Hi Everyone,I bought a couple of empty gondola cars at a train show this past Sunday. One vendor actually threw in 4 cars, saying the gondola I wanted was part of a set. He only charged me $10 for all of them, and threw the locomotive in my bag too. At first I thought he made a mistake but he didn't seem to care. Anyway, the engine is pretty beat up, and I was wondering if it would be worth trying to fix up, or if I should just continue to let my daughter roll it around on the floor like she is. When I asked what it was, he merely told me "post war". Thanks,
PJ
Hi skullie you have a lionel scout engine made somewhere around the fiftys
TCA#09-63805
LS1, I agree that a full restoration would not be worth it, but I do see some rust and to just do a quick clean up job with lube/brushes and a bit of scrub/paint to stop the rust would be in order. If it is to be played with, you don't want the rust all over it, or your child. Something like that would be a great project for a beginner, and not very hard to do. Besides, he could paint it pink for his daughter, or any other color.
Dennis
LS1Heli wrote:That is the 1110 Scout from 1949 and 1951. After looking at the pictures I have no idea why you would want to restore that. If you cleaned it up it looks like C5 condition which is what 1/2 of the people on this forum are operating. Not C1 which is basically junk and should be restored. I see engines in that condition that people have on their layout and they considered that their "pride and joy."
That's right. If I still had my Scout engine I had when I was a kid, I would refer to it as my pride & joy too . Nice some people can be above that stage. Awful loose with the word JUNK IN MY OPINION.
csxt30 wrote: LS1Heli wrote:That is the 1110 Scout from 1949 and 1951. After looking at the pictures I have no idea why you would want to restore that. If you cleaned it up it looks like C5 condition which is what 1/2 of the people on this forum are operating. Not C1 which is basically junk and should be restored. I see engines in that condition that people have on their layout and they considered that their "pride and joy."That's right. If I still had my Scout engine I had when I was a kid, I would refer to it as my pride & joy too . Nice some people can be above that stage. Awful loose with the word JUNK IN MY OPINION.
Want to see a few pictures of our "pride and joys" ??????
Skullie, the loco is absolutely worth fixing if.... the big if:
Try giving some power and see if anything happens. If the wheels spark or there's just poor contact, clean the wheels and rollers and try it again. If you have luck on this, goody for you.
Now, if you don't have the Greenburg Repair Guide, check your loco library: my local library has them both for AF and Lionel. This loco was a bottom line cheap loco of its' day. The motor is an enclosed bakelight assembly: if you take the shell off the loco you will see the drive wheels attached into a boxed in enclosure. The motor is inside this and is a REAL CHALLENGE to work on if you have never done it before. It certainly can be a learning experience, BUT get the repair guide first. The probelm is when you take the side cover off, all the parts tend to spring out and fly all over the place. The reverse unit is basically a mechanical cam that changes position when power is cut off, thus changing direction of the loco.
The big operational drawback of these locos is because of the small space between the motor chassis assembly, in particular the center rollers and the center rail, the loco bounces and jerks over uncoupling tracks and switches, thus automatically (and undesirably) changing direction. This problem can be solved by remvoing the roller pickups from the loco and adding a roller pickup assembly to a tender and using a tether (a male/female spade connector will do) and soldering a wire from the copper strip on the loco to the center roller on the pickup assembly on the tender. This works because I've done it.
If the loco runs without having to pull the "guts" out of the motor, it would be easy enough to custom paint the loco either existing fresh black or another color, like pink as suggested above. A pal of mine did this and his daugher just loved that loco because it was "hers." He added some cheap gondolas and added some small figures from cartoons like Garfield, Dora and Sponge Bob... I've seen this figures in bubblegum machines at the supermarket for 50 cents. I've gotten a whole load of differing figures from these and they're perfect for Lionel sized trains.
Trains don't have to be expensive or so-called valuable to be priceless.I got my nephew a Lionel MPC Rock Island Docksider for 99 cents at the Salvation Army - and it worked. So I fixed it up, adding more weight to the loco, a traction tire, a working headlight, painted the molded-in handrails and the molded-in coal load and that little bugger can pull 20 cars now believe it or not, though I tell him running at the max won't help the loco's life. So we run usually with about half that and it pulls great.... it's one his favorite locos... he likes the red color too!
brianel, Agent 027
"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."
The scout's Achilles's heel is that the reversing mechanism is operated by a hinged part of the motor-field magnetic circuit. This mechanism is none too reliable; and, when it fails to step fully, the motor is open-circuited, preventing it from stepping no matter how many times the power is cycled, until it is corrected manually. I think the scout is best locked into forward (or reverse, if you prefer!).
Bob Nelson
brianel027 wrote:...A pal of mine did this and his daugher just loved that loco because it was "hers." He added some cheap gondolas and added some small figures from cartoons like Garfield,
...A pal of mine did this and his daugher just loved that loco because it was "hers." He added some cheap gondolas and added some small figures from cartoons like Garfield,
Any pic of that Garfield train per chance?
Here's mine:
I bought this from a fellow on a forum, well actually it was a throw in. He had a Railway Express Agency freight car in very nice shape and a few flat cars THat I wouldn't mind having and he threw in the Scout.
When I first got it, I put it on the tracks and it was an absolute flamethrower - sparks everywhere, Bob's aforementioned forward/reverse issue and all.
I sent it to a friend of mine who was a Lionel repair man and a while later he sent it back and I was shocked at how well and surprisingly quietly it ran.
I have no "pride and joy" factor in this one, but it is a dandy little engine. Unfortunately, I had it in a box that was a little too close to where I was painting some fence and it has some overspray on it. I am thinking of either doing a full repaint on it, or trying to remove teh overspray, or trying my hand at engine weathering.
As an aside, there are many folks here, myself included, who greatly enjoy relatively common items. For some it is nostalgia and the stories wrapped up in the trains we had as kids, others have different reasons. Being insulting to others over what is important to them is never a good idea.
Here's one of our pride and joys. A 2034 from 1952. No marker lights (broken off long ago), plenty of scratches and patina, but it runs like a top and we love it!
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
If push came to shove and I had to get rid of all my trains except one, I'd probably keep my Scout set from the early 60's. My 246 engine still runs nicely and it's priceless to me - it's what got me started in this wonderful hobby.
Joel
Thanks for all of the info everyone, I really appreciate the advice.
I've decided not to get too deep into trying to restore this one. For one I dont even know how to take it apart yet, I have to get that repair guide that was mentioned. Second, I think all I am going to do with this is clean it up a bit and make it "safe" for my daughter to play with. I have a friend of is a professional painter, he airbrushes murals and such on cars and motorcycles all the time. He is going to take it to his shop after I get it apart, sandblast it and paint it for me. In the meantime I jut plan to rig some wheels that will spin easier for her to roll it with.
I've already got a few cheap cars to paint and customize for her too. Luckily, the closest hobby shop here is a customer of mine where I work, and I now have gotten to know the owner. He told me to let him know if there is anything in his store I like and he'll give me a break on it. So I've gotten a few cars, and I plan to get more. Maybe even another inexpensive engine to give to my daughter that will work well on the track.
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