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All: I have quite a number of older Kato and Atlas (China and Japan Manufactured) RS-1's and RS-3's that I just cannot get to run smoothly or to consistently run smoothly, no matter how many times I have taken them apart, cleaned, lubed and put them back together. These have TCS GN decoders in them. And I have replaced the traction tire wheel sets with full contact wheel sets. Can someone provide me with a step by step or overall repair protocol for these locomotives? Ie: What causes the problems, the things I should be looking at/for, the steps I should go through and specific procedures to repair the faulty mechanisms. The problems I perceive are: 1) Lurch when they start - the trucks appear to move before the frame follows, resulting in a visible 2 step movement. 2) Poor running - they will start off a session fine, after cleaning wheels and testing, but in the middle of the session (1.5 hours or so), they will begin to balk - run poorly, stall, stop/start. And need to be taken out of service. I recently saw the video on the Railwire recently where someone (Jim M?) installed a sound decoder in one of these and it ran smoothly and perfectly. HOW DO YOU GET IT TO DO THAT? That's what I want to know. What's the secret sauce? PS: I also have a couple of the old LL SW-8 loco's that you guys apparently have the secrets too. I cannot get these to run properly, even with wired contacts. But that's for another day. Thanks.
I also have three of the old Atlas/Kato RS3's. These rely on contact between the frame and truck for electrical pickup (instead of using the phosphor-bronze pickup strips), and aren't quite as reliable on the electrical pickup front as the Atlas China models. But they can work very well if you polish the area where the truck contacts the frame, both on the truck and the frame. Again, I use a wire brush to do this. And I use ESU LokPilot decoders in these, which for me provide the best performance.John C.
Sorry - this was a LONG time ago, like the late 70s and early 80s. I can't even take pictures now, as the loco itself was lost to burglars years ago! Fortunately, they raided our old house, which was being used for storage, so all they got was the "junk". I've found some of it at train shows, on the second hand train tables, where the dealers have acquired it from the burglars. Most of it doesn't sell, so it just keeps showing up... It's junk!