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I have acquired a good number of 2 rail rolling stock that I am converting to 3 rail to run on my scale detailed O gauge layout.  The a lot of the rolling stock was made by Westbrook.  A frame from a Lionel SP caboose makes a good base to attach the trucks and fits easily on the bottom.  Trimming is necessary, but it is not necessary to drill new holes in the metal.  I drill a hole in the bottom of the car in order to clear the stud and the horseshoe clip.  The Trucks then sit at a correct height.  I use post-war trucks to maintain the vintage look of the old Westbrook cars. 

 

The only question I have is when Westbrook in business.  How old are these cars?

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Thanks, Rusty, for posting that ad showing history of Bob Peare line, too...as I favor

Peare's caboose kits.  There have seemed to have been a lot of them out there, and

some of the later kits were not boxed but just wrapped in cellophane, which might

have been after the sale.  Wonder if any of those kits ever showed up with "North Jersey" labeling?  Still interested in learning IF or by whom, Vandemboom's variety

of caboose kits were made?

 

The build dates on some of the cars are mid 1940's.  I doubt they followed lionel's practice of dating the car when introduced, but I doubt they would have put a date in the future on the car too.  My guess was that these are late 1940's to early 1950's.  That 1953 add announcing the purchase of the westbrool line helps a great deal.  I want to run these cars with post war power and putting post war Lionel trucks on them is in keeping with using era specific parts. 

Most all of them are Westbrook.  All of them are ancient by today's standards.  They spent several decades wrapped in newsaper under various layouts my dad had since 1996, and before that they were who knows where.  All are wood construction.  The Westbrook cars have cardstock overlay sides.  They have gotten a bit beat up over the years, and I have repainted most of them.  I used the worst of them as a paint sample car and am pleased with how well the detail of the card stock shows through the new paint.  They decal easy too.  I'm sure some Westbrook collector out there just blew his stack, but rest assured, I don't refinish antiques unless they are truely beyond help as far as a slight touch up goes. 

 

I am using Lionel SP caboose frames trimmed to fit, and am trimming back the center beams as well as removing any scale details in the wheel area that would interfere with truck mounting and operation.  The flat frames are the way to go and give the most realistic height. 

 

So far I have preserved and only converted an L&N flat car, and have refinished 3 boxcars into Southern, DT&I and C&EI.  I like midwestern roads.  I have also done a CCC&StL hopper of unknown manufacture.  The flat car came to me with a copper pipe mounted on it.  It tracks excelently with Lionel postwar trucks and weigh's a ton!

 

Eventually, I will restore the PRR X31 boxcar and a 50 foot auto boxcar.  These sides are wood, and not card overlay.  There is a lot to do on those.

 

I am only using salvaged PW Lionel parts for the conversion process.  It is what would have been availible back then if this project was being done in the 1940's or 50's.  The staple-truck is preferred since that is most in keeping with the production era of the rolling stock. 

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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