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I was testing my new Bachmann EM-1 to see how it would do pulling at train that I bought it to pull. It is 55 hopper cars. It seemed to pull them fine on a level oval without any detectable wheel slip. I wanted to see if it can pull that train on a 1% grade, so I stuck a 1" riser under one end of my 9' long test loop, and it did not seem to slow the beast at all, with no apparent wheel slip.But, on the 2nd lap with the grade added, I noticed a traction tire had torn and was hooped around the rods, with the loco's performance still showing no ill effects.I suspect I overloaded it, but am wondering if it was weak to begin with. The other 3 traction tires seem normal, at this point.So, I am wondering how to replace the tire. Or, if I should just go the Bullfrog Snot route.Recommendations on the choice?Any guidance on how to get the wheel free to change the tire? I do not see any screw head on the fastener connecting the rod to the driver. Is it a pin that pulls out to the side? Does pulling it out once tend to make it loose so that it tends to come out later when running?
Bob, The tire is not intact. It has a clean-looking break perpendicular to the wheel radius.I am careful putting locos with traction tires on the rails, so as to not stress the tires. My techniques is to use one of those blue Kato railers, putting the loco on it and moving the front onto the rails, then holding the loco still and pulling the plastic railer out from under the loco instead of shoving the loco along the rails. That should put any stress on the flanges against the plastic instead of on the wheel treads (and traction tires) against the railheads.In this case, there are a lot of wheels, but I am pretty sure that I started sliding the plastic before the now-busted tire got to the rails.So, this seems to be due to the stress from pulling the train. It occurred on a wheel on the inside of the loop curves, which makes sense as the higher stress side.If I use a traction tire again, I will use an unbroken one. The question is how to get the wheel disconnected from the rods, and whether doing that will lead to it coming loose when running after I put it back together - especially if I make a habit of killing tires with this loco on long trains and need to replace tires more than once.The other option is Bullfrog Snot, which does not require removing the wheel. Does that work well enough to make it worth putting on? Or would it be almost as good to just run with the tires missing?
I wouldn't use adhesive. This loco has failry small diameter drivers, so I think the tires will not slip off during use. Of course that is if the tires are rather tight on the driver. Looser tires could slip off. In my experience, the larger the driver's diameter is, the more prone the tire is to come off.But I would make sure the driver's tread and the groove are thoroughly degreased before installing the tire. I use Naphtha, but other solvents (like 95% or stronger IPA or denatured alcohol) should also work well.