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I've done a preliminary design on one but stopped after getting stuck on what to use for the mechanism. If anyone knows what would work I could probably be encouraged to finish it. With the Little Joe, I was so thirsty to get that kit finished I ended up making my own chassis kit, but with this one I'd really love to have an off-the-shelf solution. Same with the BoxCab kit - there are a couple JNR locos that sort of work, but i'm the type that would really want bang on to prototype. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ (Attachment Link) -Mike
The motor is one of my favorite hacks, they are a 3V 25:1 gearhead from Solarbotics, the GM15A, with a D-shaped shaft. I drill out the shaft .030 and put a piece of brass wire in there, and ACC the universal on it. 100 ohm resistor on the motor and I'm running on DC. And they are dirt cheap. I've never burned one out.Because of the gearhead, the current draw is minimal, you can get away with a tiny resistor. Full slip and you won't hear RPM drop and that resistor won't heat. That's one of the secrets.I've used that motor on all my Kato conversions for my Climax kits, up to and including the Nn3 Climax, and anything else it will fit into, including my original scratchbuilt stuff. You get about a 25mph top speed, incredible slow speed control, unlimited torque for such a tiny motor. For tiny geared steam, it's about perfect.I'm constantly experimenting with new drives, motors, whatever for tiny locomotive construction. I'll have pretty much my entire collection with me down to Altoona. The Holy Grail is a really well-peforming GE 25-tonner, I've probably built six of them, still never reached perfection.Tomytec has a lot of flavors on trucks, you have to pay attention to wheelbase, and if it has end-axle or interior pickups. For this, you want any MID tower (not end tower) short wheelbase, end-axle pickup truck. They change models of frames constantly, but there's about four different truck designs in all of them. The other thing about Tomytec is turning the flanges for Code 55 is as easy as it gets with split axles in a dremel with a micrometer.I also designed and fitted in custom weights on those models, making a pattern out of styrene and making a mold, so that there were custom drop-in weights made out of 160-degree Bismuth, which won't damage a silicone mold. Weight is everything. If anything, you have to make a decision on whether you want to pull cars or blow the horn, you can't do both. There's not enough space.I had another gearhead/motor combination I loved, but it's gone now - the Kato 11-105 12v motor with a Gizmoszone 5.14:1 gearhead on it. Gizmoszone out of Hong Kong just up and disapeared. Gone. That is the combo I've done all my tender-drive steam with.
Unless you want bell and horn sounds, no sound system is really needed for a MILW steeple cab. Like all of the MILW electrics, they were basically big versions of our trains. DC went in the top, through the motor, and out the bottom. No transformers, motor-generators, big cooling fans, nothing. Running, they were almost silent.