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Nope, I've taken all the smoke units out of my stuff except the one in my Railking Imperial 0-6-0 and that's because I've had to reason to open it up lately.

 

I lost my sense of smell a few years back and what little I can smell doesn't smell like it should, most smoke smells pretty nasty to me.  I just hope I can detect it if there's ever a fire!

While I don't mind a little bit of smoke in steam, I HATE smoke in diesels. What a PITA that stuff is. I've had so many problems with smoke units in diesels and the straw that broke the camel's back was when the painted got ruined on a new engine because of the smoke fluid. On the rare occasions I buy a new engine, I usually run the smoke one lap to check functionality then shut if OFF! I've also unplugged or totally removed smoke units in the past as well. 

Hardly. I, more often than not, leave them turned off. If they fail, I typically do not

fix them. If a new loco has it turned on, I'll use it until I have the loco off the track

for some reason, then I'll turn it off if I think of it. 

 

Smoke is OK, and I like the way NON-scented smoke fluid smells, and it's not really

"smoke" anyway - it's a harmless vaporized light oil.

 

Model diesel locos smoke WAY too much, especially when modeling modern units; someone needs to go to the rail yards and look. EPA, and all that. 

All modern, scale 0 gauge steam engines have smoke units, so I really don't have to make a decision! I do usually run smoke when I am running a steam engine, but I'll shut it off after a while just because keeping it full is a nuisance. On an older engine, I'll buy it if I like it, even if it has a "puffer" type unit. On diesels, I really don't care much. I do run the smoke units sometimes on diesels, but they can be a pain to keep filled, especially on an MU consist where they smoke units will run out of fluid at different rates. 

 

Bob Delbridge's comment about sense of smell reminded me of something funny from the toy train museum. I don't have much of a sense of smell either, but I used to use the coal scented Mega Steam. When I would run a steam engine at the toy train museum, people were constantly telling me or one of the other members that something must be on fire, they could smell smoke! When I used up that bottle of smoke, I switched to the unscented. The coal smoke scent is quite realistic - and pretty nasty smelling. 

I like to see engines smoke, BUT my train room is so small I would not be able to leave the smokers on for long without needing some oxygen.  Maybe a larger problem I have with engines smoking is the greasy film it leaves on the track.  It is like the track is a magnet attracting this film.  Yes, I clean it off with denatured alcohol, but I rather do almost anything else.  

Originally Posted by Bob Delbridge:

Nope, I've taken all the smoke units out of my stuff except the one in my Railking Imperial 0-6-0 and that's because I've had to reason to open it up lately.

Want to sell all those smoke units?

 

I can tell that the folks in this thread are not in the market for any Super-Chuffer units!

 

Last edited by gunrunnerjohn
Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by Andrew87:
So the smoke fluid can ruin the paint? 

I have never seen smoke fluid "ruin the paint".  Yes, the smoke fluid mess up the weathering, but does NOT "ruin the paint". Thus, I do NOT turn the smoke units on, in any of my models. Besides, the "fall-out" from the smoke, gets all over the scenery too.

I don't weather my stuff but the smoke sure did ruin the paint. The cheap plastic "funnel/channel" thing that runs from the stack down into the smoke unit cracked and caused fluid to leak. It was a few days before I realized what happened but once everything was cleaned up, the paint on the shell had been severely discolored and overall screwed up. That was the LAST time I ever used the smoke unit in a diesel. 

Originally Posted by Andrew87:
Is havering a smoke unit in an engine or car a deal breaker?   Have you not bought an item because it did not have a smoke unit?

Not part of the purchasing decision at all for me.

 

I don't use the smoke in the handful of steam locomotives I have and I certainly would not use it in a diesel. In the real world a smoking diesel is one that is in dire need of mechanical attention.

 

I never have understood why someone would want a diesel to smoke. But that's just me...

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
 

I never have understood why someone would want a diesel to smoke. But that's just me...

Because I am a big kid that likes toys and toy trains and the smoke is fun. It makes me feel like a kid. Once in a while I see a diesel smoking and I joke with my wife telling here the real ones do smoke!

 

Of course reality and prototypical operations would likely mean that if a real diesel smoked as much as the toy ones do then the EPA and the CARB here in California would go crazy and that unit would be pulled out of service quickly. Several of us noticed the ex-California diesels in service in Buffalo, NY during out TTOS convention tours. I think the emissions laws have not caught up to California standards.....yet.

Rich- You should install a blue LED in the smoke stack of your diesel, that way it looks even more realistically "in dire of mechanical attention" Makes me think of my buddies VW rabbit in college, the blue smoke could wipe out a swamp of mosquitos and a parking lot of Prius' in 2 minutes.....
 
 
 
 
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by Andrew87:
Is havering a smoke unit in an engine or car a deal breaker?   Have you not bought an item because it did not have a smoke unit?

Not part of the purchasing decision at all for me.

 

I don't use the smoke in the handful of steam locomotives I have and I certainly would not use it in a diesel. In the real world a smoking diesel is one that is in dire need of mechanical attention.

 

I never have understood why someone would want a diesel to smoke. But that's just me...

 

I'm on the side of the original poster - smoke is a must have feature and yes, I have either bought something or not mainly because of the smoke unit(s) it has. Actually for me the most realistic smoke feature is in Lionel's Vision Line GE Evo. It comes on only on start up and when the engine is under load - no belching all the time as with the MTH version. However, every steam engine I run has to have maximum smoke effect. 

Originally Posted by gunrunnerjohn:
Originally Posted by Bob Delbridge:

Nope, I've taken all the smoke units out of my stuff except the one in my Railking Imperial 0-6-0 and that's because I've had to reason to open it up lately.

Want to sell all those smoke units?

 

I can tell that the folks in this thread are not in the market for any Super-Chuffer units!

 

John, Let me see what I have, maybe a trade (for a LED kit) is in the offering

 

My last 3 conversions were all Williams so they're Seuth (sp?) units, but I don't have the unit from my Legacy GP9 and possibly 2-3 MTH units.

Last edited by Bob Delbridge

I think smoke units on diesels are absurd.  they just don't correspond to anything you see in real life.  Why not install smurf figurines in your cab if you are going to use white smoke?

 

However, if I ever run my premier allegheny, I always turn on the smoke to watch the synchronised chuffing.  Since that prototype has been out of use for decades, I have no idea if it is accurate or not.

Smoke 'em if ya got 'em!

 

I most enjoy doing switching with 1st gen diesels ... and I love the smoke.

 

I have a sensitive schnoz ... so a bit of cross ventilation is a must. Don't run them in a sealed, A/C'd room.

 

When Lionel comes up with a delivery date for their ALCO switchers, I may cancel my order of Atlas EMD switchers altogether ... just because of the smoke feature.

 

 

RogerPete: "You should install a blue LED in the smoke stack of your diesel, that way it looks even more realistically "in dire of mechanical attention"

 

How cool is that!!! I want that!!

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