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I gave up on the black nickel entirely. I did some poking around on the internet and found a plating forum somewhere (yes, there actually is such a thing). A fellow who was a professional plater for years and is now retired wrote some posts in there about black nickel, and explained that:1. It is really just nickel plating with some other metal added to it so that a black oxide rapidly forms on the surface. 2. The black is not durable because it is just an oxide and will scratch off.
My contact is only through the axles/bearings/frame. I am not using wipers.My 2 pickup axles have springs in their bearings as I showed with my last installment. That is crucial. They need to be ableto rock and roll a little over real-world track and keep those drivers in solid contact with the rail or it would stall all over the place.Wipers would accomplish the same thing if they were placed on the tops of the wheels. They would keep the wheels down in solid contact with the rail. In fact, I'm sure they would work a lot better because there wouldn't be the rotating contactpoint in the bearing, which is good but not perfect. I bet if I had wipers pressing down on the tops of the drivers,the engine would crawl. But I really do NOT want wipers in this thing.
Thanks, narrow. I have enjoyed your well-thought advice on my project, and it is helpful, believe me.I gave up on the black nickel entirely. I did some poking around on the internet and found a plating forum somewhere (yes, there actually is such a thing). A fellow who was a professional plater for years and is now retired wrote some posts in there about black nickel, and explained that:1. It is really just nickel plating with some other metal added to it so that a black oxide rapidly forms on the surface. 2. The black is not durable because it is just an oxide and will scratch off.
That is what I found with the Caswell Black Nickel. So I gave up on that idea. Adjusting the current (I used my own power supply instead of their wall wart), and putting a longer length of cloth on the wand did not help. My plating wasn't burning after all.That black nickel stuff just goes on... well, BLACK.
I tried plating it over a layer of copper, which did not help at all. Not only was it not durable, but the conductivity was poor - in the neighborhood of 15-30 ohms just touching meter problesto the rim of the wheel.
Then I plated with their straight nickel solution. The difference was night-and-day. I got a beautiful, hard, silver finish (and zero ohms on the meter). But I didn't exactly want "bright silver" on my wheels (even though that's the way engines oftencome commercially).So on a whim, I added a "splash" of the black nickel solution to the plain nickel and tried it. I got a dark weathered-lookingnickel (not unlike Neolube, actually). The resistance was still zero ohms.After some experimentation, I decided on a 10:1 mix (10 nickel, 1 black nickel). (4:1 was still a little too gray for my taste).That's what I ended up plating with.
My contact is only through the axles/bearings/frame. I am not using wipers.The behavior now is this. I can run it at about 10 mph around the layout, and it runs pretty good. But when I patch a Kato tender behind it, the performance is absolutely spectacular. It can crawl crawl crawl all day long, nice and steady without stalling.It could never do that just on the engine driver pickups alone. So in spite of all my best efforts, the pickup is still nowhere nearas good as what I can get from a tender. But I will have a tender, so that's a good thing.My 2 pickup axles have springs in their bearings as I showed with my last installment. That is crucial. They need to be ableto rock and roll a little over real-world track and keep those drivers in solid contact with the rail or it would stall all over the place.Wipers would accomplish the same thing if they were placed on the tops of the wheels. They would keep the wheels down in solid contact with the rail. In fact, I'm sure they would work a lot better because there wouldn't be the rotating contactpoint in the bearing, which is good but not perfect. I bet if I had wipers pressing down on the tops of the drivers,the engine would crawl. But I really do NOT want wipers in this thing.
Finally, my weight is now at 46 grams. That is huge considering that I started with the brass chassis that you all saw in the last installment at about 20 grams. I have loaded it up with tungsten in every conceivable way, but it can still be disassembled.I took 1/16" thick tungsten plates (you can get them from Pinewood Derby supply places), and I was able to cut and shape them to really fill cavities well. Tungsten is awful to cut, but with a Dremel and cut-off wheels, it can be done. You just have to go slow.I also found .004" thick tungsten foil and some .031" tungsten rod on eBay - those were spectacular for filling voids with weight that would have been impossible to achieve with lead or tungsten cubes.And remember, I still have to do all the cosmetics: domes, boiler saddle, cylinders, pilot beam, CAB. I will be able to add a lotmore weight to this later in the project.The Walthers 0-8-0 and Bachmann 0-6-0 are both around 46 grams (where I am now) by comparison.I can push about 9 cars on level track with it. Not terrible, but I want it to do a lot better than that, even though it's onlyan 0-6-0. But this is overly conservative. I have no rods on it. So only one driver set is giving me any pull.Even though that's the traction-tire geared driver which is responsible for most of the pull, when I get rods on it so that the other 4 wheels can contribute, I bet it will pull a lot better.
Now I see what you mean. But most of the time the bearing will be in direct contact with the metal frame which electrically parallels the spring, reducing number of contact points by 1. But I do understand that if you used pickup wipers then the number of contact points would be decreased and reliability increased.
Generally, the springs in my bearings are very light. Under normal circumstances, with the engine sitting on level track,the springs are completely pushed up, that is, completely recessed, and the frame is sitting directly on the bearings,which is what I want. If you rock the engine a little bit, however, you can see the spring appear on top of the bearing,and the wheel stays on the rail. And that's the whole idea.Now, why do I say that a wiper on top of the rail would work better? It's because of the less-than-perfect track of the real world.When the engine is sitting solidly on all 4 wheels and bearings, sure, everything is great. But when it isn't, here's what happens.In my spring-bearing scheme, the current has to flow from the axle, to the bearing, then through the little spring, to the frame.There are 3 contact points in the path. (axle/bearing, bearing/spring, spring/frame) During lucky moments when sides of the bearing are touching the frame, we can forget the spring, so we have two points of contact (axle/bearing and bearing/frame)With a wiper directly on top of the wheel, the current flows from the wheel rim to the wiper, and that's it. There is only one contactpoint. Ain't nothin' more reliable than that, as long as the wheel and wiper are clean and the wiper is adjusted right.I agree with you. I don't like wipers either. They bend, they get dirty, they wear, and they put drag on the wheel. That's why I'm not using them. But when they are clean and adjusted, they do provide perfect contact (until they become anythingless than perfectly adjusted, that is).
Most of our engines, I'd wager, are actually sitting on 3 points most of the time.The frames, trackwork, wheels, etc, are just not made to tolerances nearly close enough to actually have decent pressure on 4 points at once. Even within .001" is not good enough.And that means that at an given moment, with only 2 conductive wheels on each rail, there are probably lots oftimes when I have to count on only one wheel completing the circuit.Thems ain't good odds in N Scale
Our (factory made engines) yes. But if your sprung suspension keeps the springs under roughtly 50% compression (in the center point of the suspension's travel) while sitting on a piece of even track then all the wheels will be in fairly good contact with the track (unless the trackwork is really horrendous). But again, I agree that if pickup wipers were used then the conductivity would be maximized.
Brass and nickel both oxidize. I have not done any research about the conductivity or hardness of the oxides. But if you clean a piece of brass and do not contaminate (like touching it with fingerprints which have salty sweat) or expose it to caustic or acidic fumes then it should stay relatively clean.I am also assuming that you will lubricate the areas where the bearings will move in the slots in the chassis. Oily film also prevents oxidation. I don't know if nickel plating will actually be beneficial in this application.