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Actually, now that I've had some of these apart, there are small metal "fins" on the half-axles that are pushed into the plastic tubes, so Kato thought of that. Unless the tube cracks, the wheels would not go out of quarter.
I'm surprised they didn't just make a new plastic tube out of a different material that wouldn't crack.I suppose they decided it was tough to know exactly what would hold up in that application.
The only problem was the rapid failure of the "tires". I do not place it on the track and push/pull to check that it is indeed on the rails.
Victor's suggestion about a sleeve over the axle (what I called the "faux" axle tube) would work.I considered that when I was fixing these.
But man, having played with these... the old bearings were so much freer. You just have a polished hardened steel axle sliding in the bearing hole.
I think if I owned one of these, I would rework the axle tubes and keep my old bearings.There's a good bit of room in that frame. I could grind out some more clearance under where the tubegoes, and grind some off the inside of the gear cover plate where it sits above the tube,to allow for a larger tube diameter.Then sleeve a brass tube right over the plastic tube. It would be like Victor's brass collar solution, onlyit would be a little easier to do, I think, because it's just a single sleeve, no milling of the plastic tube edges,or cutting tiny collars, etc. This assumes I would have the advantage of doing this BEFORE the tubeactually fails.If you catch them before they break and reenforce them, they should last forever.
So... you really think these break a lot because people are shoving on them on the track, eh?Boy. People need to take better care of their engines.
One thing to realize...These engines also come right out of the box new with cracked axle tubes sometimes.Not cracked enough to operationally fail, but clear stress cracks nonetheless.So I would bet the the root cause of all this trouble is that the axle tubes themselves cannot takethe stress of the inserted metal axle - either because the plastic is too inflexible, or the hole is bored a littletoo small (or both). Maybe ham-fisted operators exacerbate the problem, but I thinkthe part itself is really the problem.