QUOTE: Originally posted by ben10ben That's it. Put a drop or two on the place where the shaft sticks out. Look and there should be a small notch in one end of it. This notch is where you fill the oil wick, and will take several drops of oil.
God bless TCA 05-58541 Benefactor Member of the NRA, Member of the American Legion, Retired Boss Hog of Roseyville , KC&D Qualified
QUOTE: The CW80 can accutate the postwar whistle relays, only it is VERY sluggish! You are right, if you start use some watts (lighted caboose, passeger cars, smoke units) it will hardly close the relay at all. The modern transformer only need a little DC current to close modern electronic whistle relays and soundboards.(Thats why the CW80 has low DC voltage) But postwar relays need a little kick in the rear end to close. The old lionel transformers equiped with a whistle rectifier can give that extra "kick". Jerry
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
QUOTE: Originally posted by jwse30 and jaabat Sorry if this is a stupid question, but John's latest post has me wondering. Will a post war whistle tender whistle when using a small, modern transformer's (CW-80) whistle button? I would assume so. They work with my modern MRC dual power (the one that puts out the square sine wave). The only issue might be wattage, but an engine and whistling tender shouldn't eat all the watts up. If you have a lot of accessories, or a lighted passenger train, that could be a different story. J White
QUOTE: Thanks, Keith. I knew the W stood for whistle, but have always wondered why some whistle tenders had an X at the end of the part number while others did not. I have David Doyle's book about Lionel's post-war trains, and although I think it's a great reference book with many color photos, it has very little information about tenders and all their variations. Thanks again, Jim
Bob Nelson
QUOTE: Originally posted by 1688torpedo Hello Jim ! The W indicates that the tender has a whistle and the X most likely means that it was a department store special or made up for a different Lionel Customer Account. In the prewar years the X meant many different things.Such as No Journel Boxes on the trucks of certain freight or passenger cars(eg "027" 1600 series) or maybe a special set for Macy's or Gimbels in New York. There has been much discussion over the years as to why Lionel used a X to signify different things about its Trains. Hope this helps................Keith
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