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Most of the photos were taken a couple of weekends ago at the Golden Gate Live Steamers 75th Anniversary meet. A couple close-ups of the cab were taken in my garage. As for running, she runs real strong and has plenty of power. At the end of the second video you can see my buddy coasting downgrade after hauling himself and two other adults and three kids up a sustained 2% grade with power to spare.

She's probably as easy to run/fire as any coal fired steam loco. Managing a coal fire adds complications and additional duties to operations as compared to propane where one basically sets the gas level and forgets about it after that. You have to keep after a coal fire - stoking, raking, leveling, clearing the grate of clinkers and clogs so the fire can breathe, adjusting the blower during hard running and coasting as well as running and just sitting - all while still managing the throttle and Johnson bar and the water level/bypass valves and paying attention to track conditions. My first few runs I found it completely overwhelming, and I still find it moderately so. Smile I have a long way to go before becoming an "old hand." hehehe
Last edited by Dwight Ennis
I've been making good progress on the walnut cab. It's based upon the
restoration drawings for Sonoma's cab from the Sacramento Railroad Museum, but
scaled up and stretched a bit to fit a standard gauge locomotive.







She's starting to really look like a steam locomotive now. Smile



The doors are hinged and the rear side windows open by sliding forward like the prototype. Just finished and installed the rear vertical walls...





There's around 200 individual pieces of walnut in it so far. Now on to the roof with its removable section and the removable section of the rear wall.
I have the finishing done on the cab. I changed my mind on the spar varnish as it made the wood too dark for my taste and went with ployurethane instead...







All that remains to complete the cab is the locomotive name (decals are ordered) and the metal sheathing for the roof.

I also turned four new brass handrail stanchions...



Coming along, coming along...
Thanks Russ. She's a strong runner. She pulled five steel log cars weighing 100+ lbs each plus a riding car weighing 75-100 lbs plus my buddy who was running her... another 175-180 lbs - a total of 750 lbs minimum - up a fairly long 1.5% grade from a standing start at the foot of the grade. It was a struggle but she made it. The Little Engine That Could. Smile

I finally have functioning cylinder drain cocks.    I bought a set from Reeves 2000 in the UK.  As the drain cocks are 1/4-40 threads and my cylinders are tapped for 1/8 NPT, I had to make four adaptors from 7/16 brass hex stock.

 

 

Found some small rectangular bar in a drawer so I made the connecting bar for each side.  Amazing what you can find floating around in drawers. 

 

 

 

Been in Vegas since Monday evening.  My buddy Jesse and I stripped her down and painted the frame, cylinders, saddle, newly-completed pilot, drain cock control arms, etc., then put her all back together.  Yesterday we took her out to the track in Boulder City for her first post-backshopping run...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gotta love coal smoke and steam!!!

 

 

 

Dwight a couple of the 'coalies' up here have switched over to 'char' and seem to be getting more heat and it leaves nothing but a light powdered ash when done.  As I understand it 'char' is the residue left over from some oil cracking process, so it is a manufactured product.  If you are interested I'll try and get you some more info.  Russ

 

Just 41 days until our big celebration, current count:

May 1, 2012: 569 people, and 233 trains 8827 feet long

Train Mountain 2012 Triennial

Here's some video we shot on Friday at her first run after reassembly at the "Friends of the Nevada Southern Live Steamers" track in Boulder City. One of the valves had slipped during reassembly so here her timing is a little off. That's fixed now.

 

 

 

 

BTW, when shown pulling the riding cars near the end, she was pulling over 800 lbs up a sustained 3% - 3.5% grade.  

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