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I tried that but the bearings won't come off the shaft.Attached is a photo of what I have. The trucks toward the top of the photo are the ones that came with the unit. They made the ride height way too high and one side was higher than the other on one of them causing the unit to list to the right. I also removed the rapido couplers in favor of body, or should I say, chassis mounting MTL 1015's. I replaced those trucks with the 'revised' version, the set toward the bottom of the photo. This brought the ride height down to an acceptable level plus they had no couplers attached.However, this truck change did nothing to eliminate or reduce the noise. As I mentioned, I searched TRW and did find the "beardenizing" fix for four-axel trucks but I am not able to remove the inner bearing block. As can be seen in the photo, they do have the brass cups inside. I don't know what this means as far as the noise is concerned but if it has any effect, I'd like to know.Dougp.s. The paper insert inside the box is blue.
I had a Con Core PA that started sounding like a coffee grinder when a bit of plastic picked up off the track (or so I think, couldn't find anything damaged in the truck or chassis). Cleaned the trucks out and lubed the gears and I think it is good for another 40 years.I have had an issue on old Katos with those bushings. Some are green (don't know if they were made of different material or perhaps an interaction with a lubricant), and seem more brittle than the white ones. Of course, it never hurts to count all the teeth on all the gears...
I thought in all these types of drivelines (meaning Kato and Atlas diesels with the worms mounted between two bearings), the worm should always be able to move back and forth a little between the bearings. If it can't, then I pull that little fork end out a hair so that the bearings and worm can slide back and forth. It doesn't have to be much, but it can't be zero or the worm binds and makes a lot of noise.
I closed my eyes and pulled and off came the u-joint !!! Well, all I can say is WOW!! The 'beardenizing' worked! Thank you, Ron, for all the work you did toward solving this noise issue.Not being able to take anything at face value, no offence Ron:), I closely scrutinized why this mod may have worked on my unit. With the inner bearing block in place, the worm is held firmly between the two blocks. If there is ANY resulting mis-alignment between the worm and the main gear, there will be added friction which can/will cause noise as the gear teeth try to mesh with the worm. With that inner bearing block removed, it allows the worm to move back and forth along the shaft, thus allowing the gear/worm combination to find its own "sweet spot", thus eliminating, or at least reducing, the noise. Although this may not be true of all noise issues, I believe it was the cause on my unit.Another benefit of this mod was a significant reduction in current draw and a much lower starting voltage. Although there's still work to be done on this issue, the mod has certainly helped. I may be able to DCC this old girl after all.I have a few other 4-axle locos that I will try this on should they exhibit the same noise issue. Thanks again, Ron, and all the others who provided suggestions.
BCR 751 could you show a pic of how you milled the frame for the 1015 coupler. I have a f7A and b unit that have broken truck coupler pockets.