Picked up an old Roundhouse old-timer caboose "kit" at a swap meet. Looked like everything was there but it turns out that half of the deck railings were missing (along with the smoke jack). Each end has one of the railings in place, with holes for the other (missing) railing, and for ladder and brake wheel. But only the ladders and brake wheels were in the box.
I figger I can probably bend some wire to make the railings, and I know you can buy piano wire of varying sizes, so I aim to go that route. But does anyone have a good guess at what gauge of piano wire this would be? I have no idea, and the materials don't specify. I even found some parts online from Grandt Line that look similar, but they don't mention the size of the wire either.
Clues? Suggestions?
Thanks,
-Matt
Returning to model railroading after 40 years and taking unconscionable liberties with the SP&S, Northern Pacific and Great Northern roads in the '40s and '50s.
Suggestion? Borrow a micrometer.
Better yet - buy a pair of calipers:
While I really like my 40-year old dial Starrett, you can pick up inexpensive dial or digital calipers for $20-$30. A worthwhile investment - especially if you are going to do scratch-building or repair work.
I prefer dial calipers. However, the digital calipers are handy for switching between English and metric units. If you do decide on a dial, I would go with one with 0.100" per revolution increments - like the one pictured above.
Tom
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
Before everyone gets too excited telling me what kind of measuring tools I should borrow or buy, maybe that energy could be better spent helping me understand how to read the one I already have. My dad left me this -- I guess it's a caliper, not a micrometer? -- but I don't know what the smallest ticks represent. In the photo, it's open to 2 numbered units on the shaft made up of 25 numbered units each around the handle. This looks like way more than two millimeters to me, but I'm not very metric, so the single ticks on the shaft I don't know what they are.
the ferrous metal railing beside the brake wheels is .022”.
crossthedog it's a micrometer
it's a micrometer
Look up how to use a micrometer on youtube. The pictures should be very helpful.
Do not store the mic. with the two surfaces (yellow arrows) touching.
Make sure first when those two surfaces do touch the tool reads '0'
Ok, I had another close look at the tool. I don't know why it seemed confusing to me the first time I looked at it a few years ago. Maybe having just lost my dad I was easily disoriented.
One full turn of the handle, twenty-five ticks from zero to zero, moves one tick on the shaft, and there are four ticks to each numbered unit on the shaft. The number .001 is engraved right on the tool, so I assume that's the smallest unit, which is one tick on the handle.
I took one of the rails off the caboose and, from all the way closed, I opened the caliper 22 handle-ticks before the rail finally fit in between -- almost a full turn around -- which is what I expected from Bear's comment. So I guess that the wire I want is 22 thousandths of an inch.
Yes, .022'' wire.
Sorry for the loss of your father.
crossthedogThank you Bear. I'm sure it's the same.
Hi Matt,
I'm going to throw a couple of wrenches in your works just to be a nuisance.
First, 0.022" is much bigger than a scale HO handrail would be. They would look more realistic using 0.0125" wire. If you install the handrails using gel CA (apply from the inside of the shell), the CA will fill the gap between the smaller wire and the 0.022" holes.
Second, I would suggest using phosphor bronze (pb) wire from Tichy Train Group instead of piano wire. Phosphor bronze wire is much easier to bend but it is still solid enough to withstand handling. Also, if you make the bend in the wrong place, phosphor bronze wire will allow you to straighten the wire and re-bend it in the right place whereas piano wire may break. Pb wire is also easy to solder whereas piano wire is not.
Here are Tichy's ph wire listings:
https://www.tichytraingroup.com/Shop/tabid/91/c/ho_wire/Default.aspx
By now, you are fully aware that I have a bad habit of offering more information than is needed. I'm about to continue that habit by making some suggestions about how to improve your caboose handrails.
The end platform handrails that come with the kit are a bit simplistic when compared to most prototypes. That gives you the opportunity to make them much more realistic by making your own handrails. I kitbashed a fleet of Athearn cabooses a few years ago and this is what I did with the railings. Note that I did these before I was aware of the proper size for the railing diameters so I used0.020" pb wire.[D)
I could have done a much better job. For example, the ladders and the brake wheels are way too thick. Live and learn!
I did add working marker lights and an interior light that only shines out of one window suggesting that is where the conductor's desk is located. I also added a keep alive system for the lights. If you want information on any of that, please ask.
Cheers!!
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
crossthedogefore everyone gets too excited telling me what kind of measuring tools I should borrow or buy, maybe that energy could be better spent helping me understand how to read the one I already have. My dad left me this -- I guess it's a caliper, not a micrometer? -- but I don't know what the smallest ticks represent. In the photo, it's open to 2 numbered units on the shaft made up of 25 numbered units each around the handle. This looks like way more than two millimeters to me, but I'm not very metric, so the single ticks on the shaft I don't know what they are.
crossthedog,
Since you didn't divulge in your original post that you owned a micrometer, it was logical to presume you didn't have any way of measuring the grab irons on your caboose; hence the recommendations. And what you have pictured is a micrometer. What a special rememberance of your dad!
And I'm glad you were able to figure out how to use it. Since it has 0.001" stamped on the side then the increments are indeed English and each rotation is 25-mil (0.025").
I will add that, while a handy tool, your micrometer will be limited to a total of 1" of travel. And it cannot measure inside diameters. If you think you might be measuring things > than 1" and IDs of tubing in the future, a caliper would still be a good investiment.
FWIW,
tstageSince you didn't divulge in your original post that you owned a micrometer, it was logical to presume you didn't have any way of measuring the grab irons on your caboose; hence the recommendations. And what you have pictured is a micrometer.
hon30critterBy now, you are fully aware that I have a bad habit of offering more information than is needed. I'm about to continue that habit
Dave, yes I DO know that about you, and I don't mind the extra chapters AT ALL. In fact, I'm very glad you lasso'd me before I went and bought a bunch of metal that will surely break on me. I'll look for the brass. Your caboose track looks great and I like the idea of marker lights and the solitary lamp-light of the conductor's desk.
PC101Sorry for the loss of your father.
And thanks for the warning about keeping the micrometer surfaces apart during storage. Sounds like some kind of voodoo, but maybe damage from pressure changes, or corrosion? Magnetic buildup until a disastrous Dr. Who-style polarity reversal throwing us back in time to before nickel plated track?
@Dave. Bronze. Did I say brass? I meant bronze.
As I skimmed through this thread, observing most folks here were getting wrapped around the axle over the measuring tool, I was focused on your use of piano wire. That material is very hard; it will damage diagonal cutters and is very hard to bend. I would recommend using brass rod, which is more malleable and easy to cut and bend. I'm doing a similiar thing for scratch-built N Scale cabooses.
Best of luck.
—Bruce
crossthedog I sometimes get kind of snarky in my posts
Who? You? Gee, who would have thought that?
Anyway, regarding calipers, yes, I have a digital one of those. Don't really care for it. One edge is marked in millimeters, and the other in tenths of an inch.
Since it is used infrequently, the battery always manages to pass on to the big repository in the sky just whan I need to use the thing. If I were to purchase one again, I'd opt for the non-digital (analog?) version. The digital version is sort of useless w/o the battery.
I use the micrometer much more frequently. Not because I need to measure something with great accuracy, but because I either have left a number of small diameter drill bits laying around without putting them away in the drill index and need to know what goes where, or because I managed to knock the drill index over and all the bits tried to escape.
Neptune48I would recommend using brass rod, which is more malleable and easy to cut and bend.
Hi Bruce,
Have you used phosphor bronze wire? It is quite a bit stiffer than plain brass but is is still easy to bend and solder. I have found that brass wire bends too easily so that you have to be very careful when handling a model with brass hand rails. With phosphor bronze, you can be pretty clumsey (which I usually am) but nothing gets bent.
maxman crossthedog I sometimes get kind of snarky in my posts Who? You? Gee, who would have thought that?
I sometimes get kind of snarky in my posts
crossthedogSeriously, max? Am I that bad?
I can't answer that question. It hadn't occurred to me until you mentioned it.
Crossthedog For some reason I thought you were one of younger members. Us old guys are crotchety.
As was mentioned, your micrometer is marked in inches. I have both calipers and a micrometer. If you are confused, measure something like a 1/4" drill bit and you can figure out the divisions.
I moved recently and I am still looking for things I know I moved. I will see if I can find my bronze phosphor wire that I used for these railings. As has been said, you don't want to use piano wire.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley
Link to Tichy group phosphor bronze wire.
Found my wire 0.015"
crossthedogI figger I can probably bend some wire to make the railings, and I know you can buy piano wire of varying sizes, so I aim to go that route. But does anyone have a good guess at what gauge of piano wire this would be?
I agree with Dave's suggestion about using Tichy's phosphor-bronze wire for making handrails and ladders, and have a good supply of all sizes that they offer, along with pretty-well every size of strip styrene that's offered by Evergreen, and their variety of sheet styrene thicknesses, too.
While piano wire is very useful for a variety of items, I'd suggest phosphor-bronze wire for handrails.It's available (from Tichy) in a variety of diameters, from .008", .010", .0125"", .015", .020", .025", .032", and .040".
It's easy to bend and if you've mis-done the bend, it can be easily straightened, and then re-bent properly, without fatiguing, as would often occur with steel piano wire.One of it's other valuable properties is that it's easy to solder. I used strip brass for ladder stiles, then used phosphor-bronze wire for the ladder rungs, soldering everything together on a homemade jig, then used a cut-off disc to remove the excess wire and any excessive solder.
Here's an old Athearn bay-window caboose that I re-worked somewhat...
...with scratchbuilt ladders and railings (the platform gate does work, too).
Because I've sold (or given away) a bunch of my cabooses, I'll be scratch-building at least a dozen replacements, and will likely buy a few of the bay-window ones, too.
Wayne
BigDaddyI will see if I can find my bronze phosphor wire that I used for these railings. As has been said, you don't want to use piano wire.
BigDaddyFor some reason I thought you were one of younger members.
@Wayne, that's a mighty attractive bay window caboose. That gate is slick. It puzzles me, though. Why is there a gate there? Is that for ease of uncoupling without the conductor having to climb down to the ground?
hon30critterWith phosphor bronze, you can be pretty clumsey (which I usually am) but nothing gets bent.
Neptune48on your use of piano wire. That material is very hard; it will damage diagonal cutters and is very hard to bend.
crossthedog maxman crossthedog I sometimes get kind of snarky in my posts Who? You? Gee, who would have thought that? Seriously, max? Am I that bad? Now I'm going to develop a complex. I need to rethink how I move through the world. Thought I'd done all that interior work already. -Matt
Seriously, max? Am I that bad? Now I'm going to develop a complex. I need to rethink how I move through the world. Thought I'd done all that interior work already.
Rich
Alton Junction
crossthedog@Wayne, that's a mighty attractive bay window caboose. That gate is slick. It puzzles me, though. Why is there a gate there? Is that for ease of uncoupling without the conductor having to climb down to the ground?
Thanks for your kind comment, Matt.As for the gate, it's there to allow a brakeman access from the caboose to the end ladder on the freight car, to which the caboose is coupled.
My layout is set in the late '30s, so it wouldn't be unusual for the engineer to use "whistle-talk" to get a brakeman setting brakes (or retainers) on cars near the back-end of the train.
Hi again Matt,
If you compare doctorwayne's caboose handrails with mine, you can clearly see how much better the 0.0125" phosphor bronze wire that he used looks vs my 0.020" pb wire. Also, it looks like wayne used an aftermarket brake wheel (Kaydee maybe) whereas I used the original wheels that came with the kits. I wish I had known better when I did the caboose fleet.
It wasn't really an offer but let me see how much I have. I was looking for it to give you a size, 0.015"
BigDaddyIt wasn't really an offer but let me see how much I have. I was looking for it to give you a size, 0.015"