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I have run my lc+ mikado for about 2 to three hours straight for the past 4 Halloween evenings.   Last night,  towards the end of the evening, every 3 or 4 laps it would slow to nearly a crawl and then slowly speed up again.  The location on the oval track didn't seem to matter.  I stopped the loco for a few minutes and then restarted and it ran fine.  Typically I would chalk this up to a need for lubrication, but since it didn't have an issue for about an hour and a half , I am also wondering if this could be an electronic overheating issue?

I looked for a place to lube the gearbox, and I can't find one. I went so far as to take shell off and try to remove the motor.   After removing the motor mounts, it didn't move.  So I stopped to ask for help.

How do I lube the gears on this thing?

Has anyone else run into intermittent slow downs with these, particularly after a long run?1604239975951483881966878614716916042400048301215111069967639536

16042403043334272935654826286292

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If these are built similar to how the Berk Jr.s and similar are built, the entire bottom plate comes off with little work....that’ll expose everything you’d like to lube....

are you sure it was a locomotive problem and not something else?..transformer warming up, something else lit up that’s pulling amperage,....I’d check all the boxes before condemning the locomotive......usually lack of lube would result in some sort of audible noise like a squeak, or something.....I’d think....but certainly go for simple fixes first....no need to get the cart ahead of the horse.....

Pat

@harmonyards posted:

If these are built similar to how the Berk Jr.s and similar are built, the entire bottom plate comes off with little work....that’ll expose everything you’d like to lube....

are you sure it was a locomotive problem and not something else?..transformer warming up, something else lit up that’s pulling amperage,....I’d check all the boxes before condemning the locomotive......usually lack of lube would result in some sort of audible noise like a squeak, or something.....I’d think....but certainly go for simple fixes first....no need to get the cart ahead of the horse.....

Pat

Thanks Pat.  Since this happened during "public running " I really didn't have much time to troubleshoot.   I cleaned the tracks beforehand and was using a Z4000 that I bought second hand and admittedly don't have much time on. 

Trick or treating time was almost up anyway.   I ended up jus parking the train until the next customer came up.

Even though it's only a couple times a year, this engine is my only one that will consistently see multi hour running.   I figure a lube job is in order no matter what.

@Norton posted:

Turn the flywheel by hand to check for unusual resistance or binding. Then run the engine with the shell off to see if anything is getting hot, besides the smoke unit. Maybe even leave the smoke unit off.



Pete

You know , I had the shell off twice this morning (forgot to plug the back the first time), and I didn't think to spin the motor enough to see a full revolution of the wheels.  🤦‍♂️

I do run with the smoke off so no one needs to keep refilling it.

@RickM46 posted:

I would clean the track again, the pickup rollers, the wheels that serve as a ground; had the same with a Lionel Polar Express and a Lionel Birney trolley till I cleaned the ground wheels.

Yep....start with simple stuff first....then graduate to complicated stuff...good call Rick...

jhz563, if you take the bottom plate off to lube everything, you’ll be able to spin the worm like Pete mentioned, although it can’t be that bad to pop the shell off...no??

Pat

Pull those 6 screws on the bottom plate and get some grease on those gears.

I've never seen remotely enough grease on a new Lionel Loco. Usually whatever in there is just stuck to the inside of the gearbox and not even on the gears.

I'had a similar experience with my old conventional PE for around the tree. This model is underpowered ,but the grease made an improvement. The gears were basically dry from the factory.

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