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Mike, where have you been? Post more often.
Well, I'm fixing the f#$*!$. Here is before and after on the lightboard that goes in the top of the cab. (Attachment Link) The actual fix is as simple as unsoldering the headlight wire, and moving the interior Cab light LED wire over to the headlight pad. They even labeled them for you! I should add that the soldering was a total piece of cake compared to getting the light board installed back into the cab properly. That was a royal f#!$^ pain the !#$%. But mission accomplished. I plugged it back and checked and the lights look good.Still gotta fully reassemble and program and stuff. But we're almost there.
... I'm talking about how SP had the headlight in the nose and the gryalight above the cab as seen here. One of many film examples that can be found, standard SP equipment in the 70s even though it wasn't always turned on. And once you know, a solid headlight above the cab on an SP engine looks wrong.Well, I'm fixing the f#$*!$. Here is before and after on the lightboard that goes in the top of the cab.The actual fix is as simple as unsoldering the headlight wire, and moving the interior Cab light LED wire over to the headlight pad. They even labeled them for you! I should add that the soldering was a total piece of cake compared to getting the light board installed back into the cab properly. That was a royal f#!$^ pain the !#$%. But mission accomplished. I plugged it back and checked and the lights look good. ...
Ben, in your opinion, would it be easier to cut the wires and swap them around (while adding some length to make plugging back in easier) rather than removing the board from the cab? I pulled mine apart tonight and they sure don't give you much wire to make plug removal/reinstall very easy.-Mike
Damn. I should've reviewed this thread before (or while) taking mine apart an hour ago to install the LokPilot 5. Swapping the cab light lead is genius... although... I'm going to poke around on the main board and see if there's a solder pad corresponding to an unused AUX to run a separate wire. There are AUX solder pads on the decoder itself, but there are perils in doing that relative to disassembly.
... Also, if anyone knows or finds out anything about adding keep alive to these decoders, please post. The first outing at the club was a bit disappointing. I mean, we can always do a better job with track cleaning, but ESU decoders do better.
... Yeah I poked around a bit but couldn't find any such thing on the main board. BUT, I wasn't sure if I was getting good readings with my probes. IIRC, there were 7 resistors on the board, 6 of which had the same value which I concluded was for the LEDs. (I think they put two LEDS in series for the numberboards and cab light, but not absolutely sure.) There was one other resistor I couldn't figure out. (Speaker?) And there was set of pads marked for a resistor that didn't have a resistor, but I couldn't get any voltage reading off of. If you find anything let me know as I do have a 2nd one of these to still deal with. ...
Probably preachin' to the choir, but did you clean the wheels? The blackening is definitely a problem. Two out of two decodered so far (of seven) didn't run for crap until I cleaned 'em. Nice black streaks on the paper towel soaked with contact cleaner. Then they ran great.
Doing it without removing the board would involve bringing a soldering iron a lot closer to the decorated shell than I trust myself to do. I guess if you have all the right tools it could be easier, but risky.Another strategy might be to remove the cab from the rest of the shell. I'm pretty sure at the factory they install the lightboard to the cab roof before attaching the cab to the rest of the shell. But I couldn't really figure out everything holding the cab down and was afraid of breaking something. Not 100% sure they didn't use some glue.
Another strategy might be to remove the cab from the rest of the shell. I'm pretty sure at the factory they install the lightboard to the cab roof before attaching the cab to the rest of the shell. But I couldn't really figure out everything holding the cab down and was afraid of breaking something. Not 100% sure they didn't use some glue.
If so, that would be a drastic departure from Atlas practice.Based on decades of Atlas models, my default assumption would be that no glue is used.There is usually/typically a few tabs at the bottom of the Cab. On some locos, it's on the shell itself. On others, it's at the bottom of the side window glass.
Well, this locomotive is a drastic departure in all other ways. As peteski noticed, it looks like it was made by the BLI factory. The fuel tank is metal and I can't figure out how to remove the trucks.
If these are built like BLI Centipedes, and the worm is integral with the truck (as opposed to it being affixed to the chassis), then if you remove the worm cover and the worm, the truck should drop out from the bottom. Just throwing that out since I don't own one of these models.
Yeah, that's what it looked like to me, but actually popping the worm cover off seems easier said than done. Probably not going to try until I have a critical reason.
The fuel tank is metal...