I don't know about this prewar switch. On another switch had the same problem with a roller dropping into a gap on the switch. I found a gargraves wood rail tie (may have to cut to fit gap) worked well.
Do you have issolation pins on the two inner rails
Life's hard, even harder if your stupid John Wayne
http://rtssite.shutterfly.com/
Does anyone have a wiring diagram for the left and right Lionel prewar 012 switches? And for the 011 switches? I have a 2 of the 012 and 4 of the 011 and only about half of them work so I need to pop them open and look at the wiring but I don't have a guide. One of the 012 switches won't switch, it just hoovers in the center and makes a terrible buzzing noise, not sure what's going on with it. any help would be appreciated. Some of the 011 work but intermittently, not sure how to fix that either.
AnonymousI picked up some old Lionel PreWar 'O' gauge switches for my train layout. they work really well as far as reliability is concerned, but I do have a problem with the rollers on my engines sometimes getting hung up in the rails that form the junction between straight and curved. It is where the center rail goes down under the curved rail and there is a big gap. Is there something I can fill the gap in with? I'm afraid of have a roller torn off if it keeps getting stuck there. Newer switches have a different setup for the center rail and this does not seem to be a problem. I would like to run these older switches if I can because the wheel flanges are too deep for the newer switches and besides I like the look of the older metal switches. I hope someone here like 'lionelsoni' or 'Brianel' might have an idea or two. I was thinking of making a piece of wood filed down in the shape of the space and maybe that might work leaving enough room for the wheel flanges. I had a great holiday season and my uncle gave me a Lionel #3652 Gondola car that is yellow and unloads by remote control. It is metal and PreWar! Cool! It has those funny elctric couplers on it but it matches up to my stuff that has manual couplers. I also got some Plasticville buildings too. My girl friend got me those. She thinks my trains are way cool!
JTrains At this point I've had one of the 011s substituted in place of a straight piece of the track on my ICRR and it has yet to snag anything I've thrown at it over the past couple of weeks. I haven't run any PW shoe operating cars at it - I'll do that later today. From there I'm going to move it "on a little farther down the line" (as Johnny Cash would say) and substitue it for a curve and repeat the experiment. Will report back what I see. Of course YMMV - so far, so good though.
At this point I've had one of the 011s substituted in place of a straight piece of the track on my ICRR and it has yet to snag anything I've thrown at it over the past couple of weeks. I haven't run any PW shoe operating cars at it - I'll do that later today. From there I'm going to move it "on a little farther down the line" (as Johnny Cash would say) and substitue it for a curve and repeat the experiment. Will report back what I see. Of course YMMV - so far, so good though.
Well, after a month of testing I only ran into a clear problem with cars that have a circa 1970 "hollow roller" pickup (like some early Fundimensions whistle tenders). The roller almost gets lodged in the switch causing a derailment. I was also less than impressed by the "thump" that the roller on my #50 gang car made when going through the 011. Perhaps what was the "worst" was that the switch coil energized each time cars went through it because of its anti-derailment design, drawing about 1A off the track current in the process. Once the switch did not quite fully close and the coil remained energized, eventually causing my 3A circuit breaker to open.
Because of all of this, I'm not sure where/how I'm going to use my pair of 011s. Putting it on a mainline operating at normal speeds has its issues - and using it in a yard/siding exposes the coil to constant operation if cars are left across it. We'll have to see...
IT consultant by day, 3rd generation Lionel guy (raising a 3YO 4th generation Lionel Lil' Man) by night in the suburbs of the greatest city in the world - Chicago. Home of the ever-changing Illinois Concretus Ry.
Oregon Ace This is something I've wondered about, whether those old prewar switches will snag rollers.
This is something I've wondered about, whether those old prewar switches will snag rollers.
Having read others' previous comments, as part of my effort to incorporate them into my layout I thought I'd run some tests. At this point I've had one of the 011s substituted in place of a straight piece of the track on my ICRR and it has yet to snag anything I've thrown at it over the past couple of weeks. I haven't run any PW shoe operating cars at it - I'll do that later today. From there I'm going to move it "on a little farther down the line" (as Johnny Cash would say) and substitue it for a curve and repeat the experiment. Will report back what I see. Of course YMMV - so far, so good though.
I'm not finding any provision to edit a previous post. Trying to fix photo posting issue.
[quote user="Oregon Ace"]
This is something I've wondered about, whether those old prewar switches will snag rollers. Sure looks like it. I was given a rusted batch of prewar switches a couple years ago and sold them off cheap because I had too many other projects to deal with. Lionel's postwar switches have the big center-rail 'blob' betwen the switchpoints, apparently a redesign to accomodate rollers better. I suspected the prewar switches would be a problem for postwar trains, although I never tried them because the rusty switches needed a lot of clean-up work.
http://i1273.photobucket.com/albums/y413/Ace97601/100_3684_zpsrymw1ggr.jpg
I'd like to take apart the switch mechanism on a pair of Pre-War 011 switches (to both clean as well as to add a fixed voltage source) but can't seem to get the cover off. I removed the two screws from the sides of the top plate - but things didn't seem to want to budge and I didn't want to apply more force than what I was using. Haven't been able to find many notes about these switches. Does anyone have pointers as to how these come apart?
Hi,
Have you run any of the lionel Box Cab Locos (248, 152) and early cars on 011 0r 012 switches useing this gap-filler? Are there any paticular problems?
I'm building a combo Standard Gauge and early O gauge layout and would like to use similar looking switches for both: #222 for STD, and # 011 for O.
Thanks,
George Thill
Regards, Roy
Bob Nelson
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