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Just wondering if or why not couldn't Lionel Corporation make a collapsible pantograph like the 408E has but proportioned for the brute.  They screw off so replacing wouldn't be hard to do. What with the price we paid for this engine you would think this would only enhance the look and I would think this would be a very popular item to upgrade your engine with.   Anyone have any ideas.  Scratch building is out of the question due to the collectability and price of this engine.

 

 

indydanny

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indydanny, I agree completely, that was one of my objections when I got my Brute and one of the reasons for getting rid of it.  For the price and size and all, the level and quality  of the trim, fit, and finish were all seriously deficient, and the pantographs were the worst.  I mean, really...   Yes, they were staying true to the original Brute model, but in this and many other respects also that was a questionable choice.  I find the Super 381 to be a much more satisfying locomotive to own and run: it has its issues which have been discussed here at length, but it's a good lookin beast.

 

 

I picked up a Brute a few months ago and completely agree with Hojack about the fit and finish along with the detail parts. Can not blame MTH as this is a model of a prototype. The super 381 is so much more refined. It has marker lights a bigger bell and maybe even the whistle is larger. The pantographs are much better.

 

I guess all these parts are available from MTH so anyone can upgrade there Brute.

Last edited by F&G RY

Bob, 

the pantographs on the Richart locomotives look most like the ones on the Robert Hendrichs "Gold Standard" GG1:

 

 

PICT0064 copy

 

 

Another possibility is the pantograph on the big McCoy E2:

 

 

PICT0109 copy

 

The McCoy pantograph might be more readily available: I recently got a replacement from Bonnie, and I believe she and Bob Jr still have these in stock.

 

 

 

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  • PICT0064 copy
  • PICT0109 copy
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by hojack:

Bob, 

the pantographs on the Richart locomotives look most like the ones on the Robert Hendrichs "Gold Standard" GG1:

 

 

PICT0064 copy

 

 

Another possibility is the pantograph on the big McCoy E2:

 

 

PICT0109 copy

 

The McCoy pantograph might be more readily available: I recently got a replacement from Bonnie, and I believe she and Bob Jr still have these in stock.

 

 

 

Are the pantographs on the GG1 attached with a single machine screw like those used by RichArt?

How many holes are drilled into the McCoy E2's roof to install each of its pantographs?  Does each plastic insulator on the bottom of the pantograph require a hole?

 

Bob

Yes, the big pantograph on the Hendrich GG1 appears to be attached with one machine screw at the center:

 

PICT0001

 

 

By contrast, the McCoy pantograph on the E2 is not held on by any screw:  it "pops" into place and is removable without tools.  There are four holes in the roof superstructure into which a pin on each corner of the pantograph pushes (these are not plastic, they appear to me to be stainless steel, same as the pantograph base):  at the same time, there is a central boss that is fixed to the roof and protrudes up into the pantograph.  To seat the pantograph, you have to line up the four corner pins in their holes, and then "pop" the center of the pantograph down over the protruding stud.  There is a spring mechanism in the bottom of the pantograph that "latches" onto a detent on the stud:

 

 

PICT0003

PICT0004

 

 

Interestingly, the CMC loco used the McCoy pantograph but used a different attachment method, by removing the McCoy pin "insulators", running a machine screw down through the pantograph legs at each corner and through the roof, with a new spacer "insulator", with nuts on the under side of the roof.  There is no center boss:

 

 

PICT0005

 

 

PICT0009

 

 


As an aside, the JAD GG1 from around the same period, also uses the McCoy pantograph, and it appears to attach the same way that McCoy used on the E2.

 

 

PICT0011

 

 

 

In operation, the McCoy pantograph has a spring which snaps the pantograph closed when it is pushed down and goes "over cam."  The larger Hendrich (which I believe is also your Richart) pantograph has a couple of brass clips to hold the pantograph down.  These are bent on my Hendrich GG1 and I have messed with them but can't get them working well to hold the pantograph down.

 

The big pantograph on the Hendrich/Richart measures 2-1/2" high (from the roof) when raised and 4-1/4" long when all the way down.  The McCoy is 2-3/8" high when fully raised but only 3" long front to back when closed.  These compare to the Lionel 408 pantograph which stands 1-3/4" tall when up, and is 2-1/2" long when down. This Lionel pantograph is also the one used on the Super 381.  It would be too small for the Brute.

 

The Hendrich/Richart pantograph is the largest and would be the best fit for the Brute.  But the McCoy with its "over cam" mechanism is the more user-friendly, and at this point probably easier to obtain.

 

I do not know who made the pantograph used on the Hendrichs (Roberts Lines) and Richart locos.  Arno may know.

 

 

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Last edited by Former Member

hojack,

 

Thanks for posting those great photos!

 

The only difference I can detect between the pantograph installed your GG1 and those on my RichArt BiPolars is that the hole in the metal base plate of the BiPolar's pantographs has a slot extending from it.  Specifically, the hole is just large enough for the machine screw's head to pass it and has a slot extending to the rear that is smaller than head of the screw but slightly larger than the threaded shaft of the screw.  This allows you attach the pantographs to the BiPolar by lowering the pantograph over the screw head to the roof then sliding the pantograph forward horizontally so that machine screw's shaft is moved into the slot.  You then tighten down on the machine screw to firmly clamp the base of the pantograph between the head of the machine screw and roof of the BiPolar.  Very quick and easy to do.

 

Bob

 

Last edited by navy.seal
Originally Posted by mdainsd:

Those arent McCoy pantagraphs, they are Lionel GG1 pantagraphs from the post war era.

They are a similar (very similar) design, but by the 1970's they were not available from Lionel.  Like the McCoy trucks; they look like Lionel 200 series trucks and wheels, but they are made by McCoy.  "The McCoy Story" book by Mark Horne, page 40, says that when McCoy introduced their first locomotive in 1969, "...The first 500 engines had permanently mounted pantographs which were made in Japan, whereas all later engines had McCoy-built snap-on pantographs."

 

Before making what we know as the line of McCoy trains, Bob McCoy made his name in the 1960's making and selling exact reproductions of Lionel parts and trains that were so good it caused an outcry from collectors as they could not be distinguished from the real thing.  That's when Bob decided to make his own line so there wouldn't be any controversy.  But the point is that he was extremely good at making Lionel parts.

 

Many of the other MESG train makers in the 1970's went to McCoy for parts:  for example, many Richart and Jim Cohen locomotives and cars have McCoy motors, wheels, and trucks.  Today, you can go to MTH for parts:  in the 1970's, Bob McCoy was the go-to man for standard gauge parts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It looks like one could make an adaptor plate with holes matching the current mounting holes and then holes or slots in that plate to accept the improved pantograph.

 

The pantograph down on the Brute is 5 1/2" this is 6 1/2" retracted. It looks like it will fit.

 

Other things look ridiculous on this engine like 2 bells and 2 whistles. Running lights on the front and back would look nice. 

Last edited by F&G RY
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