I was thinking of an AristoCraft Snow Plow for this fall and winter operations.
A/C sells one for $92 bucks!! http://www.wholesaletrains.com/Detail.asp?ID=5798
Kinda steep for a gondola and a wedge??
So I was thnking of buying the gondola car for $24 dollars http://www.wholesaletrains.com/Detail.asp?ID=20017325
Then buy the snow plow wedge $10 bucks http://www.wholesaletrains.com/Detail.asp?ID=20010093 and attach it to the gondola car for a total of $35 bucks, a lot better than $92........Has anyone else done this??
dan
Dan,
I think the AC plow comes with metal wheels.
I used an old Bachmann gondola (free), and made the wedge from black PVC pipe.
It's even adjustable, and removeable, should I ever need more than 15 gondolas.....
Total outlay:
zero.
Plus, we use it to plow the railroad.
Wow. Even the discounters want $92 for them.
There's one simple rule in G gauge: If you don't want to buy it, make it!
I had ordered just the plow from my local dealer but he went out of business before it ever came. I like the idea of using PVC pipe for the plow. I was going to try to kit bash it on to a cabose. I saw one on one of the other forums that looked really nice. Maybe now I'll have a plow by the time snow flies around here.
Thank you,
Jaime
Curmudgen, I would be interested in seeing pictures of your homemade plow.
Bill
Is it REAL? or Just 1:29 scale?
Long live Outdoor Model Railroading.
I'll try to get some photos today.
Marty:
Guess how many pieces of rolling stock I have with ball-bearing wheelsets in them?
(Hint: well over 100 actual pieces, all 15 years of heavy use, some 20+)
I load my plow up with rock.
One of the locals used lead ingots.
The only "trick" is to tie the Bachmann sideframes togeter with a paperclip under the sideframe screws.
TOC
I bought the separate snow plow from Aristo. It came without the leading-edge blade. Aristo has told me for the last six months, that the leading edge is out-of-stock. !!!!!!!!
I am hoping to mount it to it's own single truck, with weight [batterys] and light, so it can hook to whatever loco I choose with a kadee coupler.
JimC.
Got three.
The PVC is cut at what ever angle you want.
We used 45 degrees.
There is a 1/8" or so brass rod, threaded, fits through the back lower corner of the blade, and through the end beam of the car.
Remove the nut and washer, slide it out, remove the adjustment rod, and return car to revenue service.
The blade tip can be adjusted up and down by turning the double nutz on the adjuster rod inside the end wall of the gondola. The blade pivots around the horizontal rod through the end beam.
This shows the adjustment rod and spring. Those are real rocks, load to suit.
It is an old clevis from an r/c aircraft servo link. Someone had it in their junk box.
On this you can see the old paperclip. I later soldered the ends. Keeps the truck from spreading (ball bearings would make NO difference to truck spread with weight).
I only use plastic wheels in show and ice.
Some folks think letting their metal wheels set to outside temp works, maybe where they are, but NOT here and NOT at the North Pole.
Thanks for posting the pics and narrative, Dave. There are lots of good ideas there to borrow.
Thank for posting the information on the snow plow, now to get a piece of pipe and try and make one , did you use pvc glue to glue it together.
Thanks Ben
Yeah, I had the glue, so I used it.
Hasn't failed in use in 15 years, so I guess it's gonna hold up.
You can choose the size pipe, too.
Some guys used a chunk of 4"....
Curmudgeon wrote:What kind of wheels and what kind of trucks?
Whatever is cheap.
You actually going to use this in snow removal?
Metal springs in the sideframes rust, and you get them all impacted with snow, well, I wouldn't.
German trucks are expensive, metal trucks ditto, the best bet for me for MOW service would be Bachmann with a clip tied across the sideframes as shown to keep the trucks from "spreading".
I should probably ask if you are doing Narrow Gauge or Standard Gauge?
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.
Whatever the standard PVC glue I had on the shelf!
I set the car on the track, figure where the blade will fit, grnd the bottom on a bench grinder until it lays the way I want it to, lift the back up to clear the rail by, oh, less than 1/8", drill the pivot holes, insert brass rod.
Then attach the clevis mount and rod, so I can adjust the tip up away from the rails.
Never have sprayed anything on it.
It just curls off nicely.
The notches in the bottom corners are done to clear the Tenmille Ground Throws.
A little trial run in both directions, mark and grind.
I too am inspired to try making a PVC pipe snowplow. I was hoping to make the type that looks like it was made from a caboose or boxcar, see photos below.
B&M snow plow in Nashua NH.
I have seen photos of this style plow that others have kit bashed that look good. I also like the idea of being able to have a "wing" to push snow even farther back (the dark square/rectangle just behind the plow - there is one on each side so it could clear 3 tracks at once). I also figure you could hide a lot of weight inside this plow.
Thank you,Jaime
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