Very nice. Any amount of weight added in the right place helps. Just a warning it is possible to add too much. I added so much weight to a brass 2-10-0 that the drive coupling tube was slipping on the motor. I revamped to a universal shaft and all was good until it started clicking while pulling around 70 cars. The idler gear in the gear box broke. I then removed some weight and it's been a great performer since.
Pete.
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
So my tungaten weight came in the mail today. Ended up adding a little less than 4 oz and removed the rear spring for the guide wheels. Now the train has zero struggle at all up the grade. Now sure if it was the spring that helped the most or the weight. Just doesn't seem like 3.5 oz would make that much of a difference. I may go ahead and remove the front spring as well just to see how it does.
Redhawk95 So I did just weigh the MTH engine. It is 23 ounces without the tender and 37 ounces with the tender on it combined. So that's only 1 oz less than your engine. so do you guys still think its a weight issue?
So I did just weigh the MTH engine. It is 23 ounces without the tender and 37 ounces with the tender on it combined. So that's only 1 oz less than your engine. so do you guys still think its a weight issue?
Weight of the tender is not relavent to pulling ability since that weight is not over the drivers.
However, the tender weight will work against you as it increases the load the engine has to pull.
wrench567 Beside adding weight, try removing the springs on the front and trailing trucks. That would put more weight on the drivers. Sometimes those springs do more harm than good. Pete.
Beside adding weight, try removing the springs on the front and trailing trucks. That would put more weight on the drivers. Sometimes those springs do more harm than good.
Redhawk95It is 23 ounces without the tender
i'd estimate that the engine can pull (tractive effort) 5oz. (20-25% of weight on drivers)
better rolling cars require < 2% of their weigh to move on level track. add 2% for the grade and possibly another 1% (R/30) for a curve and that's ~5% or ~100 oz (weight of train)
less 14 for the tender leaves ~86oz
do your 5 passenger cars weigh about ~17 oz/car?
greg - Philadelphia & Reading / Reading
Also I would like to add that I have a BLI n&w Y6B that I tried pulling the longest possible train that I could around this grade and it was able to pull 16 coal cars as well as 6 passenger cars. But these 4-8-4s are struggling to pull anything more than 4 passenger cars. I just put an order in for some tungsten putty so I'm hoping to see a change. I mean its super frustrating to see that. Haha
Lots of savvy and highly experienced responders above. I will add that undulating track and grades-that-are-steeper-than-we-think are often going to trip up the intrepid layout builder. My BLI Niagara can brute six Walthers Heavyweight passenger cars, plus two head-end reefers, up my 3% grades, and that's the Paragon from 2004/5 with no traction tires.
I do lube my cars' trucks, though, with plastics compatible ATF.
Pruitt One sure-fire fix - add Bullfrog Snot to the rear set of drivers on each loco. It acts like a traction tire. Works great!
One sure-fire fix - add Bullfrog Snot to the rear set of drivers on each loco. It acts like a traction tire. Works great!
Mike
BEAUSABREYou might want to consider replacing the trucks and wheel sets of your cars
doesn't seem warranted, yet. he said the cars roll freely
Redhawk95I can tell you that if you u couple the passenger cars at the top of the grade they will run very fast down the grade and well past the end of the grade about 4 feet into a staging yard.
i think adding weight is where to start, but not sure without knowing weight of loco or cars
You might want to consider replacing the trucks and wheel sets of your cars and/or using MicroMark's Truck Tunner and Truck Spreader on the journals and trucks Search results for "truck tuner" (micromark.com)
I got sheet lead from a small company in my hometown of Hamilton, Ontario, and dropped in to buy some. I don't recall how much I had intended to buy, but the two guys running the melting pot simply cut off 5' or 6' of it and wished me a good day...no charge. I also dropped by a tire shop a couple miles from home, and asked if they had any scrap wheel-balancing weights available. I got about 10lbs. of them, although some turned out to be steel or zinc.
I have lots of sheet aluminum on hand, from when we bought the house next door to ours. It's perfect for creating moulds if you wish to cast your own for adding weight to both locomotives and rolling stock. A straight-edge, a knife, and tin-snips will do the job
Here are some pictures ...
I made a melting pot, using the steel cap from a spray-bomb, along with a piece of broomstick, then loaded some lead into the pot, put it on the vice and then heated it with a propane torch...
After the lead has been poured into the moulds, it takes only a few minutes to harden, but I do let it cool before removing the castings from the moulds...
The moulds can be used several times, but eventually the aluminum will fatigue.
These simple moulds were used to make the boiler weights for the Genesis Mikados....
Bear's comment about balancing the weight at the mid-point of the loco's wheel base is good advice for getting the best results when adding extra weight.
Wayne
Redhawk95 I notice a lot of you guys using lead. Has anyone ever used tungsten putty? It's heavier and moldable just seems like a better substitut. Just wondering if there is a reason.
I notice a lot of you guys using lead. Has anyone ever used tungsten putty? It's heavier and moldable just seems like a better substitut. Just wondering if there is a reason.
Cost. I have a bunch of lead flashing. It was free. It's maleable and easy to work.
How much weight do I add to my locomotives? As much as I can fit. Some of my brass locomotives had cast zink weights. They were replaced with lead. You can find places if you think outside the box. Cab roofs, cab floors, smoke box, and fire box are some places. I even put lead inside the cylinders just leaving room for the piston rods.
Mark P.
Website: http://www.thecbandqinwyoming.comVideos: https://www.youtube.com/user/mabrunton
Redhawk95I notice a lot of you guys using lead... ... Just wondering if there is a reason.
unfortunately I do not have a scale at the moment. I can tell you that if you u couple the passenger cars at the top of the grade they will run very fast down the grade and well past the end of the grade about 4 feet into a staging yard.
I have a Bachmann light Mikado that couldn't pull a dozen freight cars around my basically flat layout. I swapped out all the old plastic wheelsets and it so imprived rolling performance that i just kept goilg until all my wheels were metal.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Another factor that is familiar to buyers of smaller brass locomotives and that is that the driver treads are really slick when new and over time and with enough running that should ease. Don't rub the driver treads with abrasive as that is an invite to places that gather dirt.
It should probably also be mentioned that while 2% grades are rather common on layouts, on the prototype a 2% ruling grade is something to be reckoned with.
Dave Nelson
i'm curious. could you post the weight of the loco and passenger cars (total) and how easily the passenger cars rolls down the 2% grade?
I guess I'm wondering if it is slipping.
If so, I'd wipe the rails with rubbing alcohol and clean the locomotive's wheels with alcohol.
I don't know if that will make a difference, but it is the easiest thing to try before you get to more complicated stuff.
York1 John
This much modified Bachmann locomotive...
...was never a good puller, and eventually quit running. The tender was a partial scratchbuild, using part of a sun-damaged covered hopper that I converted into a centipede-type.I sold it, quite cheaply, to a friend...he was aware that it didn't run, but it was a fairly nice loco for photographic purposes.
Pretty-well all of my locomotives get added weight...
I re-built three of these Athearn U-boats....
...fitting them with two motors each, and filling the bodyshells with sheet and custom-cast lead weights...
Each of them weighed in at just over 33 oz., and all three had similar drawbar pull-capacities of 8.3 oz. They easily pulled a 22 lb. train of hoppers, filled with Black Beauty blasting medium, up a 45' long 2.8% grade, composed of two complete horseshoe-type curves (one to the right, and one to the left), followed by a series of wide radius S-bends.
I add weight to all of my locomotives, diesel or steam, and usually as much as can be crammed-in.
Most of the added weight is lead, cast in homemade aluminum moulds.
Here's an Athearn Genesis Mikado, one of six modified with extra weight...
...the air tanks are brass tubing, also filled with lead, and the cab has sheet lead under the roof, and lead seat's for the fireman and engineer. The tender was modified by removing the coal bunker's cast-plastic load and fashioning a suitable coal bunker to allow use of either Black Beauty blasting medium or coke breeze as the fuel load. The tender's cistern was also filled with blocks of lead, and all of the tenders' wheels were fitted with wipers to increase electrical contact.
In completed form, the engine/tender combo weighs-in at just over 25 oz.
The Bachmann is last years version of the J class 4-8-4 611 and the MTH loco I also bought last year and is the J class 4-8-4 603 I bought new. I am pretty sure the Bachman is a plastic boiler but the MTH feels like metal.
So would you suggest getting tungsten putty and start adding weight to the inside of the engines? How much weight would you start off with?
Both the Bachman and the MTH locomotive were bought last year.
Take a good hard look at how free rolling those cars are too. I have a BLI Niagara without traction tires that pulls a 5 car consist of walther's Proto 85' passenger cars up a 3-1/2% grade that is the full length of a 25" radius curve. I have a Bachmann light 4-8-2 that could pull any combination of freight cars up to a certain length up the same grade, unless I had one particular caboose coupled on the end. That one caboose rolled so poorly it cut train length up the grade in half! I never knew it on the flat layouts I had prior.
An engine's pulling power can be affected by a grade and by a curve, so having a 2% grade on a curve may affect an engine more than a 2% grade on straight track would.
As Shane mentions, which Bachmann engine you have and how old it is could be a factor. With a few exceptions (USRA 2-10-2 and Heavy 4-8-2) Bachmann engines have plastic boilers so don't have much weight, which can cause slippage. Also, older versions of say their NYC Niagara had relatively poor motors so didn't have much pulling power.
You don't say which MTH engine you have, but there too, if it has a plastic boiler it could be causing the slippage.
Make sure too that all the wheels are firmly on the rails. Many Bachmann engines have an apron that swings down from the back of the cab to sit on the 'lip' at the front of the tender. If the apron gets under that lip, it can lift up the engine slightly, making the drivers not fully reach the track. I try to tip the apron all the way up, get the engine's wheels all on the track, then reach in with a screwdriver or pencil and lower the apron.