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The problem: Three or four of my HO scale Atlas locomotives have squeaks (my daughter thinks they sound like a mouse) that are within the trucks. The specific trucks seem to be four-axle trucks that are models of Blomberg trucks. I took apart the trucks last night and cleaned out where the axles meet the metal electrical contacts. The difference between these trucks and Atlas' N scale trucks are that the latter are needle-point axles into "cups" that are the electrical contacts. On the HO models, the axle ends are not pointed. They are blunt and each axle end passes through a "hole" in the electrical contacts. It is the axle riding in the contact that squeaks.So, I cleaned all of the contacts and axle ends last night. Instant improvement, but eventually some squeaking came back after running the locomotives for ten or fifteen minutes. I figure that if I attempt to add any lube that will cause a couple of problems: (1) a loss of electrical continuity due to the lube, and (2) the lube attracting gunk, potentially making the problem worse. Should I consider something like dielectric grease?Ideas? I've searched the internet and have come up empty. I could go back to Atlas, but they just saved me big time on two warranty repairs due to a manufacturer reselling damaged returned goods. I would prefer not to bother Atlas again, if the experts here can offer some solutions.Thanks,DFF
@peteski,Thanks for responding. At the risk of causing a mess inside a locomotive (I still think oil is going to attract dirt), I may try as you suggested. I also emailed Atlas to see what their response is. I'll keep you posted.DFF
Just turn the volume up Dave!
Yes, oil and grease will attract some dirt - that is a trade-off for silent operation (and for longer life of the model). And yes, dirt accumulates in those low-friction bearing cups too. And if you don't lubricate them, the axle point will eventually wear out a hole in the bearing cup. And it can squeak too.I'm not sure why you are so averse to using some lube. You don't need to use a lot of oil - just a tiny dab. After all, any metal-on-metal moving surface needs to be lubricated. Only Delrin plastic gears can be run dry. You didn't run all if your N scale models without any lubrication, did you?
I lightly lubed the axle ends with some Hob-E-Lube Premium Lite Oil. The squeaks are gone at first, but I'll continue to let the locomotives run for twenty or thirty minutes to confirm that this fix is better than my first attempt last night. Thankfully, I didn't overdo it enough to cause electrical problems, as the locomotives are running well so far and the sound is not cutting out. These locomotives are stock Atlas GP40-2s and do not have Keep-Alives on board.That's two locomotives down and two to go. Interestingly, they're all Blomberg trucks that are squeaking. My locomotives with FB-2 trucks haven't squeaked yet.Thanks,DFF
It should be fine. Even if you flooded the contact areas with oil, I don't think that would cause electrical connectivity problems until the oil started accumulating debris.
As far as the FB-2s go, maybe they were better lubricated at the factory? Or they have different design? I don't know - I'm not a H0er, remember?
"Use conducta lube-cleaner Part #192 Atlas product. Bachmann makes one too."