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Just last night I did a quick-&-dirty weight test on the Athearn loco. I used tiny bits of sticky-tac, and gradually added 4” strips of plumber’s solder (the heavy stuff that’s 1/8” diameter and is used to sweat joints on copper pipe etc) to the shell exterior. Started with a strip along the bottom edge of each side (ie - just above the fuel tanks and trucks). I then added two more on the roof, and then two more again on the roof, for a total of six 4” strips of solder weights. I had no way to actually measure/quantify the weight change, but my rough guess is that I was probably close to doubling the original weight. Net result? The grossly overburdened little loco DID manage to pull all six crappy coaches around the oval, but not without STILL suffering some wheel spin on the curves. So, I’ve decided “screw it”. I just picked up two packets of Microtrains “4-wheel Lightweight Passenger Car Trucks” (1017) and will finangle them onto two coaches to see what happens. I’m beyond caring about the prototypical truck appearance. No one who views my layout will ever know any different (mostly four little grandkids, their parents, my wife, the odd brother- or sister-in-law etc). At this point, some ten years down the road, I’d rather see the F59HPI pulling six cars having plain black conventional trucks on them, rather than a maximum of only three cars which happen to have shiny brake rotors like the real thing!
I did a quick test on an incline track and found the Comets do run much better than the Kato Amfleet cars.They seem to roll about 20-25% better. And about 4X better than the modified Bachmann Amfleet cars. Yikes! I don't have the Athearn bi-levels to compare it to.One interesting note... I polished the wheels and axles of one Comet truck and found it to be more resistant than the non-treated comet truck. I have not treated the bearing cut yet so that may be the reason, but I would have thought any polishing would improve rolling qualities.I did buy two additional cars - Con-DOT to replace broken parts on my MBTA cars as well as provide parts for experimenting on these trucks to get them to run better.
I’ve always thought inside bearing trucks looked anemic anyway (literally - an iron deficiency).Seriously, getting your cars to operate with the wrong trucks is better than not having them operate at all.