I also remotored my U25C with a Mabuchi FK-130SH and a belt drive. It works very smoothly and quietly, and has pretty good low speed control. If I had a flywheel to put on it like SteamFreak did, I bet it would work even better.
These are the motors Bachmann uses in their Spectrum 2-8-0, and I think in their 2-10-0 and 4-6-0, and my 2-8-0 runs more silently than most of my high quality diesels.
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AntonioFP45 wrote:SteamFreak, Amazing work and likely the first time a number of us here have read of using your method. Great approach! Sounds like it would make a great "step-by-step" article for MRR magazine. The staff's always looking for new ideas.
SteamFreak,
Amazing work and likely the first time a number of us here have read of using your method. Great approach! Sounds like it would make a great "step-by-step" article for MRR magazine. The staff's always looking for new ideas.
Thanks for the flowers Antonio! It's not an original idea, though. The first time I saw it done was by a guy named Nigel Nichols in New Zealand who modeled the Oro Dam Project: http://www.wave.co.nz/~lakewood/OroDam/OroDam.htm
He used a Roco motor and turned some pulleys, but didn't have room for the flywheel. A few days ago I found a photo in the Yahoo group of someone who remotored one with a Sagami, flywheel, and a small plastic chain drive (I wish I knew where he got those parts!). It's in the photo section, so I think you need to join to view it.
It's just dumb luck that I came up with the right combination of parts for the job, but I strip every old VCR or CD drive for the parts. That belt is the shortest I've found, but you can splice belts with CA to make any size you need. The motor is a Mabuchi FK-130-SH. The spindle motor is a Mabuchi RF-310T-11400, and is much better than the stock motor, and a much easier installation. It's available from All Electronics, and I've seen the FK-130's on eBay.
Nelson
Ex-Southern 385 Being Hoisted
Heartland,
That is a sharp looking NP unit. Did you repaint it?
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
It's good of Nelson to provide photos and information for upgrading the Rivarossi U25C's. Thanks to Nelson!
My U25C's (photo) have their original mechanisms and don't spend much time on the layout. The Burlington unit was from Ebay a year or two ago. The seller said it did not run in his listing and that he did not know why. I bought it for less than $5.00. When it arrived, I simply placed one of the brush springs back where it belonged. (It had dislodged itself from the motor brush.) The engine ran fine after i did that. I just love bargains!
Installing kadees was not too hard to do. I used a 30 series coupler with a long underset shank. First, I removed and dicaded the stamped metal footboards.
NP 2506 is a repainted model.
GARRY
HEARTLAND DIVISION, CB&Q RR
EVERYWHERE LOST; WE HUSTLE OUR CABOOSE FOR YOU
Patrick,
Ken beat me to it, as I was going to recommend the U25C Project as well. Until they come out with something, it is possible to make these engines fairly decent runners. I have two remotoring examples. First, with a CD spindle motor.
Better performance, though still too speedy.
I remotored the second with a Mabuchi can and flywheel under the hood, and used salvaged CD and tape drive parts for the belt and pulleys.
The pulleys give it additional reduction (about 16:1 now), and top speed is around 80 MPH. The belt doesn't slip at all, even with those traction tires. The flywheel actually gives it some momentum. I've since built a styrene cradle for the motor, and switched to a larger A Line flywheel that just clears the old motor mount.
The flanges and traction tires are the biggest problem. NWSL doesn't make drop-in replacements, and the fine helical axle gears are part of the axle, making it a difficult retrofit. Rivarossi's truck gearing was beautifully milled, but it's a shame they didn't make it a lower ratio. Does anyone know if there are wheels that can be substituted without machining them? I think the axles are a larger diameter than NWSL wheelsets.
Patrick, while not exactly what you are looking for, check out the Yahoo group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/u25cproject/ . Part of the group's description is:
This group is dedicated to a team effort to produce, from the Rivarossi shell and truck sideframes, a highly detailed, excellent performing, DCC capable, RPM-type model of the U25C (Phases I, II, and III) and the early U28C (Phase I) for modelers of the Northern Pacific; Pennsylvania; Lake Superior and Ishpeming; Atlantic Coast Line; Louisville and Nashville; Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy; and the Oro Dam Constructors (the FIRST U25C buyer) - as well as all the roads they merged in to.
They are well under way and have mfrs working with them on this. It sounds like there should be something soon. Ken
philo426 wrote: I know Stewart Hobbies made a U-25 because I have one!Stock no7100.But it is a u-25b not sure what the differences are between the B and C models.
A "B" trucked unit (U25B, U30B, etc) have 4 axles, 8 wheels. "C" trucked units have 6 axels, 12 wheels. And of course, the frames/bodies are generally longer to accomidate the larger trucks.
Rick
AntonioFP45 wrote: JPM335 wrote:I had an AHM/Riv. U25C. I repowered it with a nice can motor and cobbled together a driveline with athearn parts. It ran pretty well, but the traction tires and big flanges caused a few troubles. I sold it on ebay for about $35. JPM, Could you have replaced the wheels with NWSL wheels?
JPM335 wrote:I had an AHM/Riv. U25C. I repowered it with a nice can motor and cobbled together a driveline with athearn parts. It ran pretty well, but the traction tires and big flanges caused a few troubles. I sold it on ebay for about $35.
JPM,
Could you have replaced the wheels with NWSL wheels?
Possibly. I remember it having wierd gearing on the axles. Like the teeth ran diagonally or something, cant remember for sure. I dont know if NWSL makes anything like that.
-Philo, A loco with a B has 4 wheel trucks and a C has 6 wheel trucks. So the U25B has 8 wheels while the U25C has twelve. Im sure there are other differences but I'm no prototype expert.
Fear an Ignorant Man more than a Lion- Turkish proverb
Modeling an ficticious HO scale intergrated Scrap Yard & Steel Mill Melt Shop.
Southland Industrial Railway or S.I.R for short. Enterchanging with Norfolk Southern.