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Many here know that more than once have I posted about the ten greatest ogres to all things N scale. Eight of those are dirt and at the end, frequently I add "Did I remember to mention 'dirt'?".When a reliable locomotive starts to sputter and stutter, the first suspected culprit is dirt; but on the track. When a thorough track erasing/LL Track Cleaning does not solve the problem the next suspect is the locomotive. The first things for which I look are dirt devils in the trucks. This problem is more common on live trucks with contact wipers, but it does happen on needlepoint as well. If the dirt devils are not the culprits, it is time to disassamble the locomotive.One thing that I have noticed that occurs frequently is that crud will accumulate in the indentations for the needlepoint axles on the bronze contact strips that are in the trucks. A quick swabbing with LL Track Cleaner on a Q-tip then an outscraping of the dirt cleans up the mess. I then re-swab with the q-tip, put back the truck, track erase the nub on top of the contact strip as well as the bottom of long contact strips on the chassis. This addresses the problem. The things run fine after that.Has anyone else had this problem with these locomotives?Is there anything that you can do to prevent this from occurring so frequently. I am afraid that the plastic nuts on the metal chassis and the clips on the trucks will become fatigued from so much disassembly and reassembly, thus ineffective, which will render the locomotive useless.Thank you in advance.
I think Conductalube is just dielectric grease.
I have actual silver bearing grease that is conductive. It came in a syringe the size of an ink pen.https://www.mgchemicals.com/products/grease-for-electronics/electrically-conductive-grease/contact-grease/
I bought it a long time ago so I doubt I paid that much. I just put it in Kato tender trucks. I did wear a lab coat if that makes it scientific. I don't have the Atlas stuff to compare, but I recall way back when I bought the stuff there was a video showing a guy touching a meter to it to show it conducted. Similar to this:I have a big tube of dielectric grease out in the garage that I used on my landscape lights. It is just a grease to stop oxidation.
Are you stating that Atlas Conducta-Lube is conductive, or that it is dielectric (non-conductive)?I don't dispute that your MG Chemicals conductive grease is in fact conductive.Conductive lubricants are either solver or dark gray in color (since they contain the conductive metal or carbon particles. Dielectric lubes (like the Atlas Conducta Lube) are often transparent (no conductive particles in them).