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I grew up playing with some beautiful Lionel 0 gauge trains that were probably manufactured in the 60s and played with in the early 70s. 

Two years ago I bought a Polar Express 0 gauge Lionel Chief bundle starter set. A little visitor decided the observation car never made it off the ice and pushed it off the table. 

When I was trying to figure out what I needed to do to replace the coupler I noticed it was riveted on. 

Please keep in mind I’m new to 2019 model railroading. That threw me. Are Lionel train cars no longer made to be easily repairable and more of a disposable item? Is there a Lionel line that continues to use screws instead of rivets? It was less expensive to buy a new car from Ebay than buy parts and a rivet kit or have someone do it for me.

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Lionel has used screws and other fasteners for attaching metal trucks, and that continues through the present.

Plastic trucks, like those found on your Polar Express passenger car, have predominantly been fastened to the car with rivets. This goes all the way back to the introduction of Lionel's plastic trucks in the late 1950's.

In short, what you're seeing is nothing even remotely new.

TRW

The LIONEL Traditional O gauge freight cars produced in the USA during the 1990's the trucks were fastened with rivets. Since the car is made from thermoplastic it would melt extremely fast from the heat generated by drilling on a rivet. You would have to cut off the plastic truck, then bend the rivet to pop it out of the car. 

The Standard O scale freight cars had trucks attached with screws.

Andrew

I have some experience with Lionel rolling stock in that I searched ebay and any place that I could find for anything with food and beverage industry advertising.  Three hoppers I purchased had the trucks attached with rivets.  Some of my box and reefer cars have riveted trucks.  Yet some of them are installed with trucks attached with screws.  Falconservice mentioned the danger of drilling out a rivet causing excess heat and melting the truck.

In the case of the three hoppers, I didn't like the overt way the cars swayed from side to side.  It was due to excess gap between the truck and the body due to the rivets.  I know train cars teeter from side to side as they follow along on the tracks, but these cars looked like fans at a rock concert with lighters swaying to the final song.  So I fixed the problem.

I used "my method" mechanics to do this.  I didn't have any rivets so I looked at the hole the rivet exited.  I used needle nosed pliers to pinch the bottom of the rivet until it was narled to the point of falling out.  Once I saw the hole I realized that if I could find the correct size, I could use those fender clips that hold a car fender to the body.  They are plastic, have a flat round top with a triangular underbelly that when slid through a hole, if long enough, they slide through then fan out on the other side of the hole remaining locked in place.  I think the Nissan clips were the right length and size.  To my amazement, the idea worked.  The trucks still turn unimpeded left and right, the cars have no problem following a line of other cars or navigating a switch pattern, and, most of all, the body of the hoppers still jiggle side to side like a real train car, but they don't look like windshield wipers.  So this may be a possible solution if, like me, you aren't familiar with rivets and how to install them.

Another fix I tried and was astonished to find that worked.  I have a Jolly Green Giant reefer that needed new trucks.  Old ones were rusted.  I bought some nice new Lionel trucks that attached with screws.  Guess what.  Didn't see that they were on with rivets.  So, out came the "my method" tool box.  I found the right size screw, longer than the ones normally used, then used a washer to cover the rivet hole that had a small enough hole to keep the head of the screw from falling through.  The Nissan method, I just coined, wouldn't work here.  The holes on the trucks were too small.  The hole on the flat part of the reefer was big enough, but not the hole on the truck.

Just thought you might like to know.

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