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Quote from: 3rdrail on August 26, 2007, 06:57:56 PMHow are you gonna model that one Ed? It's got three plain bearing axles and one roller bearing axle!! Only the PC could have done something like that. :What the heck are plain bearing trucks? Are they something new? I asked a couple of guys I know who worked for the PC back in the day along with a NS conductor friend and they never heard of plain bearing trucks...
How are you gonna model that one Ed? It's got three plain bearing axles and one roller bearing axle!! Only the PC could have done something like that. :
Quote from: Allentown Hump on August 27, 2007, 10:43:15 AMQuote from: 3rdrail on August 26, 2007, 06:57:56 PMHow are you gonna model that one Ed? It's got three plain bearing axles and one roller bearing axle!! Only the PC could have done something like that. :What the heck are plain bearing trucks? Are they something new? I asked a couple of guys I know who worked for the PC back in the day along with a NS conductor friend and they never heard of plain bearing trucks...They're what some folks incorrectly call "friction bearing" journals. The kind with a brass bearing and oily waste to lubricate things. if the waste caught between the axlke and the bearing you got a hotbox. ;D
There is more than a cover missing on that truck Mike . A friction/plain bearing side frame has a cover and a welded/molded on wadding cup that the wadding would be placed in . That first bearing area must have been ground down flat and then rollered . First time I saw that . Some freight cars were rollered but retained the friction frames and covers . UP used to paint the covers yellow to alert employees that they needed no wadding . Maybe on that switcher side frame that is not possible for some reason . Sure would like to know for sure .
There's also another cover style used on AAR-Bs that were built with roller bearings.. but you can pop it off and it'll look similar to the above.