can see this occurring in the following video.
When Paragon4 fails to connect to Rolling Thunder, I test it with a NEW Paragon3 locomotive. It fails to connect as well and fails to move!
As if the new Paragon4 and Paragon3 locomotives right out of the box not working with Roller Thunder wasn’t devastating enough, you won’t believe what happens next. After getting all 4 of the BLI DRGW locomotives working together again, I wanted to get a picture and some video of all of my N scale Chicago, Burlington & Quincy passenger car collection on the HJR Lonsway Pike layout at the same time and if at all possible, have all of the locomotives running at the same time too. As I positioned additional locomotives on the tracks while the 4 DRGW locomotives were idling on the tracks, the A-Unit that was part of the A&B unit dual locomotive set #6862 shorted, and stopped working. THIS pissed me off. However, that action occurred while a video recording was on hold so it didn’t happen on camera. I decided to mention what happened in a video so I could present it to the seller or Broadway Limited Imports, and low and behold, the newly received A-Unit shorted while the trains were just sitting there idling and now it too doesn’t work anymore either. That is 2 of the 3 powered Broadway Limited Imports F7 Diesels with Paragon4 are not working with less than 2 hours of runtime. SOMETHING IS NOT RIGHT! The expensive Broadway Limited Imports CRAP is JUNK — Pretty, Handsome, Beautifully Sounding Electronic Waste! That is a kind way of calling them SHIT! You can see the replacement A-Unit stop working in the following video.
2 Broadway Limited Imports N scale Paragon4 Denver & Rio Grande Western F7-A diesel locomotives STOP WORKING by shorting themselves out.
(Preparing to return all 4 BLI locos)
March 24, 2022 at 3:50 PM. I called Broadway Limited Imports to see what can be done about these failing locomotives. I managed to get a technician on the line. I explained to him what is happening and what is going on. I ask him is this is a known problem and if other people are experiencing these issues. He doesn’t seem to have received a report from anyone else that this is occurring, but he neither confirmed or denied it. He said that they could take a look at them. I mentioned to him that the almost 2-year old locomotive always failed. He said that one seemed like the motor crapped out on it. I mentioned to him that I cannot keep buying faulting locomotives or locomotives that keep failing after being on the shelf for 1 or 2 years. I let him know that yesterday (March 23, 2022), their billing department sent me an invoice for $99.00 for an HO scale Paragon3 that was acting exactly like the almost 2-year old undecorated new-in-the-box never-before-run ES44AC. He told me that he felt he might be able to get the 4 DRGW locomotives looked at by expediating a return to them. I asked him if they were going to charge me for that. He said he felt they could do it, but he would run it by his manager to be sure. Then asked about the 2-year old and before he could say anything, the line went dead. I looked at the time as I quickly called back. It was exactly 4:01 PM. I believe this has happened before and I believe that BLI’s phone system terminates all calls exactly at 4 PM. When I called back, I only received a message indicating that I need to call between the hours of 10 AM and 4 PM. So, it is 4:14 PM as I write this line. One of my concerns is that if I send the 4 DRGW to BLI, the companies I bought them from won’t be able to refund my money if BLI replaces them or send them back modified. So, I think I’m done with Broadway Limited Imports. This is just too many failures occurring with their products. So, I’m going to call ModelTrainStuff.com and FactoryDirectHobbies.com and see if I can return these and get my money back. I just don’t have any confidence in Broadway Limited Import’s ability to produce consistent quality products that work reliably over long periods of time.
Okay, I calmed down a little bit. I called Broadway Limited Back the next morning and was able to speak with the same technician that was helping me when were disconnected the afternoon before. He had spoken with his manager and transferred me to him. We spoke at length about what has happened and about my concerns. Arrangements were made to send the 5 locomotives to Broadway Limited Imports for repair. That has been done. They will evaluate the locomotives and see if they can repair them. We discussed options in case they cannot be repaired or replaced as I won’t be able to returned them to the sellers and get my money back since I sent them to the manufacturer instead. I have a lot of BLI locomotives and I would like for them to run good and reliably. Hopefully this can be achieved.
In the correspondence, as per my conversation with the BLI Tech Manager, this page was provided along with a lot of information regarding how the locomotives ran, my layout, and MRC command station. I stated I would upload a lot of the videos that I took showing the performance and failures of the BLI locomotives. It has taken me much longer to do so than I anticipated. As I write this line it is 3:43 AM on April 1st, 2022. The locomotives were delivered to BLI on March 29th around 4:30 pm according to tracking. So they have had them for a couple of days now. I just invested the past 4 hours updating this page and tried to get as many of the videos and photos posted as I could. There are others not embedded in this page yet. That might be okay though because it may take several weeks for BLI to get to my locomotives. I didn’t check yet to see if the support website shows that they received them yet. I haven’t received an email indicating that they have.
Meanwhile, the HO Paragon3 locomotive that was in their shop was delivered on March 31st. I haven’t opened it yet. I need to get up in 5 hours and have a full day planned for today followed by a Train Club meeting tomorrow so it may be 16 hours to 3 days before I get a chance to resume updating this page or unpacking and of the returned HO Paragon3 locomotive.
Here is an interesting video that didn’t go as planned with just the Kato locomotives and passenger cars.
On March 26, 2022 just before completing the packaging of sending DRGW locomotives to Broadway Limited Imports, I decided to try to test the last working locomotive, an F7-B unit to see if it would connect with my Rolling Thunder module. It would not.
Having removed the DRGWs from my layout and prepared them to be sent to BLI, I split the 20 passenger cars up. I think I had most of them on the tracks, about 10 or 11 cars were pulled by 2 sound-equipped CB&Q E5-A’s while 3 WP F3’s pulled 7 to 9 cars around the tracks in the opposite direction. This worked good for the most part. However, I discovered that something was happening in the tunnel underneath my mountain. The tracks there were not very secure and may have had a small flexible hump in them. As the 2 heavy E5-A units went over the tracks, the tracks lowered and then raised again causing occasional derailments. Discovering this caused me to glue down the roadbed and track a little more and just before doing that I decided to clean all the track that I could reach with a brite-boy. I haven’t removed the pins holding down the tracks yet so I haven’t taken any other videos since or test run the trains again after gluing them down.
I found this Sperry Rail Car Doodlebug at a local antique store. To my surprise, it runs very well. It was made from a kit by someone else. I had some Christmas trains as well as some Metaltrain cars on my layout so I hooked it up to those while testing it. It struggled a little bit but it managed to pull 6 cars around my lower mainline loop on the my HO scale Libraryville layout. Pulling that load or just 3 of the Christmas cars it couldn’t make it up a 3 or 4 percent grade. No matter. Because I was surprised it ran at all, I grabbed my phone and took a video of it running around the track.
It would be 13 months before I finally finished posting the video to YouTube and my website.
Well model railroad fans, this is a cruel review of a brand new, just received, right out of the box, HO scale Athearn Genesis Union Pacifc Heritage DCC-Sound Equipped SD-70ACe Diesel Engine Locomotive #1943. It was delivered on December 3rd, 2020, I opened it shortly after midnight on the 4th of December. I took it out of the box and placed it on my tracks. I grabbed my cell phone and started recording a video. I went over some brief details about the locomotive and I mentioned some new updates to my layout. Actually, the video was supposed to be about the new updates to my layout. I spoke to a friend and he wanted to see a video of the changes I made. Since the new locomotive came in, I decided I would film it as well as show the updates to the layout. My friend would get to see both at the same time.
What I didn’t expect was the locomotive not to move right out of the box. I had to push it to get it to start moving. Once I did that, it moved half-way around my layout. I stopped it. Then I turned the throttle up again and it wouldn’t move. This time, even giving it a push it would not move. I had to end the video the examine the locomotive further. I sat down and read the paperwork from front to back. In it, it has some troubleshooting tips. One of those is what to do if the sound works but the locomotive doesn’t move. It is recommended that I reset the locomotive to factory settings. So, I did that. It was successfully reset to factory and upon turning the transformer back on, after about 10 seconds, the lights blinked 16 times. This is an indication of a successful reset.
However, the locomotive still would not move. I took the shell off and tried to get it to move. It would not. I pressed down on the locomotive while it was on the tracks and the throttle was engaged. Finally, it moved. I let it run for 30 minutes at various speed-steps, but didn’t push it above 14 (using 28 speed steps). Then I ran it in reverse. I let it run until I became too sleepy to deal with it any more. I went to bed.
After a long day, I returned and with a little difficulty, I was able to get the locomotive to run again. This time, I let it run several laps around on speed-step 1. Then I did the same thing in reverse. I eventually after more than hour, increased the speed and ran it at speed-step 4 for a while. I lubricated the places indicated in the manual as points of lubrication. I did this by apply oil onto a toothpick and then placing the toothpick and the many points illustrated in the guidebook. I ran the locomotive both forward and in reverse for another 30 to 45 minutes. Eventually, I put the shell back on it and let it run for several more minutes in both directions. I had to push start it several times. So you can imagine my frustration. Eventually, it did perform better, but still, the locomotive should work flawlessly instead of picking and choosing when it wants to move and when it doesn’t.
Sadly, folks, after a day of resting, I tried to operate the beautiful UP #1943 again, and it wouldn’t move. I tried pressing down on it, giving it a push forward and backwards. It would not move in response to throttle commands. I reached out to the seller and the manufacturer. I will update you as to the outcome of this locomotive once the issues has been addressed by one of them. 12/7/2020 – Henry