Good morning Dave, I see you're another early riser. Just finished the crossword puzzle and am hitting the forum.
To reply to your question I do add weight to problem cars, those that have a tendency to stringline or derail when being pushed in a string of cars. If I remember correctly, without going out to the train room, I use 5 oz + (I think) 1 oz per inch of length (might be 1/2 oz). I've found it to be mostly boxcars.
I add weight to all of my rolling stock.I use automotive tape weights for everythnig except hopper cars and some tank cars.For these I super-glue double ought buckhsot along the frame rails.To be extra cautious I super glue the tape wieghts also.Being metal I don't want them coming off onto the tracks. My rolling stock weighted this way (app 5-6 oz total weight) only derails if I do something stupid.
Ed
Dave, I'm surprised you ask this. I have talked about this before. You DO NOT NEED to add weight to cars if the trucks are mounted properly. Adding weight to a car to prevent derailments is a solution of last resort.
The major causes of derailments are:
1) Loose trucks that wobble. Real trains have the couplers mounted to the car body. With the coupler as part of the truck assembly, any wobble or play in the truck will cause the truck to "lift" when pressure is applied. This means drilling out the attached rivet and replacing it with a blackened screw and a stop or lock nut. I've drill out the rivets to almost every piece of rolling stock I own. My track layout breaks all the rules: tight 027 curves, "S" curves, reverses with switches, curves with switches on them - and yet derailments are very infrequent.
2) Not enough open space in the closed knuckle coupler. The Industrial Rail cars are prime examples of this but nearly any car could fall into this category depending on what is coupled with it. Coupler lacking enough space will bind and cause cars to derail especially on tight curves.
3) Uneven wheel gauge. On postwar cars, as the "nubs" on the freerolling wheel axles wear down, the wheels can move more on the axles, making them more prone to derailments. On fastangle wheel sets, you want to be sure the 2 axles on the same truck both have wheel sets that line up with eachother. This isn't so much a problem from the manufacturers, but it is from the parts vendors making repro fast angle wheel sets.
There are a few other things: poor track or switches, roller pickups that have stiff springs... these can also cause derailments.
Fix the above things first, and you will find it surprising how utterly infrequently you have to add weight to rolling stock. Meaning you can add those weights to your locos and pull more cars. My cheap plastic Lionel 2-4-0 steamers pull 20 cars with ease with weights added to the locos, as do my Industrial Switchers.
brianel, Agent 027
"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."
Dave: Your comment "While metal trucks would be one solution, one could always also add weights in boxcars" - let me tell you my experience relative to that.
A while back, before I started buying 'better' stuff, I had maybe 15 cars with plastic wheels and frames. Very Light but they ran fine as is. Then I read the NMRA standards and thought that I would try it. DISASTER! The cars collapsed inward going around bends. But then I didn't have 72" curves either.
My theory is that if you're starting with relatively good ( meaning hefty) rolling stock and metal trucks and wheels, then maybe the standards work. But I do not in any way believe that one can 'upgrade' cheaper equipement by adding weight.
- walt
Exactly Walt! The rivets used to hold the plastic trucks to the train body or frame have quite a bit of play in them. The plastic MPC snap-rivet is even worse. Though die-cast metal trucks can also have some play just from the tolerances allowed in the manufacturing/design process for the use of a screw.
On the cheaper cars, the rivets need to be drilled out and replaced with a blackened (or not blackened, as the case may be) screw with a lock or stop nut. You want to completely tighten this so the truck won't turn, and then loosen the stop nut so that the truck swivels freely.
On some die-cast trucks that have nubs that protrude into the car frame, I use a Dremel and shorten the height of the nub so that when I reattach the truck with the provided screw, there isn't as much play.
Ridding yourself of the truck wobble will go much further towards eliminating derailments than will adding weight. I can run light 9 inch MPC era flat cars with plastic trucks at the head end of a train pushing backwards much heavier cars with no derailments. The explanation is not weights, but eliminating the wobble of the trucks.
That was a very good answer and explanation Brianel! Its amazing how something so obvious can be missed at first glance. As you say, adding weight makes the problem worse and yes you're right about its being better to mount the couplings to the bodies.
However the trouble with that is that once you start to get into this sort of thing you're kind of heading off towards scale modelling land, I always had major issues with all the minutiae of NMRA standards, its too much trouble in my opinion. I just want to run trains not get into a self imposed regimen of blueprinting everything. Thats why in my HO empire days, much as I would have liked to fit Peco or Kadee couplers for their alleged operational superiority, it was too much time, trouble and expense. If you're going to do all that you might as well go scale to start with.
Our problem is that we're trying to run O on N dimensioned curves, heck most HO track has wider radii than we use, I can get as much 0 gauge onto an 8x4 as I could fit H0! Adding weight is the brute force approach, it makes it harder for the wheelsets to lift off the track and I bet long term users if they checked their oldest rolling stock would find all sorts of wear on the axle bearings, pivots and flanges where the constant use has created that sort of slop through applied force, unless the manufacturer made provision for the problem in the first place.
However I dont agree that the problem is as simple as this. I've always had problems with trucks which is why I prefer the old fashioned English short wheelbase fixed axle goods wagons for shunting and yard work as they very rarely give problems where even correctly set up trucks do. The problem is also caused by the way that trucks are mounted to their bodies and the height of those bodies which makes them sway on tight curves and their mass reacts to a different frequency and a longer moment than the trucks they ride upon.
So even though its the mechanical equivalent of patching over the cracks rather than fixing the foundations, I have found that adding weight to the mass center as low as you can get it, often helps iron out both problems. Fortunately I only have the one wagon, the K line gondola, that ever has any problems and even though its a combination of poor design and bad balance, the quick fix that works is to put something heavy in it!
Nevertheless, your answer is absolutely correct and well thought out, thanks.
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
Very interesting conversation. I have needed to add weight to some of my lightweight log dump cars. The all plastic ones run well with all my engines except my dockside switcher. The switcher has frame mounted couplers, not truck mounted, and therefore when it pushes (not pulls) a load of empty cars the closest truck will always derail. The spring in the frame mounted coupler is nice and sturdy (too sturdy for light cars). Therefore I need to weight the car with a full load or it jumps on the turns (again, only while pushing!).
Just my limited experience....
I have always added weight to some rolling stock that gave trouble with derailing. Now Brian brought up some good details. Read an article in the early 80's about "loose play on trucks to body" and shimming them. Wish I could find it now. I add weight to all older engines. I have some late 70's/early 80's GP9's and U36B's taht will now really pull. I added flat lead weights and pulled fuel tanks and filled with fishing weights.
God bless TCA 05-58541 Benefactor Member of the NRA, Member of the American Legion, Retired Boss Hog of Roseyville , KC&D Qualified
Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
But Jim, Doug, if FasTrack is the solution, then how is it I don't have derailments? I use 027 track and have broken every single rule as far as laying track and layout design. Everyone of my 027 switches has been majorly altered. And I don't as a rule add any weight to cars, save for ones with roller pickups that bounce off track over switches.
Not a knock against FasTrack which I can see is nice, but the answer to the problems are as I stated above, simple as that. It is not necessary to add weights to cars to solve derailments, and adding weight will not solve them in many cases.
And yes, the stiff coupler spring on the Docksider can cause derailments, as can stiff coupler springs on any loco. I've had to make a few alterations on several of my locos to eliminate this problem.
One "fix" I recall from the Tips book is to use magnets for added weight. I enjoyed reading the post about fixing the real problem and plan on spending some track time finding some troublesome rolling stock to put these ideas to use. I do have one problem car and that is a Lionel Tank car that jumps the track at the grade crossing for fastrack. Same car, same truck same crossing every time. I will look into it and post my findings.
Dennis
TCA#09-63805
You're probably right, Jim, except I'd bet it would be the same with FastTrak. My layout is uneven because it's built on 1 inch foam boards laid upon 10 by 29 ft. of rocks that I couldn't grade. So the boards go a bit up and down. Now the rock is all covered by an anti-radon tarp that adds to the bulk.. But I like it: the train noise; jockeying the throttle on the subsequent minor grades - and 027 curves, especially the quasi-super-elevated curves in the corners of the layout. Brian, you're absolutely right - some of my very cheap and old K-line cars were practically unmanageable - too tall, too light and too wobbly. Focusing on syncing down the truck and getting rid of the wobble made 'em much better.
I have added weight to some of my tenders so that my locomotive can pull a longer frieght train, I stuck a magnet or two to the bottom of the tender, once I had to open the tender and add the weight.
Lee
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