0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Well, there wasn't any modeling at all lately...At the end of November my brother suddenly passed away. He went to bed and never woke up again.As you can imagine, that was a shock to all of us and still is.He has no family of his own so organising everything is quite a huge task for us as he was not living nearby.So I'm afraid this little critter has to wait a little more for the maiden run...ThomasPS: My offer still stands. If someone of you would like to have one of the printed brass frames, I could order them in one batch and ship them to you.
I appreciate all the hard work you have put into this. Thank you for your diligence.And can't wait to see the painted green version.Your experience with the mechanism makes me think that the Kato truck is probably the best way to go- even if it lacks the gearhead.
From what I saw in this thread, I agree. Also remember to cover the gear openings in the bottom plate with a strip of making tape. Even small pieces of debris (or packed dust of fuzz) can jam the gears. Piece of tape is a super-easy mod which seals the gear case minimizing the chances of contamination.
I'm curious about this. Don't all diesels, in fact, all of our engines, have open gears under the bottom that could pick up fuzz or junk from the track? Is this truck somehow more sensitive or susceptible to this problem? Or is this just something you do to all your engines as a precaution?
Yes, most diesels have open slots for gears and yes, this one is much more sensitive to foreign matter in the gears.This "advanced" design truck uses gears with a finer pitch than the "regular" N scale models. They run extremely smooth, but are much more sensitive to any debris in the gears. Just a week ago I dealt with a loco which was not running well at low speed (but didn't exhibit the familiar click when a fine piece of ballast is stuck between teeth). The gears were definitely binding slightly when I was tuning the wheels by hand (after removing the worm), but I didn't see any debris in the gears. Only after putting on my Optivisor and running pointy tweezers between the fine teeth of the tiny idler gears I realized that there was fuzz tightly compacted between few teeth. It was black so it visually blended with the gear. Picking it out made the truck run smoothly again.While I'm a huge Kato fanboy, and I marvel at their engineering feats, I think they have "jumped the shark" with this design. It is incredibly smooth if kept impeccably clean, but to me it is too delicate for its purpose. The standard truck design still results in smooth running models, while it is much less susceptible to be affected by the typical debris found on layouts.These trucks also are designed in a way tha the gears do not protrude below the surface of the bottom cover, so this simple fix of using tape to cover the slots works well. The other design has the gears protruding slightly, so the slots cannot be covered.