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Thinking of picking up the 2018 MTH 44 Tonner in Army colors for my yard.

Other than the capacitor issue, are there any bugs with this engine that I should be aware of ?

Also, did either MTH or Lionel produce a command control switcher in military livery besides this engine ?

Thanks

 

 

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Ross turnouts are a perfect fit for tortoise turnout motors because you can energize the closure rails to prevent stalling of short locomotives. This gets a little wonky, but essentially what you want to do is turn the closure rail your locomotive is rolling on into a "ground" and the unused one (for the other direction) as a "hot" for the pickup roller. Using the Tortoise contacts, you run a feed from each closure rail to one of the two "common" relay points, then hook a hot feed to the one not being used; the ground to the one being used and vice-versa for the other closure rail. Ross has a diagram for "hot-railing" on their site. This is pretty much required for larger turnouts and I had to put one in for our #8 curved turnout as GP35's were stalling when running through at under 20 miles per hour.  If you don't have a ground issue, the Ross hot-railing approach is the better option as it's simpler.

Ross Large Turnout Diagram

I have the MTH 44 tonner and the MTH US Army Genset and use Lionel Fastrack switches with no problems.  Most of my switches are Fastrack 36 inch turns.  The Lionel Genset has a fixed pilot requires at least 48 inch curves.  I belive you will be pleased with the MTH 44 tonner it is suprisingly powerfully.

Railrunnin posted:

John, I'm sure it was covered elsewhere - but do you add another set of pickups to address that issue for switching moves through RCS Switches using this engine?

 I also like using small switchers in a yard.

Paul

I haven't tried adding pickups, but when I get finished with the new layout, some of my locomotives will be getting more attention, I figured I have about two years of upgrades and fixes waiting.

Richie C. posted:

Also, did either MTH or Lionel produce a command control switcher in military livery besides this engine

 

MTH and Lionel have produced a good number of U.S. Army command control locomotives. I'm particularly interested in U.S. Army items because my layout will have a military logistics depot theme. Most of my locomotives are MTH, but I also have the Lionel Genset, Trackmobile, and a steam locomotive or two. I also have several Weaver U.S. Army diesels that are equipped with TMCC. To find what MTH has offered in U.S. Army livery (it's a pretty extensive assortment), just go to their website and do a product locator search with the keywords U.S. Army.

Last edited by Allan Miller
Richie C. posted:

Thinking of picking up the 2018 MTH 44 Tonner in Army colors for my yard.

Other than the capacitor issue, are there any bugs with this engine that I should be aware of ?

Also, did either MTH or Lionel produce a command control switcher in military livery besides this engine ?

Thanks

 

 

My USAF 44T switcher was not moving and was sounding the horn continuously - so back to the dealer.

I have an USAF Baldwin which runs just fine.

We have the MTH 20-20890-1 - Alco S-2 Switcher Diesel Engine "U.S. Army" #7107 w/ PS3 sale priced at $399.96  - One left

Also the GP-9 - for the $399.96 - $100 off - MTH 20-20862-1 - GP-9 Diesel Engine "U.S. Army" w/ PS3 #001

MTH still has the 20-20875-1 in stock - $399.96 is its sale price - MTH 20-20875-1 - G.E. 44 Ton Phase 3 Diesel Engine "U.S. Army" #1659 w/ PS3 (Hi-Rail Wheels)

I would appreciate your business on any of these..... 

20-2086220-20890

 

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  • 20-20862
  • 20-20890

I have the MTH GE 44-tonners in that U.S. Army scheme as well as Milwaukee Road. It’s all diecast metal. Great model.

The Milwaukee Road version did hesitate going through a switch on my O-27 home layout, but only in one direction and was not a problem if I turned it around and ran it through the switch in reverse. The Army version has no problem in either direction on that same switch. Go figure.

Photos of both running on the club layout:

C5F8EDFA-1712-4E79-AF68-BD192773A6218DBD2E0B-B314-4BFB-8CF5-A4420BA7D4BA

Attachments

Images (2)
  • C5F8EDFA-1712-4E79-AF68-BD192773A621
  • 8DBD2E0B-B314-4BFB-8CF5-A4420BA7D4BA
AGHRMatt posted:

Ross turnouts are a perfect fit for tortoise turnout motors because you can energize the closure rails to prevent stalling of short locomotives. This gets a little wonky, but essentially what you want to do is turn the closure rail your locomotive is rolling on into a "ground" and the unused one (for the other direction) as a "hot" for the pickup roller. Using the Tortoise contacts, you run a feed from each closure rail to one of the two "common" relay points, then hook a hot feed to the one not being used; the ground to the one being used and vice-versa for the other closure rail. Ross has a diagram for "hot-railing" on their site. This is pretty much required for larger turnouts and I had to put one in for our #8 curved turnout as GP35's were stalling when running through at under 20 miles per hour.  If you don't have a ground issue, the Ross hot-railing approach is the better option as it's simpler.

Ross Large Turnout Diagram

Matt I sure could use a Diagram for the Tortice

Clem

I think MTH is on gen 3 of this model now?

Grounding both outside rails on Gargraves like everyone should do, should provide smooth operation I would expect. If my S.I. MP3 sound script is not chosen, the unit is going back to the dealer anyway.  We shall see when it finally arrives.

Problem with 3R O is there are too many companies with variations. Nothing is standard like H.O.  

 

Last edited by SIRT
Jim R. posted:

I have the MTH GE 44-tonners in that U.S. Army scheme as well as Milwaukee Road. It’s all diecast metal. Great model.

The Milwaukee Road version did hesitate going through a switch on my O-27 home layout, but only in one direction and was not a problem if I turned it around and ran it through the switch in reverse. The Army version has no problem in either direction on that same switch. Go figure.

Photos of both running on the club layout:

C5F8EDFA-1712-4E79-AF68-BD192773A621

Hi Jim,

I have to tell you that I saw the Milwaukee 44 tonner in person.  It was in the middle of a mixed freight on the NYC short line thru Cleveland.  This was in the late 50's; I was eight years old.  It was quite a sight to see.

Lou N

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