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BTW, anyone got any ideas how to add the "chains" across the door...? chain is too big... maybe 0.008 wire ?
And I was never fearful of trains until I took a frail geriatric RDC on Vancouver Island from Qualicum Beach up to Courtenay BC. The old beater RDC I rode, more like a horse than a train had obviously lost the usefulness of the springs to dampen the ride. I never bounced, jounced, and bobbled our way down the track like I did on that thing, I was actually nervous for my son and I's safety.
Puddington, I was thinking you could twist two 0.005" diameter wires together... No holes but it would be awfully small... I've seen the technique before but never tried it.
Seen helices built with threaded rods, but using threaded bolts for bridge base is brilliant!(or, it is in concept until I mangle it in practice!)Any words of wisdom on the windings?[p.s. locos look luscious, too]
And that was a CP RDC!
This weekend was all fun run and no work. Attended an open house on a friends of mine's layout, he models the Santa Fe in New Mexico, so the scenery was a bit off for my engines but still looked great none the less. It was nice to be able to run some of the stuff I have been working on as my layout still is in the benchwork stages. The pictures are of an Oriental Brass NP A-3 that I custom painted as an SP&S E-1, #700 that now resides in Portland, Oregon and is operational. The loco was re-motored with a coreless motor, the tender chassis was scratchbuilt from plastic and now utilizes Bachmann/Spectrum trucks from their C&O long vandy tender so that I can have 12 wheel tender pick up. The loco is still adding some additional pickup from one rail. I had found the original pick up scheme (tender left rail, loco right rail) just wasn't enough for the sound decoder. I now run a Tsunami 750 Heavy Steam decoder for sound and a TCS Z2 is in the boiler to run the motor. This is probably my best running loco, very smooth and not too picky on track.Phillip
NARmike, is that a laser crosshair for your drill- where findie? Me wantie! ...