Northern Pacific ran 2-6-2 engines into the 1950's, they were fairly common around Duluth/ Superior for example. They were powerful enough that in the early 20th century NP even used them on iron ore trains.
Later Mantua engines (staring c.1988) used a Sagami can motors, and offered a retrofit kit to add the can motor to their earlier engines. Even if you can't find that kit, I suspect the can motor is still being made(?) As noted, you do have to isolate it from the chassis but that isn't hard. Just need some electrical or other tape and a plastic/nylon 2-56 screw.
These Mantua engines, like most steam engines from 'the olden days', only picked up power on the drivers on one rail, and from the tender wheels on the other rail, so they are a good candidate for a decoder with some type of "keep alive" to they can keep going through turnouts or crossings.
SpaceMouse Da Stumer I think a Mantua/Tyco is always worth fixing up just for the fun of it! I've just converted my dining room from structure production to Fast Tracks turnout production. Part of that set-up is the Mantua, a piece of track, and a transformer. When I get bored, I can see what I got. On a differnt note. Ferns line the bottom of a redwood forest. They are everywhere, thick in places. How easy would it be to get a 3D file of a fern? How easy would it be to write? I have zero knowledge of 3D printing, other than a few YouTube vids.
Da Stumer I think a Mantua/Tyco is always worth fixing up just for the fun of it!
I've just converted my dining room from structure production to Fast Tracks turnout production. Part of that set-up is the Mantua, a piece of track, and a transformer. When I get bored, I can see what I got.
On a differnt note. Ferns line the bottom of a redwood forest. They are everywhere, thick in places. How easy would it be to get a 3D file of a fern? How easy would it be to write? I have zero knowledge of 3D printing, other than a few YouTube vids.
I took a quick look around and I found a couple that might be of use. If you want to find a model to print, your best bet would be to find a file in a .obj or .stl format. Thingiverse is the site I use the most to find files, it's a place where people upload and share 3D models they've made.
This would probably be the easiest one to use: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2346296
Some others that may be helpful:
https://cults3d.com/en/3d-model/art/l-system-2d-3d-collection https://cults3d.com/en/3d-model/game/openfoliage-stump-40-mm-base https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:637164
You could make one yourself, unfortunately I can't really help with that. Modeling organic shapes is a fair bit different than modeling hard mechanical edges. I would reccomend looking at the programs Blender or ZBrush and corresponding tutorials for guidance on that. However, if you just want to cobble some simple shapes together, Tinkercad is very easy to use.
For printing, I would reccomend getting such a part printed in resin. If you don't have a printer, there are plenty of places you can get a print from. Shapeways does a little resin printing, makexyz is another service. If you search around for resin printing service, you can find quite a few options. I found a local guy on craigslist for my resin printing needs, scout3dprinting.com, who I am very happy with.
Hope that helps!
-Peter. Mantua collector, 3D printing enthusiast, Korail modeler.
Da StumerI think a Mantua/Tyco is always worth fixing up just for the fun of it!
Chip
Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.
I've got one, these locos can be pretty smooth runners. Mine has some motor bearing noise that goes away after it runs for a little bit. These are really easy and fun to work on, and very reliable. The most work they usually need is some cleaning and pickup enhancement. In the tender, power is picked up through the axle points into the truck frames, and that doesn't always work very well. I added some brass wipers to the axles and that solved the pickup issues I had. I think a Mantua/Tyco is always worth fixing up just for the fun of it!
snjroyAnd I see that your climax has its original trucks and wheels. No wonder its a good puller! Does it have its original motor?
I sent it away for a tune-up. I believe part of that was a new can motor and gearing. I haven't had it apart since then.
dehusman Why do you have 3% grades in your yard?
Why do you have 3% grades in your yard?
I want to see if my switcher can juggle.
I don't have 3% grades in my yard--only on the climb to the mine and logging camp. (Actually I haven't layed any track yet. I start that this week.) When I started testing the geared steam on a 2x4 for my layout planning, I thought I'd test the other locos for laughs and giggles. This is the one and only time I've run the 0-6-0T.
Any of these engines could be used as switchers, in my opinion, including the 2-6-2. I just think that the latter would look funny without its pilot and training wheels.
And I see that your climax has its original trucks and wheels. No wonder its a good puller! Does it have its original motor?
Simon
Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
Title "Can you date this loco?"
Answer - I dunno. Is it married?
Tom
Life is simple - eat, drink, play with trains!
Go Big Red!
PA&ERR "If you think you are doing something stupid, you're probably right!"
snjroy My Mantua has a rubber tire, which makes it a decent puller. I have a Bachmann saddletank... a cute little engine, but a poor puller. Simon
My Mantua has a rubber tire, which makes it a decent puller. I have a Bachmann saddletank... a cute little engine, but a poor puller.
I need two engines, but I can make due with what I have. I need a road engine and a yard switcher. I was hoping the 0-6-0T could be the yard switcher. I would have to 8-10 36' cars and smaller on flat ground. If it can't, I can have it trade places with my Heisler which is switching my lumber mill. The mill switcher would need to occasionally need to pull 4 cars. It mostly would move single boxcars to specific locations for loading.
The 0-6-0 tested the worst hauling cars up a 3% grade at one car.
My Climax A tested the best pulling 6 cars.
I have 3 road engines, but 4 staging tracks. The 3 are Roundhouse SP 2-6-0s. The last must be able to pull 3 55' passenger cars on flat ground. SP road name would be a bonus.
THen is the matter of the yard switcher.
I can do this several ways.
I can get a geared steam locomotive. That can take over mining duties from my Climax A. The Climax can switch the yard or the mill.
I can get 2 road engines and one of the SP 2-6-0s can switch the yard.
I can simply get a switcher.
Purchasing any engine is out of the question right now. That's why making this Mantua work is so inviting. I almost traded for a road engine earlier this month. Then I find this Mantua in an MDC box mixed in with my Roundhouse Kits. Something will come up.
Sorry, I guess I was writing this more to clear my thoughts than answer you.
snjroyBut if you are looking for a 0-6-0, i would recommend a Rivarossi or even better, a Life-Like.
I have a Bachman 0-6-0T that I think I like well enough (I've only tested it on a 3% incline.) It's DCC. I'm interested in this one because I already own it and money is a big issue.
Good tip on wiring the tender.
The Thurso and Nation Valley RR in Quebec had a very similar engine. It was a Baldwin and it was used for their logging operation. For that reason, I bought a used one a few years ago. I put a can motor in it, installed DCC and sound. I also added all-power pickup on the tender, which made a big difference. It runs OK... The motor was installed using silicone. It does not run as well as my Mantua Mikado, but I keep it because it is very close to the prototype I was looking for. But if you are looking for a 0-6-0, i would recommend a Rivarossi or even better, a Life-Like.
EDIT: the TNVR 2-6-2 was built in Montreal by MLW in 1927
selectorA 2-6-2 would not have been made in numbers beyond maybe 1910 (??)
Of course the Russians made the most of this wheel arrangement, and it's useful to look at the proportions of what they did, but that job was better done here by Mikados in most respects... note what was different for the Santa Fe...
Charleshttps://www.hoseeker.net/mantuainstructions.html This model shows up to be from around 1980s. The engine has no prototype, Mantua/TYCO just used an 0-6-0 and added a leading and trailing truck wheels.
Thanks. Those instructions will most likely be invaluable. Do you think I could run it as an 0-6-0. If I get it working acceptably, it would only be doing light switching, mostly single cars.
DaveMinimum speed was 7 to 9 mph which was about average back then. Top speed 150 mph which was also average.
Yeah, I'd have an issue with that.
I agree that the tender is Ginormous.
DocReplacing the magnet in the existing motor with rare earth magnets will lower the required starting voltage and improve low speed operation. It will also increase the loco's pulling power... Another option, if the original motor doesn't perform all that well, is to replace it with a can motor. However, since the wheel flanges are overly large, you might wish to replace them with better wheelsets, which don't come with the pointy tips - just make sure that the axles are the same diameter as those on the original wheelsets.
Another option, if the original motor doesn't perform all that well, is to replace it with a can motor.
However, since the wheel flanges are overly large, you might wish to replace them with better wheelsets, which don't come with the pointy tips - just make sure that the axles are the same diameter as those on the original wheelsets.
It seems to me that replacing the motor with a can motor is the logical way to go. I'll probably have to isolate it from the frame. But I wouldn't begin to know how to figure out which one to get.
I expect to have flawless track, but it wouldn't hurt to have more standard wheels. I wouldn't know where to look for this either.
TomAs far as the actual prototype is concerned, my guess would be the 1890s or 1900s...
I'm going with 1895 until proven otherwise.
OvermodPart of the 'secret' is that switcher designs got bigger and more modern right along with road power, so you wouldn't make a modern branch-line 2-6-2 by sticking trucks on a modern switcher. (In fact it was not uncommon to see trucks lopped off sometimes quite large road engines to make yard power...)
I'm considering converting it to an 0-6-0. SP SP had a switcher with a sloped-back tender back then.
OvermodThere have been recent threads on 're-magneting' the motor and tuning its attachment and 'fit' to the drive. I would follow those here in conjunction with wiring, especially as some of them recount how to make the locomotive safe for DCC, for example with judicious use of Kapton tape.
I'm pretty comfortable with converting engines where you have to isolate the motor. I agree about using the tender for the decoder harness. I'd put the speaker there, too. I don't hear well enough to tell the difference of a few inches.
selectorThe other thing that dates it is the Whyte configuration. A 2-6-2 would not have been made in numbers beyond maybe 1910 (??), but special orders would have been filled.
The first tender 2-6-2 was made in the US in 1900. You're right. THe Whyte did me in. So converting it to 0-6-0 is looking better and better.
One of the first things I look for is whether the model/real locomotive has slide valves or piston valves. This has piston valves, which are modern (post-about 1906?). So, I think it's a model of an upgraded prototype which had significant modifactions to, or an outright replacement of, the cylinder saddle, or perhaps just new cylinders mated to existing blast pipes and smokebox..not sure, Overmod would have a much better grip on that.
The other thing that dates it is the Whyte configuration. A 2-6-2 would not have been made in numbers beyond maybe 1910 (??), but special orders would have been filled.
Chip, I would be inclined to treat this as a winter project, sort of like how I deal with the brass-works of a couple of ancient clocks we keep in the house. When the mood strikes, maybe a Sunday afteroon when the light near a window is good, take it apart, look at it closely, and begin to restore it. If you can, check the motor's status via temporary power and see if it moves when you dial up the voltage. I think you'd be mighty proud if you got it running, but not only that....running very nicely on DCC/sound.
This has details of an older prototype that was periodically 'modernized' over the years: cab and headlight, and perhaps some of the auxiliaries. As noted it's something of a foobie in being small with leading and trailing trucks crammed in -- there were plenty of 2-6-2s 'in practice' but I think they tended to be more like 'lighter Mikados' in design, with a deep firebox over a smaller trailing wheel that helps to support it instead of one over the driver height as in a wide-firebox 2-8-0 variant (which can be thought of as being like a 2-6-2 with a driver pair instead of the trailing axle).
Part of the 'secret' is that switcher designs got bigger and more modern right along with road power, so you wouldn't make a modern branch-line 2-6-2 by sticking trucks on a modern switcher. (In fact it was not uncommon to see trucks lopped off sometimes quite large road engines to make yard power...)
There is nothing really wrong with the boiler size but you could 'pad out' the water legs of the firebox to take advantage of the trailing axle 'weight bearing capacity' and lengthen the smoke box slightly if the front stubbiness is distracting. The engine might have a surprising number of modern appliances on it ... tax laws being as they were when it would have been running.
There have been recent threads on 're-magneting' the motor and tuning its attachment and 'fit' to the drive. I would follow those here in conjunction with wiring, especially as some of them recount how to make the locomotive safe for DCC, for example with judicious use of Kapton tape.
At this point I would speculate that the best alternative would be to put the decoder in the tender with a disconnectable harness, and use one of those cab-roof curved speakers if you want sound. There are people here who will guide you definitively to either that or a better solution.
Chip,
As far as the actual prototype is concerned, my guess would be the 1890s or 1900s...
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
Once you fix that issue with the wire, and are able to see how it runs (or doesn't run) there are options for improving its performance.
Replacing the magnet in the existing motor with rare earth magnets will lower the required starting voltage and improve low speed operation. It will also increase the loco's pulling power...
A friend gave me this brass 0-6-0, as it wouldn't pull enough cars for his requirements...
...but after I changed-out the magnets (and added a little weight) it can easily handle 20 cars on level track. I offered it back, but he declined, as I had already modified two much larger and heavier brass 0-8-0s for him, using the same upgrades...
To get rid of the pointy-tips on the lead- and trailing-wheelsets, a cut-off disc in a motor tool will work well, or you could get similar results with careful use of a mill file. However, since the wheel flanges are overly large, you might wish to replace them with better wheelsets, which don't come with the pointy tips - just make sure that the axles are the same diameter as those on the original wheelsets.
As for dating your locomotive, I've never cared for the look of Prairie locos...that naked-looking trailing truck always looks to me to be an unnecessary add-on...like false eyelashes or other false appurtenances to which some past-their-prime gals might resort, so I'll pass on the offer of a date.
However, a somewhat smaller tender and a decent paint job could at least make the whole thing look a lot better. As shown above, most steamers aren't just all-black. (Click on the photos to enlarge them.)
Wayne
The Mantua Prairie 2-6-2 was reviewed in the June 1967 Model Railroader's "Trade Topics." (This does not mean your model is 53 years old - it was in the Mantua/Tyco catalog for a long time).
The review noted that the model had no particular prototype but that it followed general steam locomotive characteristics and "from different angles it resembles motive power of several different roads." They also noted that the boiler seemed large in diameter compared to the small 51" drivers. The 30" pilot wheel flanges were deeper than NMRA standards and I suspect Mantua took them from existing stock. The drivers were slightly narrower than NMRA standards, as were most drivers on brass steam back then. This improves appearance but can cause issues on selected crossings and turnouts, in theory (few ever report actual problems however).
They suggested snipping off the pointed axle ends on the pilot and trailing wheels. They also suggested a full width switchng type pilot and a smaller tender to change the appearance.
Minimum speed was 7 to 9 mph which was about average back then. Top speed 150 mph which was also average. Minimum radius 15". 10 or 11 freight cars could be pulled. They had a reservation about the match of metals used for bearings and axles. Ready to run it was $14.98.
All in all they did not gush in enthusiasm but they did not trash it either.
So this was more or less upper end train set quality for the time. To me it resembles some logging locomotives, where small pilot and trailing wheels are more to guide the engine around sharp curves forward and reverse than to balance overall weight on drivers. Except for the size of the boiler it somewhat resembles a compact little 2-6-2 that the Illinois Railroad Museum used to run, and presumably still has in their collection, which was from the famous Tuskagee Institute, probably to haul coal to a powerhouse.
If it was my engine, I think I'd see if the motor works and the locomotive runs smoothly and quietly - and if it did I'd scour the swap meets or my own junk boxes to find a different boiler that would fit over the motor for a more probably looking little 2-6-2. It may well be that this is the best bet for a boiler that fits however - the review noted that there was very little room available to add weight for better traction. I have a collection of small tenders that would look more probable for an engine of this size.
Dave Nelson
https://www.hoseeker.net/mantuainstructions.htmlThis model shows up to be from around 1980s. The engine has no prototype, Mantua/TYCO just used an 0-6-0 and added a leading and trailing truck wheels.
The mantua 0-6-0 was an elongated 0-4-0 switcher, which I believe is VERY loosely based off of the PRR A5 class.
It is a very simple model, worth between $20-30. Because of the fact that it is such a simple design, I would recommend restoring it just for fun, and learn to take apart and maintain your models, with no worry of possibly damaging it.
Yes, the wire between the engine and tender is likely the cuprit. The engine picks up track power with its 3 driver wheels only on one side of the track. The 4 tender wheels pick up power from the other side of the track. That single wire brings track power from the tender to the engine motor.
Charles
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Modeling the PRR & NYC in HO
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Answer: Not even a liberal court would allow it.
Seriously, I found this in with my stuff when I was looking for parts. I got it at a Timonium train show 20 years ago and according to the box "Doesn't Runs Great". (Italics mine.) So it sat on my shelf.
My books don't quite cover it. I only have decent records on Pennsy and SP. I'm guessing it was built in the late 1890s, but it is a guess based on similar structures on ten wheelers. Any idea when the prototype was built (and I know it is probably not a true prototype of anything.
It's made by Mantua. So the second question would be, is it worth salvaging? It's not getting power, but that might have something to do with the broken wire between the loco and the tender.
And I only run DCC.