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Regarding the Atlas/Kato business, this loco is one of the first ones made by Kato. Years ago when I got it I asked some questions about it and was told at that time it was an Atlas/Kato unit. Maybe it was called that due to the motor pieces being made by Atlas. Hell, I don't know. Given the dissing I've received by calling it Atlas/Kato, hence forth, it will be called just plain Kato. I trust that will please everyone.I'm going to order some of the saddle brackets (I think that's the correct term) and tryout some of the suggestions made here. I don't have much faith in the "cut it and re-glue it" scenario but it's worth a try. I'm also going to try modifying my wheel puller to make it fit between the motor body and the flywheel. I'm also going to search for the complete motor with the saddle brackets installed. That would be the preferred solution.Doug
Here is how I get things like this off when they are really stubborn and a gear puller either won't fit or can't get it to budge.Cut a slot in a small plate of stainless steel using a Dremel with a cutoff wheel. (Stainless is tough, so you might need several cutoff disks). Get the thickest steel you can that will fit between there. Stainless is really tough and rigid, which is why I like it for this.Slip that in between the motor and flywheel, (like a "V plate"). Hang the whole thing between the jaws of a vise (motor hanging down between the jaws, plate across the jaws, flywheel sticking up).From above, use a small nail punch to start tapping the shaft out with a hammer. You don't wail on it all the way through.Once you get it to move a little, you can cut the shank off an old drill bit with the Dremel and use that as a punch. Just holdit in needlenose pliers and tap tap tap the shaft out the rest of the way with a hammer. Since they are 1.5mm shafts, a 1/16" bit is just a little too big. A #54 drill is ideal, being .055" (whereas the hole is .059"). Ace Hardware sells numbered drills that size for about $4.Since the motor is hanging free by the flywheel the whole time, this does not subject the motor to any stress (as long as you don't miss and whack the motor!)
Atlas/Kato RS-1 uses saddle bracket motor mounts, but they are different than the ones in your F-unit.http://download.atlasrr.com/pdf/N%20ALCO%20RS1%20DIESEL%20LOCO.pdfWhich Atlas loco have you found that has the same saddle bracked as the F-units?
OK, I’m confused. I thought we were settled with the idea that this is a Kato model - why are you planning on purchasing Atlas parts? Unless the Kato parts and the Atlas parts are interchangeable, but in my experience all Atlas’s locos use a one piece ‘motor saddle’…Actually, at this moment I’m looking at the motor out of my Life Like C Liner, and the motor and the ‘motor mounts’ look more or less exactly the same, other than colour.
Removing the flywheel is the easy part. More difficult on a dual flywheel motor is reinstalling it without having the other flywheel moving on the motor shaft.