Sounds like the whistle unit needs to be taken apart and cleaned, the motors in most of the Lionel tenders before 1970 are similar to the motor brush set up for the engines, just a smaller version of a motor. As for the switches if they are 022's the center wire on the control goes to the center terminal on the switch, either wire can be put to the other terminals, may have to trade wires if the wrong light in the control lights up or switch bulb locations. If 022's switches there may be a small plug (only needed for low track voltage) that goes in on one side of the switch housing and this is wired to a constant voltage supply, use terminal B or C and turn power up to about two/thirds, the soleniods can handle a good bit of power on the older 022's. Otherwise the switches draw track power, even with the constant voltage plug the nuetral is derived from the track inside the switch.
If you can find it there are instruction manuals that were made by Lionel for those trains, paperback books are what they look like. Maybe you can get an instruction manual at a train show.
Lee F.
thanks bob...
ill tell you what happened: once i got the cover off the tender i saw the fan, on the side. I blew into it really hard. I heard the whistle. I then replaced the cap again, with the suspicion that all the fuss of opening and blowing etc might have jogged it into working. Sure enough, I treid it, and the whistle blew! However, in addition to the whistle noise, the tender also makes a scraping sound like a bunch of bolts in a blender, lots of extra grinding noise. I presume that a little cleaner, oil or something needs to be applied somewhere, but Im not sure where. No matter: until I can get to the hobby shop with it, I at least know that it works.
Thanks so much! Great resource here!
S. Ltd.
Note that the DC voltage to blow the whistle does not operate the whistle motor directly. Instead, it operates a special "slugged" relay in the tender, which applies the track voltage to the motor. So there must be track voltage for it to blow. You can easily test the whistle motor by putting voltage on the track and closing the relay contact with your finger.
The relay is a candidate for being the culprit. If you put a few volts DC on the track instead of the transformer voltage, you should see the relay operate. A flashlight cell should be enough; but take everything else off the track, including the locomotive, to avoid loading down the cell.
Bob Nelson
thanks for the tip mr white. im off to open up that tender now!!! im glad to hear that i wired it right.
sharpnack
The Sharpnack Limited wrote:Greetings- This is my first post on this board. Glad to be here! 1) I have one of those older model transformers circa 1950-60s (i guess) with the lever handles on either side and whistle/reverse direction But the air-whistle tender is silent. Im sure I forgot to hook up something. I remember being able to operate the horn from the transformer itself. There are 8 terminal pins, labeled A-D and (4) U U U U at the top. I have two tracks/trains running, and have attached the wires to the A&1st U and the D& last U. So I have 4 terminal pins remaining. Do I need to attach something to these in order to get the air-whistle tender whistling? I have 3 a-w tenders in my dads dusty collection and none of them work yet, and i doubt all three are just broken. What am i doing wrong? Or, if the trains are moving, should the whistle be working, and I just need to get new air-whistle tender? Thoughts?Thanks - Sharpnack
Greetings- This is my first post on this board. Glad to be here!
1) I have one of those older model transformers circa 1950-60s (i guess) with the lever handles on either side and whistle/reverse direction But the air-whistle tender is silent. Im sure I forgot to hook up something. I remember being able to operate the horn from the transformer itself. There are 8 terminal pins, labeled A-D and (4) U U U U at the top. I have two tracks/trains running, and have attached the wires to the A&1st U and the D& last U. So I have 4 terminal pins remaining. Do I need to attach something to these in order to get the air-whistle tender whistling? I have 3 a-w tenders in my dads dusty collection and none of them work yet, and i doubt all three are just broken. What am i doing wrong? Or, if the trains are moving, should the whistle be working, and I just need to get new air-whistle tender? Thoughts?
Thanks - Sharpnack
I have recently excavated my father's old Lionel trains/tracks/accessories from the dusty garage and have sucessfully figured out how to get them running again! Ah that smell of ozone as those little things started up again, took me back to the day. But I am for all intents and purposes a beginner.
So - some beginner questions (I apologize if these topics have been covered already somewhere else-please direct me to the thread...)
2)Also-track switches. How do you wire those to the transformer? I seem to recall they got wired from the transformer to a controller, and then, from that switch to the track swich itself, which is operated from the controller, not the transformer. But i dont want to wire it wrong and cause a problem.
3) It would seem im going to have to get better w/electricity and wiring in order to understand/maintain my set. Any good books that would get me started on train wiring so i dont have to keep buggin you all here?
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