Olsen's has the Postwar Lionel factory service manual online. Access is free. There are even extra pages that Olsen's created to fill in some of the information missing from the original manual:
http://pictures.olsenstoy.com/searchcd1.htm
RichardM47,send me your snail mail address and I will photocopy my Repair sheets and a tune up piece from a lionel book.
Dr Fu-Manchu
The Doctor is in! I was talking with my girlfriend's cousin, who is getting out of toy trains due to health. He sold me the Lionel service manuals, along with some other stuff. I can copy the service sheets for the Cattle car/Stockyard and send them to the folks that asked for them. Please contact me again and I will get the page copies off via Snail mail. I also am parting out some stock yards if parts are needed, email needs. Till next missive!
Dr. Fu... I would like one of your instruction sets.... I found an horse stockyard on ebay and fooled around with it.... I had one as a kid many many years ago, and wanted it to share with my grandson. It came with a few horses, and I found a set of cows on ebay. It worked for a while, then i relocated it to a side of the layout closer to us.... I have not been ablel to get it working, and dispite many..."Grampa,,, when are the cows and horses going to go????" and countless tinkering -- but isn't that part of the reason we are adicted to this hoby -- the coral hums, but the car doesn't. I did find the Lionel manual online and have tried to reproduce exactly how it was when it was moving, it's still a stationary farm set. For those looking for neat operating things the barel shooters are fun... not the vibrating cars with a ramp, but the ones with a fork lift. One style shoots the barel into the gondola... I had to build a padded side to keep the darn things from shooting into the next room. The other has a fork lift that moves the drum from one side around the house and drops it gently into the car. Grandson really loves the milk car..... and the log ramp. but the stockyard is a work in progress. The problem may be inside the car, as one time last week, I actually got it to momentarily vibrate. but have not been able to do so since.
Thanks ...... these are the things that keep us young..... and a great forum too.
After 60 years or so, all the grommets in my cattle car and corral have failed. I ordered replacements on ebay and was disappointed to find that they only have adhesive on one side. The originals were affixed on both sides with carbon tetrachloride. I read Servoguy's method of replacing the grommets with springs which raised this question in my mind. The fingers on the bridge from the corral to the car apply upward pressure to the corrall chutes/walkways when the solenoid is activated. If the springs are only glued on one side, how is contact with the chutes maintained?
Thanks. Turns out I'm ok, just wanted to verify.
The cattle pen uses two sections of tubular track, not one section. The joint between the two sections is centered on the cattle pen.
Here is a photo of the bottom of the truck showing the sliding shoe. The parts are available at most online parts dealers.
Larry
Here is a link to a post I made a while back re modifying the cattle car and corral so that they work.
http://www.modeltrainforum.com/showthread.php?t=15882&highlight=cattle+pen
I have two corrals and cars modified,and the cattle never stop going around and never fall over.
do you have a foto of the bottom of the car that you can post? I think my car is missing the contact that is supposed to contact the blade between the tracks.
I was contacted by raubsville about a non-working cattle car. He said the stockyard was working, the was not. There are 2 reasons for this: One, the wire going to the shoe is broken somewhere. Two, the coil may have died. The first is easy to fix, the second means a donor car for the part. I can sell him a car, as I have a few spare ones. The coil is no longer offered by parts dealers(as far as I can tell) Please email me off site and let me know which problem you have found. I also have some stockyards, either whole or parts. contact me off line if you are in need of items. A side note: if you use 0-27 track, either use the older black tie type. Otherwise you have to respace the end ties to get the track to snap into the stockyard base. I learned this when I refurbished a set for a former member.
Dr.Fu-Manchu, Humble as Ever!
Check out these videos from the past showing your cattle car. so neat.
http://www.jlmtrains.com/
Go to showroom layout and click on Video gallery two 8 min and one 30 sec videos . Very cool.
Tks Kev.
Joined 1-21-2011 TCA 13-68614
Kev, From The North Bluff Above Marseilles IL.
arkady,
I agree with you on that. I've worked on both the 1949 model (serviced 3) and the 1950 model (serviced 8), and the 1950 redesign is probably the source of those negative comments. The simplified method of mounting the platform with adhesive washers didn't hold up through the years like the 1949 model's more complicated grommeted tip method did. The adhesive wahers either harden or disintegrate.
If exact reproductions were available, that wouldn't be an issue. I never could find reproductions of the 3656-17 washers for the car or 3656-169 washers for the corral that gave the performance I was after. I made my own washers from mousepads available at an office supply or computer store and an ordinary 1/4" hole punch.
Cattle are another factor. Originals that are pliable, have a base that is flat and not warped, and have all fingers intact are the best. Beware of reproductions here. Some of the repro cattle work great, and some don't work at all. Here is how I tell the difference between the good and bad reproductions:
Overall Size: The reproductions that function properly are the same size as the originals. Avoid reproductions that are smaller.
Fingers: The reproductions that work properly have all fingers present, and the front finger points back as it should. The bad repros are missing a finger on the figure's left side, and the front finger is angled forward, opposite of what it should be.
Smell: I know, this sounds really strange. Smelling the cattle will help you tell original from reproductions. The rubber that Lionel used for the cattle has a very distinct odor, which all repros lack .
I have got to say, I am really surprised at all the negative comments about PW cattle car unreliability. I run both my cattle car and its associated pen from variable voltage, and I've never had the slightest problem with either. There must be a lot of cattle cars and stockyards out there that have gotten seriously beaten up over the years.
The link below might help some of you a little. As I recall, the keys to powering the "3656" system are two special contacts that mount in ordinary three-rail track. See the objects marked 'O' gauge Ground Clip, 3656-66; 'O' gauge Power Blade 3656-67 and 'O-27 gauge Power Blade 3656-68 on page 6 of the illustrations.
This is for the 1950 item which differed from the '49 item; and, as others have pointed out, there have been other variations throughout the years, involving cattle and horses.
The post-war types can be made to work, but 'taint easy. A lot of "stars" must be in allignment.
http://pictures.olsenstoy.com/searchcd31.htm?itm=545
For some possibly useful additional info see
http://pictures.olsenstoy.com/searchcd31.htm?itm=544
.
Doctor,
Thanks for the response. I can't quite figure out how to email you directly, so here is my address:
Brian Yost
711 S. North Point Road
Baltimore, MD 21224
Many Thanks.
Baltimoredrummer
Dear Baltimoredrummer: The Doctor is In! Let me find my instructions and tune-up article and I can send them to you. Email me your mailing address and I can fix you up.
The Doctor
Hello Doctor. I would love to get some information on tuning up the stockyard accessory. A copy of the instructions would also be very helpful. I purchased this item without instructions and I am a bit lost as to how to get it running.
Thanks.
Bob Nelson
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.
Get the Classic Toy Trains newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month