It may look like an earthquake or a tornado has hit my Man cave but its just me rearranging things for my new baseboards. Some normality will return from this chaos - soon I hope!
Recording my progress, or usually the lack of it, in building kits, creating model railways and other related and sometimes unrelated matters!
It may look like an earthquake or a tornado has hit my Man cave but its just me rearranging things for my new baseboards. Some normality will return from this chaos - soon I hope!
After missing going to the Rocks by Rail Museum for two weeks following Covid and then the sickly cats saga (they are all recovering) I managed to get there today. It was my last day being there whilst the Museum is open to the public. It closes after the last event on Sunday until next year. Wow! where did that summer season go - it only seems like a few weeks ago that it opened for the 2022 season?
Anyway it was a quiet day - very quiet! However I had a chance to get round and have a look around at a few things.
First thing was in the main shed where the three Sentinels were parked in line. I am not aware of any other museum that has three near identical locos so this is a fairly unique thing to see.
Going into the restoration shed I was shocked to see a large open space.
I need not worry though! Elizabeth, the steam loco under restoration had been moved outside to be over the pit. She now has her reversing gear on and handbrake workings.
A strange title to this post but as I hinted yesterday I now have first hand experience of what is termed as mazak rot. Many die cast parts to models are made out of this alloy. Unfortunately, unless the manufacturing process removes all the contaminates they do, over time, start a crystallization process which makes the casting swell and become brittle. There is a more technical description on Wikipedia - click here.
In the case of the Duchess of Sutherland the keeper plate which keeps the wheels in the chassis has this rot. It caused it to swell, bend and when I tried to straighten it, shattered into several pieces! Oh dear as I said or possible words to that effect!
A spare part would be a good way to solve the problem but an internet search revealed spare keeper plates are as rare as rocking horse droppings and as I don't have a 3D printer or the skills to CAD a new part that option is out - for the moment anyway. So out came the Gorilla Super Glue and I glued the parts together. It doesn't look pretty and wont last but it is hidden away and allows me to see if the loco runs fully.
Whilst I let the glue harden I cleaned up the wheel rims, the axles and the chassis mounting points and lubricated them.
Whilst I was at it I also checked and adjusted the back to back measurements on the wheels.
With the 'repaired' keeper plate back in place the body was reattached and the tender added and the loco tested. After a somewhat stuttering and sticky start it actually ran reasonably well.
The tender mounting point to the loco needs adjustment but I was impressed enough to think it is worth spending a bit of time and money to try to deal with the keeper plate problem. I may well end up making one from sheet brass or similar if there are no spares out there. Stay tuned on that one.
On My Last Great Project the first baseboard support has had four of its six legs added and things appear to fit together and line up - so far anyway!
As my wood butchery skills are questionable I have added these adjusters to each leg which means I stand some sort of chance on getting things level when these are installed in the Man Cave. Unlike the Duchess I hope that I won't be dealing with any wood rot on these in the future!
Whilst any self respecting Duchess would steer clear of dealing with me unfortunately the Hornby Duchess of Sutherland locomotive has no choice! So I started dealing with her tender behind! I better clarify that in that it is the tender drive that actually powers her.
The motor did not want to run when placed on the track and even with the loco itself coupled up to complete the electrical circuit there was nothing. So without wasting time the tender body came off to reveal the motor.
The two metal ballast weights at either end were taken off which allowed the motor to be removed.
The motor is one of Hornby's pancake type similar to what Lima used. They are generally fairly robust so it was not until I removed the plastic cover to find this.
The commutator and brushes were covered in an oil/grease mix which unsurprisingly stopped electricity flowing as it should! Out came some cotton buds and IPA or rubbing alcohol as it used to be called and all was cleaned. Back together the tender was connected to the main loco chassis minus the loco body and surprisingly there is a light bulb on the front that I did not know about until it illuminated. A good sign.
The tender motor certainly ran but there was something wrong with the chassis. It just did not want to move! Time for a close examination. Taking the keeper plate off the bottom of the loco chassis revealed a very bent piece of metal.
Just bend it back flat would be most peoples initial thought and mine too. However I was soon going to experience first hand something that I have read of and seen on videos many times and dreaded ever finding in my models. More on that tomorrow in my continuing story of dealing with a Duchess!
After over a week of sickly cats, who are now seemingly getting better, I made Mrs. Woody and myself a sandwich and we had a drive out into the countryside to consume said sandwich. Mrs. W likes to overlook a bit of pleasant scenery whilst eating a sandwich which I can fully appreciate as well. However, what I cannot understand is that whilst eating she reads her Kobo. However that is good for me as over the years I have developed an ability to choose from various locations that provide a pleasant view of scenery and also of railway lines therefore enabling me to do a bit of train spotting. Today we returned to a spot that had previously yielded trains on an almost 5 minute interval. Today nothing for the first 25 minutes. One train goes by and then another 25 minutes before another by which time sandwiches have been consumed and it is time to move on. It was only listening to the radio news broadcast on the way home that the unusually few train numbers was explained by the fact that it reported that today was a strike day on the national railway system. Only I could go train spotting on a strike day!
Back at WMD HQ, nourished by my sandwich and with Mrs. W settling into the sofa for some prime time TV, I returned to the Hornby Open Cab GWR Pannier that needed a new motor. Having that delivered yesterday meant that it didn't take too long to put it all together and it was running wonderfully. That is what I would have liked to have reported but it did not quite work out that way!
Having put the wheels back in the chassis it was evident that there was a bind somewhere. Whilst pushing the un-motored chassis along the workbench once every revolution the wheels became difficult to roll. It was not the coupling rods directly causing the problem - they just were not aligned correctly because the quartering on the wheels was out of sync. In very basic terms, the coupling rod on one side of the loco has to be at the 12 o'clock position whilst on the other side is at the 3 o'clock position. If there is a wheel out the coupling rods bind causing the loco to stutter on each revolution of the wheels. I found the culprit and normally it would need some persuasion to come of the axle to then be realigned. However, in this case, it more or less fell off which may explain why the quartering was wrong.
Putting it back onto the axle in the right orientation, some super glue now holds it in place. To get the distance between the wheel rims to the right dimension I used a 'back to back' gauge. A bit like feeler gauges for car spark plugs, my gauge should just be able to slip between the wheel rims if they are correctly spaced. Whilst I was at it I checked the other two wheel sets and found them a little tight. A bit of gentle persuasions and levering with a screw driver got them right.
Putting it all back together and onto the track it runs well. It will never be up with todays locos with coreless motors, but it will run slowly and through most points. Result! At least I know I can always spot this loco on my layout any day - even if it is a strike day!
The WMD HQ fleet of cats are hopefully showing signs of getting better but still some need hand feeding in the two in one out game as I feed them cat biscuits by putting one at a time in their mouths.
I did manage to finish the last baseboard frame for my revised Last Great Project. It has the dropped section where viaducts will be installed which has caused some head scratching on measurements but hopefully it will be right!
I ended yesterdays post about sickly cats and the house being turned into a vomitorium saying I would probably be giving the house a thorough clean today. Well that prediction proved correct! The steam cleaner came out at 7am and by the end of the day I had created a vista of cleanliness downstairs. Even Mrs. Woody was impressed! Just upstairs to do next!
All that cleaning probably shamed me into tidying my work bench which was slowly disappearing under parts of models and rubbish. I must admit it was getting to the stage where I was loosing things on the bench but a half hour improved matters! I must admit I felt better for doing it. If only all the cats were better too but we are making progress - slowly.
I would post a picture of the before and after of the workbench but for some reason that is beyond me the photos will not upload! Oh well! Me and technology. Hopefully it works tomorrow!
Update - I found a way to make it work!
No model making or related matters for me today. A bit of a busy few days have gone by with much of my time nursing the sickly WMD HQ fleet of cats who appear to have picked up something that they are sharing with each other. At times the house has been more like a cat themed vomitorium but with some vet visits, a few tests, some pills and a now empty wallet I am hoping that the corner has been turned. I hope so for my sanity. So far I have hand fed over 700 cat biscuits to the two most sickly cats who refused to eat. They like to play the two in, one out game which makes that 700 biscuits feel more like over a thousand! The things we do for our pets! Mrs. Woody says I am so good at the hand feeding that it would not be right for her to take over from me! I think she just wants to avoid the Repetitive Strain Injury that I seem to be developing from this task!
Given no model making time I did spend a few minutes searching down a spare motor for the Hornby Open Cab Pannier tank I featured a few posts ago. That should arrive soon but I think I will be looking for more spares for some more locos pulled out of the gift box I got given last week.
First off a rather nice LMS express loco the Duchess of Sutherland. This looks to be a 1980s Hornby model with what was not the most reliable drive train. The motor was in the tender and the tender wheels were driven. It had the advantage that the moulding of the locomotive itself did not have to be compromised to get a motor inside but the tender drive was not the most reliable or powerful and many modellers found them disappointing. I can not comment on that yet as for some yet to be determined reason this model is a non-runner. However it is such a nice model that it deserves some TLC so when I have a chance I will dismantle it and determine what is wrong.
The second loco is an earlier model from Hornby of the Class 37. Still carrying its pre TOPS number it would not in real life have been in the blue livery for very long having been repainted from the green that was common place during much of the 1960s. The model dates probably from the early 1970s as the power bogie only has 4 wheels, not the 6 that the real loco had. I have no idea why Triang originally did this and Hornby continued it but they also did it with their class 31. It is a dirty model but has a certain charm even though just like the Hornby Duchess of Sutherland it is a non runner so I will need to investigate! In the meantime a few photos posed on my terminus model which looks 1970s so suits it well.
Hopefully the Vomitorium issues will be ending but I need to do a thorough house clean so I can see that being tomorrows task - Can you get Repetitive Strain Injury from polishing? I don't think that Mrs. Woody would belive me even if you did!
Sometimes you have to play at detective to find the cause of a problem. I was going to finish the last baseboard frame today but something just did not look right. Placing it on my slabs which I know are level the frame had a twist. Trying to twist it did not have any affect. one piece or possibly more were not true and straight or one of the joints was at an angle. I discounted the joint possibility as a quick check with a carpenters square showed that my mitre saw had cut all the joints true and at 90 degrees. It was then down to detective work to determine which wood was no true. Literally this was a case of unscrewing everything and then putting it back together and seeing what the effect was as each piece was refastened. Eventually I found that one of the side pieces was twisted. It showed itself at the last joint where a twist of a few mm was enough to affect the rest of the frame. The picture below shows the problem.
Some more progress on the baseboard frames for My Last Great Project. The last frame is half built complete with a dropped are where the viaducts will go. Much head scratching and back of envelope calculations to get to this stage but hopefully my calculations and measurements are correct!
Looking through the gift box of old model railway stuff that I got last week I found this rather nice GWR open cab Pannier.
I thought that this would be a great runner only dating back from the 1980's. However on the track nothing - not even a buzz of a stuck motor. Time to investigate. This is serious dismantling!