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Lionel Postwar 1666 2-6-2 Prarie Type

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Lionel Postwar 1666 2-6-2 Prarie Type
Posted by clevedale on Saturday, December 5, 2009 12:28 PM

My uncle gave me his old train set. It is in bad shape. I really want to get it working because my Grandpa was like Dad to me bought for my uncle in 1946. I want to get the loco running and I maye even restore it?

Is there a place that I can see a parts drawing, diagram etc. so that I can figure out what parts that I need?

 

Thanks in advance.

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Posted by lionelsoni on Saturday, December 5, 2009 12:36 PM

http://pictures.olsenstoy.com/2026-48.htm

Your date may be a little off.  The 2-6-2 2026 was first made in 1948.  When looking for information or parts for this locomotive, be aware that Lionel made a somewhat different 2-6-4 with the same model number, starting in 1951.

Bob Nelson

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Posted by LL675 on Saturday, December 5, 2009 4:04 PM

the 1666 is a great engine, and very easy to work on. I bought one that had spent some time in a wet box, and was rusted pretty good, but the main parts were stil good. I got it running in a few hours. Olsen's is a great place for parts and info.

and welcome to the site!

Dave

It's a TOY, A child's PLAYTHING!!! (Woody  from Toy Story)

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Posted by lionelsoni on Saturday, December 5, 2009 4:26 PM

Did the title of this topic always say "1666"?  How did I get to thinking it was about a 2026?

Bob Nelson

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Posted by clevedale on Saturday, December 5, 2009 5:58 PM

lionelsoni

Did the title of this topic always say "1666"?  How did I get to thinking it was about a 2026?


LOL,I am afraid it has always been 1666 Smile
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Posted by clevedale on Saturday, December 5, 2009 6:09 PM

 I wish it was a 2026  as there are no drawings for the 1666 that I see. If I have to I suppose I could break down and buy the drawings. I was looking for a free diagram of course...

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Posted by clevedale on Saturday, December 5, 2009 7:09 PM

 Anyone know if the diagrams for the 1666 would be in the CDs of the Lionel Train Service Manual 1902-86?

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Posted by EIS2 on Saturday, December 5, 2009 7:16 PM

I have the 1666 and it is a very nice running engine.  CTT rated it in the 'BEST' column when they reviewed the best and worst of the Lionel postwar engines.

Earl

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Posted by lionelsoni on Saturday, December 5, 2009 8:42 PM

Here is the prewar 1666, but not in much detail:

http://pictures.olsenstoy.com/searchcd31.htm?itm=798

Bob Nelson

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Posted by clevedale on Saturday, December 5, 2009 8:54 PM

 Thanks! I am curious though, where did I go wrong?

  • I went to Olsen's Library
  • Enter the Library
  • Lionel Postwar Locomotives
  • 1666 2-6-2 prairie
  • where I found a parts list. 
OOPS never mind I just read where it was a pre war holdover and I see the years in the docs. Thanks again.
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Posted by kpolak on Sunday, December 6, 2009 7:31 AM

I have a 1666 as well.  Great little engine, very easy to work on.

Try calling Jeff at the Train Tender.com www.ttender.com.  He'll know about the parts you need and give you a fair price to boot.

Kurt

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Posted by clevedale on Monday, December 7, 2009 10:39 AM

 Thanks for all of the help. I hope to start disassembling it this week. Here is a link to a photo of my 

 

A couple more things. Except for when I was a young child when I had a couple of Marx trains and I believe a Lionel? All of my experience has been in DC trains. My trains when I was a child only ran in one direction if I remember correctly. I also remember losing a couple of them to derailments and the motors burning up.

  • Is there a way to protect against that with a fuse or something some where? Also I have a basic question as well.
  • Does the 1666 change direction by only moving the switch or will it change by cutting the power? How does that work. Oh I almost lied. I do have an old Marklin HO train. It is AC and has no switch. I cut power and push throttle to the left. The engine jumps and then when I open the throttle back up it goes in the opposite direction.

Here are the pictures...

 

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Posted by TRAINCAT on Monday, December 7, 2009 12:36 PM

"Does the 1666 change direction by only moving the switch or will it change by cutting the power? How does that work"

 

The 1666 has an "E" unit. You change directions by turning power off and on. You realize you need an AC transformer for this, right?

Roger

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Posted by clevedale on Monday, December 7, 2009 2:46 PM

 Thanks, I do realize I have to use an AC transformer. I'll have to buy one. I would be afraid to plug in transformer that came with it. It was the 40 watt model and it don't look to good.

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Posted by lionelsoni on Monday, December 7, 2009 4:03 PM

If you don't have a whistle in your tender, it will run just fine on DC.  In fact, it will be quieter.  But if there is a whistle, it will blow continuously.  You will however need quite a bit more current than an HO train draws.

Postwar transformers have circuit breakers.  You can't go wrong with a Lionel 1033 or 1044.

Bob Nelson

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Posted by kpolak on Monday, December 7, 2009 4:30 PM

clevedale
  My uncle gave me his old train set. It is in bad shape.

I'm not sure what you think is in bad shape.  That's a nice looking engine, for it's pre-war age.   Remember it's been around, and played with for 60 + years.  The finish on the plated items is still in good shape, and there isn't any rust.

I advise against a strip and repaint.

Can you post some photos of the underside?  It looks like a little oil and gear lube and that will be off and running!

Kurt

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Posted by clevedale on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 6:48 AM
Thanks, no whistle here... Thanks for the recommendation on the transformers. After the repairs I have already started thinking abut a 4x8 an L shape layout.
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Posted by clevedale on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 7:15 AM

kpolak
Can you post some photos of the underside?  It looks like a little oil and gear lube and that will be off and running!

 

That's good news. Besides the obvious pilot wheels missing. The reverser switch is missing, their are a couple screws holding the undercarriage on missing. In the front photo the class light on the engineers side is "winking" at us thanks to the loco being dropped at some point. It looks like I should be able to fix that up with a little coaxing a drill press and a new lens

You mentioned Pre-War? Is this Pre or Post?

Thanks for the input on the repaint. Depending on which day of the week it is I have been for and against it. I will likely leave it as is. It took 60 something years to develop that character. Maybe just a gentle cleaning on the outside.


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Posted by kpolak on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 1:00 PM

That's a pre-war 1666 Type II, built the later part of 1946.  The number plate is separately applied, the pilot (front) truck frame is die-cast, and the bell is not a press-in type.

Clean the bottoms of the wheels with denatured alcohol, and a q-tip, and add a small amount of plastic safe oil, like LaBelle 108, to the linkages and running gear, and you should be good to go.

You will need to open her up to look at the e-unit lever, and may need to replace the entire e-unit, as the arms are rivited into place.

Kurt

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Posted by anjdevil2 on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 1:26 PM

I also have a 1666 from my Dad.  I replaced the e-unit (purchased from Olsons) and run perfectly!!

It maintains a place on the layout as a display unit, but it does go out and play once in a while!

I am the monster in your head...And I thought you'd learn by now, It seems you haven't yet.
I am the venom in your skin  --- Breaking Benjamin


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Posted by 1948Steve on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 2:15 PM

I wonder if I might add a few words about the paint debate. I am a collector from England (not too many of those on this forum, I guess) and I occasionally run my Lionel trains at exhibitions. I don't have a 1666 but I do have the 2026 which is basically a post-war 1666 with a smoke unit.

As far as paint is concerned, I work on the basis that I want my trains to look nice when they are running in exhibitions. So unless any of my trains are valuable (which the 1666 certainly isn't) then I would rather it looked good than that it bore all its 60+ year-old scratches and looked like the walking wounded! So I imagine it all depends what you want the locomotive to do for you. Does this help?

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Posted by LL675 on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 8:44 PM

I'd leave that locomotive be as far as paint. she looks pretty good to me.

Dave

It's a TOY, A child's PLAYTHING!!! (Woody  from Toy Story)

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Posted by clevedale on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 8:33 AM

I see both points on the repaint. Since it has a lot of sentimental value to me I may, leave it as is. Were it not for that I'd repaint it without question. I uploaded more photos of the rebuild. My service manuals with parts diagrams should be here today. It definitely looks like I'll need a new E unit as the lever is gone.

 

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Posted by clevedale on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 12:30 PM

I figured out how to post pictures, lol. Her is the Eunit pictures. Obviously I need a new one. Motor inside the assembly hums when I touch both contacts directly at the motor but won't turn over the assembly. Clean and lube in order I believe. 

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Posted by sulafool on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 12:54 PM

clevedale
Clean and lube in order I believe.

 

and a new drum  Big Smile

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Posted by clevedale on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 2:27 PM

 Not sure what the drum is. Is it part of the E unit. I'll be getting a whole new E unit. Please forgive my ignorance. I got a copy of a service manual and while there is decent info in it it is sparse. Whatever happened to good old exploded diagrams?

I disconnected the motor from the drive so that it isn't pulling the gear box. When I apply power to the Brush Holders on the frame it jumps a little but won't run. Am I doing something wrong here? I have it drawn below as to where I am connecting the transformer leads.

I took the motor out and cleaned the brushes, pole surfaces etc. Motor moves freely when turned by hand.

 

 

 

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Posted by kpolak on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 4:29 PM

Disconnect the wire leading from the pickup to the e-unit, the wire going from the e-unit to the field coil, and finally disconnect the two wires from the brush plate. Once the e-unit is disconnected, you can test the motor.

Connect one wire from the transformer to the frame of the locomotive, and connect the other wire to either one of the brush holders. Connect the one wire from the field coil to the remaining brush holder. The other end of the field coil is already grounded to the locomotive frame. When you apply power, the motor should run. You can make it run in the other direction by switching the wires connected to the brush holders. For example, if the motor ran in one direction with the one wire from the transformer connected to the right brush holder and the field connected to the left, you can make it run in the other direction by moving the wire from the transformer to the left brush holder and the field to the right.

(information care of greenprobe97)  Here's a link to the origional post....I've been here before:  http://cs.trains.com/trccs/forums/p/64083/788503.aspx#788503

Kurt

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Posted by clevedale on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 9:03 PM

 I had actually removed the two white wires from the solder tabs that lead to the brushes.

I'll see what I can do in the morning. Dumb question here, is the field coil the thing that looks like a motor winding between the e unit and the motor in the frame ?

 

 

Thanks for the help

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Posted by lionelsoni on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 9:29 PM

Yes.

Bob Nelson

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Posted by nickaix on Thursday, December 10, 2009 10:46 AM

1666 is a great engine. My dad got me one for Christmas a few years ago (I'd requested something both prewar and diecast); he did not anticipate that it would turn into a "project" engine, though! I learned a LOT working on it, and now it runs just famously. A good puller, too, especially for a pre-magnetraction engine.  The 1666 got me started in the "metahobby" of train repair. Now I enjoy repairing steamers almost as much as running them.

BTW, Olsens is a great resource. Keep nosing around in their Library; they have service manual articles about motors, e-units, transformers and the like. Very useful, but not always filed exactly where you were expecting to find them!

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