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Hey all, I spent some time using the search feature on the forum but had no luck finding what i was looking for.  I'm in the midst of repainting a Lionel Mickeys Christmas 4-4-0 General into a Disneyland RR C.K. Holliday look a like.  One of the last items I need to paint are the drive wheels.  From looking at parts lists on the train, the center colored plastic pieces are separate from the action wheel.  I attempted to pull them off but I had no luck.  Hence my posting.  Is there a trick to removing these plastic wheel inserts with out damaging them?  Thanks for any help you can offer!IMG_20180128_153322IMG_20180128_153359IMG_20180128_153420IMG_20180128_153634IMG_20180128_154159

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I've never worked on a General, though I do have a modern-era version that I partially re-painted and decaled and Dullcote-ed to make it a more realistic and less toy-like loco. I just looked at the driver centers (mine were black all along, so I didn't paint them), and I would say that the best approach would be the careful application of masking tape (thin strips will work best) to the rims if you want them to remain a different color and paint the centers with a brush. Hi-quality, modern acrylics don't typically leave brush marks. 

The centers appear to be pressed on, maybe glued in, too, and are intended to stay put, so I doubt (I don't know) that removal can be done without damage.

You might e-mail Lionel's service department; maybe there's a safe trick.

I find pulling wheels a real pain and subject to breaking and making a small job into a major one.

How about painting them in place as mentioned above.  Free hand if you can or mask them off.  Use a knife to scrap off uneven lines.  The Testor's little bottles of paint do well for me and normally do not leave brush marks if thinned.  I just brush painted a missile for my Lionel 3665 Minuteman Missile Launcher Car last night and the job has no brush marks.

Charlie

Last edited by Choo Choo Charlie

I couldn't find a parts listing for the Mickey Christmas General, but I found one for the only General I have, the Coca Cola 125th Anniversary.  There is a listing for "Drive Wheel Insert," as per the attached picture, so I've gotta believe they can be removed.  Whether that can be done without damaging them I don't know, but if worse comes to worst and they get damaged by the removal process you apparently can order replacements.

Pete

Coke General Drive Wheel Insert

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  • Coke General Drive Wheel Insert

I got an idea and tried it.  I removed the siderod bolt from a rear wheel and moved the siderod out of the way.  Then I carefully threaded the bolt partway into the wheel cover, and grabbing it with only my thumb and forefinger I was able to easily pop the wheel cover off.

I'll post a photo when I get back from taking my wife to the store.

Pete

O-o-o the possibilities....

Good to know; certainly anything can be removed, but the lack of damage is nice.

I'm not a "General" guy in, ah, general, but I do like the later can-motored ones like mine, even if way over-scale. They actually run decently smoothly and not 150 mph.

Below: I toned-down this one with acrylics, lettered if for the M&O, then Dullcote all over - it emulates some of the M&O's 1850's 4-4-0's fairly well.

Club layout shots.

I would like to get another modern General and really go at it with some tools - straight stack, coal (or oil) tender, simpler domes, new whistle location, footboard pilot, modern headlight, compressor, generator, paint the whole thing black or weathered black - to represent what some of those old 4-4-0's looked like at the end in the 1940's and even 50's when they had become branch- or short-line power. 

And it's plastic - easier than zinc or brass.

Painting the wood pile was the easiest but most striking change that I made.

General1

 

General3

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Last edited by D500
Adriatic posted:

  If the hole is fully threaded you could run a longer screw into the hub and the screw would force the cap to rise.

This is completely unnecessary since the wheel insert is a pretty loose fit and very easy to remove, also it's not a through hole.  The siderods and wheel covers are strictly for appearance and serve no mechanical purpose.

Pete

ps - D500, that's one sweet lookin' loco.

Last edited by Texas Pete

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