Hum, I know I should have not bought it and more than likely it will be junk. I have been wanting steam power for a while. I thought I had a deal with a site member named Al, but seems he ships real slow or is walking over the engine to me.
Any way I bought a Tyco http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ih=017&item=270010739417&rd=1&sspagename=STRK%3AMEWN%3AIT&rd=1
With shipping around $30.00.
More than likely I will get some stuff on this buy. All I am looking for is it to pull between 5 to 10 cars, smoke with out frying the motor. I am new and this is the first step in steam power.
Cuda Ken
I hate Rust
METRO wrote:According to the Tyco trains resource website, that's a 2-8-0 Consolidation that was offered from 1975 to 1977. It's powered by a traditional worm gear like most steamers of the time, and you actually picked it up for less than the MSRP back then which was $33.00, nice. METRO
It may pull 5-10 cars, but it looks suspiciously like the first "CHATTANOOGA CHOO-CHOO" set engine TYCO produced at the time. If it is, it will have a tender drive consisting of a three pole "pancake" motor, with the locomotive just being along for the ride. The quality was such that people called them 40 hr trains. After running for ~40hrs. they quit, never to run again.
However, there is a friend of mine, who bought one when they first came out, and his still runs to this day. Even he is surprised by its longevity. Who knows you may have actually got a good one.
Carey
Keep it between the Rails
Alabama Central Homepage
Nara member #128
NMRA &SER Life member
I'm afraid I can only echo cjcrescent's comments. Most examples of Tyco's Chattanooga Choo-Choo were indeed of the tender driven variety (via a single diesel truck). Can't quite tell from the eBay image of the tender if this is one of them. Their reputation is such that Tyco honestly should have paid their customers just to take then away! For most longterm hobbyists, this item is regarded as, by far, the worst locomotive ever issued by Tyco and was intended specifically for the toy train market, has little speed control, and a brief anticipated lifespan. Sorry, Cuda.
CNJ831
It definetly is the tender drive model. You can tell by the open space under the boiler and the filled in space under the tender where the motor and gears are. It has a vertically mounted 3 pole "pancake motor" and drives only middle 4 of the 8 tender wheels. They have rubber traction tires. The tender is sort of like a 2-4-2 arrngement as the 2 front and 2 rear tender wheels are free to pivot around curves, while the middle 4 wheels are rigid. The drive is an adaptation of their diesel truck design.
This same basic loco shell is now used in the IHC 2-8-0 and 0-8-0. They are much better runners and are have the motor and drive wheels in the engine. http://cgi.ebay.ca/IHC-HO-2-8-0-CONSOLIDATION-SP-S-NMIB-SWEET-RUNNER_W0QQitemZ140011556852QQihZ004QQcategoryZ38274QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
Here is a photo of an IHC 2-8-0 from the ebay link above............
sorry but bad engine, at last train show i attended they would have given you one, no kidding. An old varney runs better!!!!!!!!!!
Ken,
Take heart. Even a Tyco that runs is a good first step.
I have one of these, bought on e-Bay for something cheap. I'm in N scale, but I wanted an HO scale loco for display. I've never run it, so I can't say how or if it works, but it looks nice on the shelf.
Buying on e-Bay is a real crap shoot. Sometimes you make your point, other times you crap out. You pays your money, you takes your chances! I'm always a little wary of buying engines off of e-Bay unless I have experience with the seller. Often, I check the other items the seller is offering. If he is offering many items other than trains, he probably has little or no idea about trains and is just selling it, possibly for someone else. He may or may not have the ability to test the engine. You are really on thin ice if you buy from that kind of seller (no offense to the seller). The seller who has a lot of train items listed usually has some interest in trains other than selling them. He often has the knowledge and ability to test them and usually describes them fairly and accurately. He's the guy you want to buy from!
I hope you have a good experience with your new Tyco. If nothing else, you will have the opportunity to tinker with it and learn the mysterious workings of a steam loco. And it WILL look good just sitting there!
One of these days, I'll actually run into you at K-10's.
Darrell, quiet...for now
Early TYCO may be OK. MANTUA products was purchased by TYCO, and Mantua's were solid runners in their day.
Now that the Mantua line/ products has been reincarnated, you may see something you'd like to have. First off, they were all metal. 2nd, Tyco's ownership is gone. 3rd, they were mostly eastern RR's
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
_________________________________________________________________
I'll add to the "had one of those list".....my dad got it (gulp) used at a flea market when I was 6 or 7. Today it resides in a box somewhere in my garage.
Dave
Don't feel to bad. I bought a Life=Like diesel loco at a show last year. Good price, joke of an engine.
It has one drive truck with rubber tires and a motor like the Chat loco, the other truck is a dummy, used for elec. pick up. The only thing on it is the shell.. It will sit on the rip track till I get sick of looking at it.
Bob
Sandy Southern Railway
Hi Ken;
It is unfortunately, that except for METRO, none of the posters took a very close look at the photos.
The model in the pictures is NOT tender drive, it has an open frame motor driving the 2nd driver axle, and you can see the armature between and above the 3rd and 4th driver axles. In addition, on the tender drive versions (not desireable) there is a big lump underneath the tender between the tender trucks, where the motor is located on those units.
The model is basically a Mantua locomotive. Most likely it has a traction tire on the 4th driver axle. The shell is plastic, with a hefty boiler weight.
Like many other things; you can NOT make generalized statements about Tyco (or Mantua).
You got a fair deal.
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
Hum, some say it is a tender drive, some say it is not? If it is not a tender drive, does it have a pancake drive in the engine? When I saw worm gear drive I was thinking can drive.
I have not paid for it yet, I will ask the seller to take better PIC. I will post the PIC so you folks can get a better look. If it is a tender drive I will offer $5.00 for his time and listing fees. Heck I am sure the seller thought it would go for more than $20.00 some odd bucks. If they will not take the buy out offer, well I will pay the winning bid. I am a man of my word.
As far as my goal of 10 cars, well I know Tyco is not a good name in the MRR world so my goals are modest. I like to haul long freight trains, but I knew 40+ was out of the question. But I have my PK's E-6's for that task. In slot cars, the Tyco 440 Mag is still a bench mark. There are finaly better by the AMX STR's but the 440's still will give them a run.
Darrell, I will more than likely be at K-10 Wednesday. With my odd hours I work Ken has taken pitty on me and will let me run his track solo when I can get there. Plus I am not in to picking up and moving cars yet. When I was there last Thursday I got to make one lap on the blue DC track, then try to work out a few bugs. Bugs where worked out when the other folks showed up and my train was ramed when they started throwing turn outs to pick up there cars. If you where there I was the Big guy with the Santa Fe E-6's that did not look happy.
On the better Bachmans, they are out of my prices range as of now. I can only dream of a Brodaway. What about the cheaper Bachmans, Train World has the 2-8-4 Nigeria or War Baby for around $60.00. I know they are hit or miss on what they run like.
Thanks for all the answers folks. Will up date as soon as I get some PIC.
Cuda Ken, looking for steam again
Cuda Ken,
Here's a website and a forum on Tyco trains. http://tycotrain.tripod.com/tycotrains/
I have several old Tyco/Mantua loco's, Yes the ones with the motor in the tender aren't very good, but some of the others are quite nice runners once tuned up. I have serveral of 4-6-2 Pacifics, some I built from the kits 20 years ago.These are all metal locos. I'm in the process of remotoring them and converting to DCC. I've done one so far using a Helix Humper remotor kit from http://yardbirdtrains.com/ They also have several parts if you need them. I've installed a Soundtraxx generic sound decoder and speaker. Now the loco is a very smooth runner, and has great sound. Next a detail kit!!!!.
Hope this helps you out. The Tyco/Mantua locos can be nice and can be found cheap, just need a little TLC.
Robert
nfmisso ........ Which photo are you looking at?
The one with the loco number 638? or loco number 328?
638 is the ebay Tyco Chatanooga Choo Choo, which is the subjuct of the original post or
328 is the ebay IHC engine to compare......
Cuda Ken: just a clarification on my post(s) to this thread, in case they came off sounding flip or elitist.
I can relate somewhat to the problem of the prices for some of the products sold in our hobby. I personally can't afford a Broadway either. And I don't want to get into a "prices are TOO HIGH" discussion as that comes up all the time and being in the business end of this no one wants to hear my thoughts on that subject.
But the reason why I posted in the first place was while it doesn't happen every day, this happens a lot. Someone buys a Tyco (NOT Mantua) or a train set quality Bachmann or Life-Like off of the internet or at a train show and it doesn't run. They bring it to me and ask me to fix it. I'm not a miracle-worker, so there's nothing to do but explain that they got a bad deal. And no one wants to find out they wasted money and no one wants to feel like a sucker. So on this end, it's not fun to explain that to folks and that's why I suggest to new hobbyists, just don't buy them at all. If you are fortunate to have them run when they arrive, they may not run for long.
What I do suggest is, (for example) instead of spending 30.00 on 4 bad engines, save that money and get one good locomotive. Just trying to be helpful, for what it's worth. Hope you continue to enjoy our hobby!
638