Who is a source for Weaver parts these days? I tried Brasseur, since they used to have parts for the early 2 rail engines, but no luck.
Chris
LVHR
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Who is a source for Weaver parts these days? I tried Brasseur, since they used to have parts for the early 2 rail engines, but no luck.
Chris
LVHR
Replies sorted oldest to newest
Depending on what you have, Williams parts may work. If I'm not mistaken, the Williams Crown Edition locos and the Weaver locos were both made by Samhongsha in Korea.
John
Bob lavezzi sells some Weaver parts. Try calling him.
If it's an Ultra Line chain-drive diesel, P&D Hobby has many of the drive parts: chain, sprockets, gearboxes, etc.
Thanks for the suggestions, guys! Sounds like P&D is the direction I need to be going.
Chris
LVHR
On a separate line of thought, you may want to consider buying junker or well priced locomotives for parts. As these parts get harder to find having old inventory will help you keep the ones you run operational for many, many years to come.
Good luck!
Jonathan,
Actually, that idea did occur to me. The fun and games is buying one that has the same guts that you need. Weaver had a couple different iterations of their diesels.
Chris
LVHR
What are you trying to get? P&D and Des Plains (sp) have detail parts. P&D have drive parts for the horizontal motors. NWSL had gears and drive shafts. It won't be original but they work. Dallee and others have an e-units or ERR or MTH have command stuff or if 2 rail lots of DCC stuff. For drive stuff you could go nuts and have Jay Crisswell put one of his fantastic drives in for you. Just because it says Weaver on the box doesn't mean you have to use Weaver parts.
Gene Anstine
Gene, Excellent points! Thanks for sharing. My unit has the horizontal motor. I called P&D and found they had everything I need to get this engine running again. I'm waiting on the package from them now.
Chris
LVHR
Excellent. I bought 3 rail parts from a 2 rail guy. He had gears IIRC from Stock Drive Parts for the top drive gear that made it run slower. I really like the horizontal motored Weavers, I get better performance from them.
Gene Anstine
What Gene said. The first chain-drive Weavers had an 8-tooth upper sprocket. When some go-fast Lionel types complained they were too slow, Weaver began using a 12-tooth sprocket on their 3-rail models. They also added a flywheel and an improved motor, which was a good thing!
I changed most of mine to the 8-tooth upper sprocket. In one case I obtained more gear reduction by changing the bottom sprocket (from 12 to 16 tooth, I believe.) My real creepers got two-stage gear reduction towers with ball-bearing shafts. These were made by High Sierra (and sadly, no longer available.) They were set up 8:12 x 8:12 with 10:1 in the axle gearbox. The chain tension worked out just right. Nine motor revolutions to the inch!! They topped out around 45 mph, plenty fast for a small layout. Excellent for switching and would run at 3-4 mph all day. Good coasting too. And all this before speed control!
What I still like about them is with all that hysteresis I think it feels like you’re running a train. Sometimes speed control makes me feel like I’m controlling a robot 🤖
Several online vendors sell chain and sprockets for this system (which I believe is manufactured by Serv-o-Link.) At least one batch of sprockets I purchased was low quality. The chain didn’t lay right, they were noisy with poorly-formed teeth. So inspect your purchases carefully before installing! Also be sure to install the chain with the rough molding burrs on the outside 😜. Good topic!
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