From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
I'm either gonna move the pans back a slight bit, or have them extend over the front. The equipment (i'm not sure what was there to begin with) was moved and or shrunk down a bit. The noses were chopped durign the -2 conversion, so there was a bit more work done besides the nose-job.
as far as the completly new cab, I'll wait for the E-33-2 to E-66 upgrade. The E-66 is a late 90's rebuild of the E-33-2. New cabs and rectifiers, basically a new locomotive.
Since the pantogragh base is wider than the cab, what are you going to do to support the front end of the pantograph?
Why not just whack the whole cab and replace it with a safety cab casting?
Where did you put the equipment that was in the nose of the E33?
Dave H.
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
Dave Vollmer wrote:
bingo dave, that's kinda the look I'm going for. If my E-33's are gonna be runnign into the modern day (albeit with a few rebuilds inbetween) why not chop-nose 'em?
I wish there were more options out there. I'd love to have a few of those units runnign arround as if they went into production, as well as a BCR modern electric. I know those at least were made in brass, but I'm not spendign more than either one of my trucks cost on 1 locomotive, much less a handfull...
I'm gonna wait until the weekend, then completly dissasemble the chassis, so I can trim the frame down a bit. I'll make that nose fit one way or the other. For the rest of the fleet, I'll take better measurements and try top be more carfull... heck I might even get some scrap wood and make a jig for 'em.
Modeling the Rio Grande Southern First District circa 1938-1946 in HOn3.
V & AL,
I have an idea of what you're feeling!
Good looking photos, but because of the black color, the picture looks slightly underexposed. Could you could edit it so that more of the surface area of the nose could be seen? If I'm looking at it correctly, it appears that you can extend the nose.
Just a suggestion. Walk away from it for a long while. Come back to it when you're in a fresh mood and decide which would be the best route for you to take that would yield you the satisfactory results you're looking for. The easiest route isn't always the best, but take the route that you know you'll be able to accomplish with your skill level, even if it takes an extended period of time.
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
Boy! So much for "safety" cabs!
Lee
Route of the Alpha Jets www.wmrywesternlines.net
Ah.....the joys of freelancing.
Here's the prototype for one solution to your problem:
http://railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=232015
http://www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=229308
Bill
"Never try to teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and annoys the pig"
or how to goober up a $75 locomotive...
well I thought I could pull this project off, Chop-nosing one of my E-33's. I measured, and cut one side, then measured again (spot on!) and cut the rest. What I wound up with was a lopsided-mess. or what looks like one. Oh, and when I put it together... the frame was in the way!! (oops, mybad) So I cut a pit of the frame off, and now I need to either hack a larger portion off, or fabricate an extention to the chop-nose. I've thought about fabricating a new cab, but I like the style of the existing one...
so now what do I do? (eventually the E-33's will be rebuilt into E-75's with -9 style cabs... but let's get cronological here. I'll keep my chop-noses as chop-noses and go with new units for the wide-cabs.)