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Picked up the new Lionel PM caboose and was pleasantly surprised to find Kadee mounts under the platforms. The only problem was the thing looked like it was riding on stilts due to the new truck design with removable thumbtack coupler. I ended up grinding the mount completely off and rebuilt the pivot with a more low riding height spacer by CAing sleeves of brass tube. I still had to grind some of the platform away to get the coupler height correct. I pulled the lighting out and will probably get around to weathering this in the next few days. I eventually want a 1225 to run and I am thinking about getting the new Lionel one. I think this choose is close enough prototypically for my purposes.

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  I'm "push toy easy", but that has got to be the worst looking lobster claw  I've seen yet. I think its the tack post that's most distracting. I hope it at least functions well.

   Thanks for posting this. PM got me here, but I was very curious about what you guys would have to go though with those to get it lower.

Adriatic posted:

  I'm "push toy easy", but that has got to be the worst looking lobster claw  I've seen yet. I think its the tack post that's most distracting. I hope it at least functions well.

Please note that this is the 3-Rail SCALE Forum, thus those of us that model in this format, really don't care about ANY of those "claws". They simply wind up in the trash can.

   Thanks for posting this. PM got me here, but I was very curious about what you guys would have to go though with those to get it lower.

 

Hot Water posted:
Adriatic posted:

  I'm "push toy easy", but that has got to be the worst looking lobster claw  I've seen yet. I think its the tack post that's most distracting. I hope it at least functions well.

Please note that this is the 3-Rail SCALE Forum, thus those of us that model in this format, really don't care about ANY of those "claws". They simply wind up in the trash can.

 Whoa!!!  What brought that on?!  Bad day?

 

Last edited by John23
Norm Charbonneau posted:

I see that Atlas is making a C&O style caboose in Trainman. Is that the same caboose PM ran?

The C&O and PM cabooses were essentially the same although some of the PM cabooses had their ladders on the left side of platform right next to the brake stand. The new Atlas Trainman caboose should be OK to use as PM cab. Definitely more accurate than the Lionel 4 window Northeastern caboose. The only question is when will they be available?

Ken

This method of attaching trucks came to me when modifying my B6. Instead of drilling out holes in the trucks and frame and risking making them off-center, I found that sleeving tubing together could adapt different hole diameters and keep everything aligned. The hole in the frame is 3/16" dia., and the truck is 7/32". I cut thin slices of 1/4" tube to retain the 7/32" tube in the truck, then a thin slice of 7/32" tube to retain the 3/16" tube in the frame. The 3/16" tube nests in the 7/32" tube. The lower pic shows the stack-up before mounting in the frame. The top 1/4" retainer on the truck set the ride height. I used my mini table saw to cut the brass tubing using a fine blade. This method also provides a hollow mount to run wiring through if needed.

 

Norm Charbonneau posted:

This method of attaching trucks came to me when modifying my B6. Instead of drilling out holes in the trucks and frame and risking making them off-center, I found that sleeving tubing together could adapt different hole diameters and keep everything aligned. The hole in the frame is 3/16" dia., and the truck is 7/32". I cut thin slices of 1/4" tube to retain the 7/32" tube in the truck, then a thin slice of 7/32" tube to retain the 3/16" tube in the frame. The 3/16" tube nests in the 7/32" tube. The lower pic shows the stack-up before mounting in the frame. The top 1/4" retainer on the truck set the ride height. I used my mini table saw to cut the brass tubing using a fine blade. This method also provides a hollow mount to run wiring through if needed.

 

Very creative, Norm!  So if I'm following your explanation correctly, there are no screws, bolts, nuts, retaining clips, etc. holding the trucks on...just the tube from the frame inserted into the tube in the truck, with a retainer/spacer setting the proper ride height. 

What happens when you pick the caboose up off the track?  Do the trucks fall off...or is there enough friction between the different diameter tubes to hold them together?

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