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Hey gang, I need some input.

I am in the process of upgrading several older Lionel Steam locos to RS4 and TMCC. They are the Reading and Chessie T-1's, Lackawanna, Rock Island and the Northern Pacific Northerns.

 

I will be using the Electric RR kits, however I want to use Lionel's 50mm 8hm Fatboy Speaker. I have a few of them that I purchased. My question is, since the tenders all have die cast shells, Should I also add the plastic speaker baffle?? Would it make a difference in sound??

 

Thanks!

 

 

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The tender shell would make a good enclosure if you can seal it completely. The Lionel Commodore Vanderbilt diecast tender is an example of what a sealed tender can sound like. Not easy to duplicate though. Alternatively used the largest enclosure that will fit in the tender. The one supplied is smaller than ideal.

 

Pete

The key to an effective speaker enclosure is to seal the backside of the speaker completely. If there is a gap around the bottom or where the wires enter you loose most of the advantage of the baffle. A good material to use is Mortite string caulk. If you can't find the original brand, ACE Hardware sell a similar product under their own name. It is sticky enough to hold but it never hardens so you can remove the baffle easily. Its been used by amateur speaker builders for years to seal the speaker frame to the cabinet.

 

Pete

I have used a short length of 2" PVC vacuflo pipe and the matching cap to make a fast speaker baffle, with good results. I usually go for about 1-1/2 to 1-3/4 inch high, or whatever will fit in the tender.

If space is limited you can sometimes only use the PVC cap.

I have used Goo to glue it to the back of the speaker with success.

I don't know if 2" pipe will fit the Fatboy speaker however.

 

Rod

Originally Posted by J Daddy:

The question is the Fat boy speaker compatible with the sound board? Double check the ohm requirement from board to speaker. The baffles do make a difference when installed correctly.

 

 

 

From what I know the Fatboy speaker is 8 ohm and is commonly used with the RS4 board.

Just curious about the PN for those speaker baffles that are used with the Fatboy?

 

Rod 

I just bought an 8 ohm Fat Boy to replace the cheap 8ohm speaker thats in my Sunset 3rd Rail GS-4. It has Railsounds 4/TMCC so it will be a direct replacement as far as the speaker. I will be using the enclosure as well, so the sound quality should be a big improvement. I'll get some pictures posted when its done for sure and hopefully a video so you can hear it.
Originally Posted by Laidoffsick:
I just bought an 8 ohm Fat Boy to replace the cheap 8ohm speaker thats in my Sunset 3rd Rail GS-4. It has Railsounds 4/TMCC so it will be a direct replacement as far as the speaker. I will be using the enclosure as well, so the sound quality should be a big improvement. I'll get some pictures posted when its done for sure and hopefully a video so you can hear it.


If I may ask, where did you buy the fatboy speaker, Lionel or another source?

 

Thanks

This upgrade was not for a beginner that's for sure. The housing didn't just drop right in, but after working on it all day, I got it to fit, and it's all back together.

 

These are the 3 pieces I bought from Boxcar Bill. 

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The 3 pieces as they fit together vs. the factory speaker.

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The large holes were already there from the factory speaker, but I drilled and tapped new holes to mount the new speaker, making sure there was enough room from the back of the tender, as to not smash the wires for the lights and LEDs. Notice the lip on the inside of the tender.... this had to be notched to get the housing to fit down inside the shell. Get out the Dremel for this brass shell. Are you kidding me? 

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Well I did bust out the Dremel and notched both sides of that lip to get the housing to fit. I also had to sand the housing down because the inside of the tender is not flat at the top, it's angled on both sides, so the housing was a tad to tall. The switch plate that has the volume control and run/program switch had to be cut a bit shorter as well to allow the housing in there, but I forgot to take a picture of that. More Dremel cutoff wheel to the brass shell.    

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You can clearly see the other notch I had to cut in the lip of the tender.

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It's all back together and running after I finished the paint detailing (corrections to some of the detail parts) and tested on my overhead loop. SOUNDS AWESOME... yeah it's still Railsounds 4 so you have a touch of that static, but once it's running you don't really notice it. The whistle is VERY DEEP, and VERY LOUD.. I had to dial the volume down with the dial mounted in the tender about a quarter turn. Much different than the stock speaker.

 

I didn't have to mount the housing in there, but the inside lip still had to be notched to allow the shell to sit all the way back down once the speaker mounting plate was put in to hold the speaker. Once I did that...might as well go all the way. Took me all dang day, but it was worth it.  

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That's great, nice when a plan comes together.

 

I would point out that if you could have found something to fit over the old speaker as a baffle, it would have improved it's sound as well.  No way to know if it would be better or worse than the one you have, and now that it's all working great, I doubt you want to find out.   If you run into another one like that oval, consider a dishwashing liquid container as a baffle, cut the bottom out and fit it to the speaker.

 

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