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While it does make sense, I'm still not entirely sold on the concept that wheels start out with a silver finish and then wear down to the brass underneath. Albeit I do but a lot of stuff second-hand, I can't say that I've ever had a loco where I know for certain the wheels started out as silver and then ended up brass. It always seemed to me they started out looking either silver or brass and stayed that way. I've also never noticed wheels that appear to be in a transition from silver to brass with some kind of wear pattern. For example, look at the wheels at the start of this thread. They are 100% brass in appearance with no trace of silver, even on the flanges.
Thanks for the hint Jon. I'll label them L or R with a Sharpie as I take them off.Peteski, I read the entire other thread. I don't have an arbor press but I'm assuming a bench top drill press would work as I can't imagine you need that much force to move those axles. The only concern I have is how the hell do I know to move the drill press down 0.01"? Yes, I can measure it with a caliper but that's the final result. I'm imagining a night more or chasing "Damn, too much! Oops, too little! Etc." scenario.Instead of taking each set apart, adjust the axles, reassemble them, measure and repeat (I'm sure I won't get the correct length the first time), I was thinking doing it with everything together and go REALLY slow with the drill press on each side of the axle.
Solid nickel silver would be considerably more expensive to manufacture than nickel silver plated brass.Doug
Do you mean that machining is more expensive (I thought they both machined easily), or strictly the cost of the metal stock?
BTW, Peteski et al, same Kato wheels will fit this one too?
Thanks Peteski. I replied in the other thread.To answer Russ' comment. Here is a picture for my first DCC loco, Atlas Conrail GP40-2, purchased 13+ years ago. Since it was my only DCC one back then, my son and I inititially ran it quite a lot. As the years gone by and I added and converted more locos, its run time dropped because it was no longer the only DCC loco that I have.As you can see, the upper right is showing brass while the other 3 are still in their various stages of silver. I'm going to guess that those 3 will eventually be like the forth.BTW, Peteski et al, same Kato wheels will fit this one too?
If the wheelset has the same offset gear and pointy axles, then it should fit. Visually, to me, they look the same to the other Atlas wheelsets. How about if you look up the part number for the wheelsets of all the locos in question (in the Atlas online parts diagrams)? If the part number is the same, they will most certainly fit.
Close but no cigar! 490304 for SD50/60 and 480304 for GP40-2 but the gear does look offset in the Geep also.