The head is gray, hands don't work , back is weak, legs give out, eyes are gone, money go's and my wife still love's Me.
Have you contacted the folks at the Mack Museum. Contact me a dmunseyjr@comcast.net if you can't find the URL - I've got it at home.
Don
Don Munsey, Jr S/Sn42 and Hn42 river logging fan Big Sandy & Cumberland RR & VGN Rwy fan Bonsai enthusiast Living in UpperRight Corner of Louisiana
Don,
Thanks, I wrote a letter to them two weks ago, but no response yet. I'm still hoping they come up with something soon. If you have a contact and e-mail address I'd appreciate it.
Sam Clarke
Kadee Quality Products
at our measeum we got a few indrestral switchers that are close want me to run down and grab some pics?
Regardless, if the switchers are not Macks we'd like some photos. Nothing has come up yet so I might be forced to build my own interior and any ideas I could get from other switchers will help. Thanks.
I forgot I had this. This is a MAck critter right down the road from us. You think it's interior might be similar?
I finally received an e-mail from the Mack Truck museum. They do not have any information on the interior but a couple of photos that show the loco with the door open just enough to see a few details. They said it was a pretty sparce interior and the photo indicate that. They unfortunate do not have one of these Mack switchers in their collection but do have some photos and drigrams.
Sam Clarke Kadee Quality Products
Lionel collector, stuck in an N scaler's modelling space.
I got the pics but the cite I usta use wont reconise me anymore so any recomendations as to where to go to get em up? I apologise for the lateness.
No interior picture but this is what I did with mine to detail it. It now has a simple control stand behind the bonnet at each end of the cab. Bit like a tram controller.
Nice. Here are the pics hope they help.
http://s218.photobucket.com/albums/cc149/SandG_Rute/
Patrick I hope you dont mind me posting your photos.
The control stand on the right side is the throttle, the stand on the left is the airbrake, the wheel in front of the brake stand is likely to set the handbrake. I suspect the lever in the front is a sanding lever for traction.
In this pic there are two levers next to the transmission casing, I suspect the larger one could be a manual transfer case shifter that would allow change in a high and low gearing range between the motor and the transmission, very common on direct mechanical driven critters (IOWs no electric traction motors) to give them a better heavy traction in lowing gear and a higher gear for normal running. Not sure about the second lever but its possible its a high-low gear shifter inside the tranny itself giving yet another gearing option. Seen a similar set-up in semi-trucks, but where trucks can have quite a few gears, I suspect this critter only had a 2 speed H-L transfer case, and a 2 speed H-L transmission. The red tank is the fuel tank. Could be wrong but thats what I'm seeing.
Have fun with your trains
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