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Could you be a bit more specific- for example, how frequently is frequently? Are you doing these cleanings monthly, weekly, daily? Also, how often do you need to clean other locos in your fleet? And is this one loco, or do you have a fleet of them all exhibiting the same issue?
I sometimes "over-lube" locos after cleaning- leading to dirt mixing with the excess lube to cause a worse problem than I had pre-cleaning.
If I run into a loco that is needing more cleaning than others, I take a look at the condition of the gears and other plastic parts in the trucks and mechanism- sometimes I find the excess "dirt" is ground plastic resulting from some parts that are not properly aligned and grinding each other down.
I just put it in Kato tender trucks.
I have actual silver bearing grease that is conductive. It came in a syringe the size of an ink pen.
I have had steam locos with those tender cone cups accumulate black crud inside the cups, killing the pickup. I usually use a toothpick soaked in alcohol to scrap out the junk first, especially down deep at the point of the cup. Then a small stiff paint brush, soaked in alcohol and twirled into the cup, gets rid of the rest. I avoid putting anything sharp or metal in the cup. It needs to remain as smooth and scratch-free as possible to avoid friction and dirt accumulation.I've seen this on Kato Mikados, Bachmann 2-8-0's, and other engines I can't recall at the moment.Your higher voltage theory (more arcing, more carbon build up, at high voltages) might have some merit. I have noticed this to be more of problem on my NP W-5, which is super-geared-down, so I tend to run it more in the 10 volt and up range.
Atlas Conductalube. It has worked wonders on my light Climax A's that live and die on pickup, and makes a NOTICEABLE improvement and a long-term benefit as well. It has a precision needlepoint dropper so that you can get a drop into end-axle pickups, I do it as SOP now, without removing the trucks or disassembling them.
The science is there though; you're putting electricity across a space, higher voltage = arcing across any gap, the spark can create carbon, which builds up everywhere as a partial insulator,
I've never had to do this to my Kato F's, just my lighter-contact units and the little 11-105 chassis are the worst.
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'?".
For complete maintenance I totally disassemble the model (including the trucks) and use ultrasonic filled with Naphtha to thoroughly degrease the entire mechanism.
QuoteFor complete maintenance I totally disassemble the model (including the trucks) and use ultrasonic filled with Naphtha to thoroughly degrease the entire mechanism. Could you, please, elaborate on this process?Thanks.
In spite of that I’ve long recommended to clients that the pointed axle/coned pickup “low friction” scheme is the Gold Standard for N Scale. Factories must feel like it is too complicated to produce as they keep reverting to various vastly inferior wipers and other pickup schemes.
...snipI would agree that arcing is the cause of the gunk but that raises the question…if it is carbon, and graphite is carbon, why is it bad? ... snip Charlie VlkRailroad Model Resources
Carbon is not nearly as conductive as phosphor bronze or copper. Carbon requires a lot more contact pressure to be conductive than, say, copper does. Note how you need steady spring pressure on the graphite brushes in our little motors to maintain conductivity to the armature. Without enough pressure, a layer of carbon is actually not conductive.In those axle cups, when they are just clean metal on metal, they are much better conductors than when you have a layer of carbon in there.
Could you, please, elaborate on this process?Thanks.There isn't really much to add. I take the model apart, then I drop all the parts into an ultrasonic cleaner tub filled with Naphtha (keeping track where all the parts belong of course). If the motor is really nasty (all oily with carbon powder from the brushes stuck all over its insides) I drop the entire motor in the cleaner. Here is a photo of a fully disassembled model truck from a brass loco. These parts have already been cleaned. Before cleaning the parts were all oily, with some metal shavings mixed into the lubricant.Then I let the parts dry (I use compressed air to speed this up), then I reassemble the model, lubricating the moving parts as I go along, and polishing electrical contacts which I feel should be polished. I mentioned polishing contact areas in my earlier post.The ultrasonic cleaners are readily available for cleaning jewelry. Mine is an older model used for cleaning plotter pens. Naphtha is a mild solvent. It is basically Ronsonol lighter fluid, or it can be purchased in larger quantities in the paint solvents section of a hardware store as Varnish Maker's and Painter's Naphtha (or VM&P Naphtha). It is a flammable liquid, so use caution when using it. Alcohol could be used instead, but I find that Naphtha is a better solvent for petroleum-based lubricants, and alcohol is also flammable.