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1936 or 1937 AF hudson

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  • Member since
    June 2003
  • From: US
  • 429 posts
1936 or 1937 AF hudson
Posted by train18393 on Tuesday, August 14, 2018 12:19 AM

I recently had an early American Flyer Hudson given to me. I would like to get it running. the running gear is free and the motors turns freeley. Should I try to clean it up or should I clean the bearings/communtator/axels and leave the rest of the grunge on the motor assembly. Is this a really rare AF engine? The trailing trucks have only one axel and how it was called a Hudson I don't know as a NYC Hudson is a 4-6-4 and this is really a 2-6-2. I am an amature at AF trains and I am not sure what I should do.

 

Paul D&MR HO railroader

  • Member since
    August 2011
  • 635 posts
Posted by Nationwidelines on Tuesday, August 14, 2018 6:49 AM

You should certainly clean the grunge off of the engine, it won't affect value and certainly could improve the operation of the motor.  The things I would do for operability is change the brushes and replace any wiring / insulation that may need repair.

As for the engine, they are relatively common.  Flyer called the motor a Hudson even though the wheel configuration was not correct for a Hudson.  It sounds like you have a 1936 Hudson, as the later models were a 2-6-4 configuration. 

The 1936 hudsons came with a steel bodied streamline tender with a whistle and the tender drawbar connected to a pin sticking up on the trailing truck, where the 1937 hudsons came with an aluminum bodied, coal pile tender with a shorter drawbar that connected to a pin on the engine body.  

NWL

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